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| The Hebdomadarii; System of the Arithmeticians; Pressed into the Service of Heresy; Instances Of, in Simon and Valentinus; The Nature of the Universe Deducible from the Physiology of the Brain. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter LI.—The
Hebdomadarii; System of the Arithmeticians; Pressed into the Service of
Heresy; Instances Of, in Simon and Valentinus; The Nature of the
Universe Deducible from the Physiology of the Brain.
But since almost every heresy (that has sprung up)
through the arithmetical art has discovered measures of hebdomads and
certain projections of Æons, each rending the art differently,
while whatever variation prevailed was in the names merely; and (since)
Pythagoras became the instructor of these, first introducing numbers of
this sort among the Greeks from Egypt, it seems expedient not to omit
even this, but, after we have given a compendious elucidation, to
approach the demonstration of those things that we propose to
investigate.
Arithmeticians and geometers arose, to whom especially
Pythagoras first seems to have furnished principles. And from
numbers that can continually progress ad infinitum by
multiplication, and from figures, these derived their first
principles,308
308
Sextus Empiricus, adv. Geom., 29 et seq. (See book
vi. chap. xviii. of The Refutation.) | as capable of
being discerned by reason alone; for a principle of geometry, as one
may perceive, is an indivisible point. From that point, however,
by means of the art, the generation of endless figures from the point
is discovered. For the point being drawn into length becomes a
line, after being thus continued, having a point for its
extremity. And a line flowing out into breadth begets a surface,
and the limits of the surface are lines; but a surface flowing out into
breadth becomes body. And when what is solid has in this manner
derived existence from, altogether, the smallest point, the nature of a
huge body is constituted; and this is what Simon expresses thus:
“The little will be great, being as a point, and the great
illimitable.” Now this coincides with the geometrical
doctrine of a point.
But of the arithmetical309
309 The
observations following have already been made in book i. of The
Refutation. | art, which by composition contains
philosophy, number became a first principle, which is an indefinable
and incomprehensible (entity), comprising in itself all the numbers
that can go on ad infinitum by aggregation.
But the first monad became a principle, according to substance, of the
numbers, which (principle) is a male310
monad, pro-creating paternally all the rest of the numbers.
Secondly, the duad is a female number, which by the arithmeticians is
also itself denominated even. Thirdly, the triad is a male
number; this also it has been the usual custom of arithmeticians to
style odd. In addition to all these, the tetrad is a female
number; and this same, because it is feminine, is likewise denominated
even. All the numbers therefore, taken generically, are
four—number, however, as regards genus, is indefinite—from
which, according to their system, is formed the perfect number—I
mean the decade. For one, two, three, four, become ten—as
has been previously proved—if the proper denomination be
preserved, according to substance, for each of the numbers. This
is the sacred quaternion, according to Pythagoras, having in itself
roots of an endless nature, that is, all other numbers; for eleven, and
twelve, and the rest, derive the principle of generation from the
ten. Of this decade—the perfect number—there are
called four parts—number, monad, power, cube—whose
connections and mixtures take place for the generation of increase,
according to nature completing the productive number. For when
the square is multiplied into itself, it becomes a biquadratic; but
when the square is multiplied into a cube, it becomes the product of a
quadratic and cube; but when a cube is multiplied into a cube, it
becomes the product of cube multiplied by cube. Wherefore all the
numbers are seven; so that the generation of things produced may be
from the hebdomad—which is number, monad, power, cube,
biquadratic, product of quadratic multiplied by cube, product of cube
multiplied by cube.
Of this hebdomad Simon and Valentinus, having altered
the names, detailed marvellous stories, from thence hastily adopting a
system for themselves. For Simon employs his denominations
thus: Mind, Intelligence, Name, Voice, Ratiocination, Reflection;
and He who stood, stands, will stand. And Valentinus (enumerates
them thus): Mind, Truth, Word, Life, Man, Church, and the Father,
reckoned along with these, according to the same principles as those
advanced by the cultivators of arithmetical philosophy. And
(heresiarchs) admiring, as if unknown to the multitude, (this
philosophy, and) following it, have framed heterodox doctrines devised
by themselves.
Some indeed, then, attempt likewise to form the hebdomads from the medical311
311 The
Abbe Cruice refers to Censorinus (De Die Natali, cap. vii. et
xiv.), who mentions that two numbers were held in veneration, the
seventh (hebdomad) and ninth (ennead). The former was of use in
curing corporeal disease, and ascribed to Apollo; the latter healed the
diseases of the mind, and was attributed to the Muses. | (art), being astonished at the dissection
of the brain, asserting that the substance of the universe and the
power of procreation and the Godhead could be ascertained from the
arrangement of the brain. For the brain, being the dominant
portion of the entire body, reposes calm and unmoved, containing within
itself the spirit. Such an account, then, is not incredible, but
widely differs from the conclusions which these (heretics) attempt to
deduce from it. For the brain, on being dissected, has within it
what may be called a vaulted chamber. And on either side of this
are thin membranes, which they term little wings. Now these are
gently moved by the spirit, and in turn propel towards the cerebellum
the spirit, which, careering through a certain blood-vessel like a
reed, advances towards the pineal gland. And near this is
situated the entrance of the cerebellum, which admits the current of
spirit, and distributes it into what is styled the spinal marrow.
But from them the whole frame participates in the spiritual energy,
inasmuch as all the arteries, like a branch, are fastened on from this
blood-vessel, the extremity of which terminates in the genital
blood-vessels, whence all the (animal) seeds proceeding from the brain
through the loin are secreted (in the seminal glands). The form,
however, of the brain is like the head of a serpent, respecting which a
lengthened discussion is maintained by the professors of knowledge,
falsely so named, as we shall prove. Six other coupling ligaments
grow out of the brain, which, traversing round the head, and having
their termination in (the head) itself, hold bodies together; but the
seventh (ligament) proceeds from the cerebellum to the lower parts of
the rest of the frame, as we have declared.
And respecting this there is an enlarged
discussion, whence both Simon and Valentinus will be found both to have
derived from this source starting-points for their opinions, and,
though they may not acknowledge it, to be in the first instance liars,
then heretics. Since, then, it appears that we have sufficiently
explained these tenets likewise, and that all the reputed opinions of
this earthly philosophy have been comprised in four books; it seems
expedient to proceed to a consideration of the disciples of these men,
nay rather, those who have furtively appropriated their
doctrines.312
312 At
foot of ms. occur the words, “Fourth Book
of Philosophumena.” | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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