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| Chapter VI.—These things were unknown to Plato and other philosophers. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VI.—These things were unknown
to Plato and other philosophers.
“ ‘It makes no matter to me,’ said
he, ‘whether Plato or Pythagoras, or, in short, any other man held
such opinions. For the truth is so; and you would perceive it from this.
The soul assuredly is or has life. If, then, it
is life, it would cause something else, and not itself, to live, even as
motion would move something else than itself. Now, that the soul lives,
no one would deny. But if it lives, it lives not as being life, but as
the partaker of life; but that which partakes of anything, is different
from that of which it does partake. Now the soul partakes of life, since
God wills it to live. Thus, then, it will not even partake [of life] when
God does not will it to live. For to live is not
its attribute, as it is God’s; but as a man does not live always,
and the soul is not for ever conjoined with the body, since, whenever
this harmony must be broken up, the soul leaves the body, and the man
exists no longer; even so, whenever the soul must cease to exist, the
spirit of life is removed from it, and there is no more soul, but it goes
back to the place from whence it was taken.’ E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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