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| Of the Principles Which, According to the Platonists, Regulate the Purification of the Soul. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 23.—Of the Principles
Which, According to the Platonists, Regulate the Purification of
the Soul.
Even Porphyry asserts that it was
revealed by divine oracles that we are not purified by any
sacrifices416 to sun or
moon, meaning it to be inferred that we are not purified by
sacrificing to any gods. For what mysteries can purify, if those
of the sun and moon, which are esteemed the chief of the celestial
gods, do not purify? He says, too, in the same place, that
“principles” can purify, lest it should be supposed, from his
saying that sacrificing to the sun and moon cannot purify, that
sacrificing to some other of the host of gods might do so. And
what he as a Platonist means by “principles,” we know.417
417 The Platonists of the Alexandrian
and Athenian schools, from Plotinus to Proclus, are at one in
recognizing in God three principles or hypostases: 1st,
the One or the Good, which is the Father; 2nd, the Intelligence or
Word, which is the Son; 3rd, the Soul, which is the universal
principle of life. But as to the nature and order of these
hypostases, the Alexandrians are no longer at one with the
school of Athens. On the very subtle differences between the
Trinity of Plotinus and that of Porphyry, consult M. Jules Simon,
ii. 110, and M. Vacherot, ii. 37.—Saisset. | For he
speaks of God the Father and God the Son, whom he calls (writing in
Greek) the intellect or mind of the Father;418 but of the Holy Spirit he says
either nothing, or nothing plainly, for I do not understand what
other he speaks of as holding the middle place between these two.
For if, like Plotinus in his discussion regarding the three
principal substances,419 he wished us to understand by this
third the soul of nature, he would certainly not have given it the
middle place between these two, that is, between the Father and the
Son. For Plotinus places the soul of nature after the intellect
of the Father, while Porphyry, making it the mean, does not place
it after, but between the others. No doubt he spoke according to
his light, or as he thought expedient; but we assert that the Holy
Spirit is the Spirit not of the Father only, nor of the Son only,
but of both. For philosophers speak as they have a mind to, and
in the most difficult matters do not scruple to offend religious
ears; but we are bound to speak according to a certain rule, lest
freedom of speech beget impiety of opinion about the matters
themselves of which we speak.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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