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| Of the Philosophers, who fell into Mistaken Notions, and Some of them into Danger, by their Desire of Universal Knowledge.--Also of the Doctrines of Plato. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IX.—Of the Philosophers, who fell into Mistaken Notions,
and Some of them into Danger, by their Desire of Universal
Knowledge.—Also of the Doctrines of Plato.
We ought, therefore, to aim at objects which are within our power,
and exceed not the capacities of our nature. For the persuasive
influence of argument has a tendency to draw most of us away from the
truth of things, which has happened to many philosophers, who have
employed themselves in reasoning, and the study of natural science, and
who, as often as the magnitude of the subject surpasses their powers of
investigation, adopt various devices for obscuring the truth. Hence
their diversities of judgment, and contentious opposition to each
others’ doctrines, and this notwithstanding their pretensions to
wisdom. Hence, too, popular commotions have arisen, and severe
sentences, passed by those in power, apprehensive of the overthrow of
hereditary institutions, have proved destructive to many of the
disputants themselves. Socrates, for example, elated by his skill in
argumentation, indulging his power of making the worse appear the
better reason,3405
3405 This is almost identically the form of what Socrates (Apol.
c. 2) declared to be the falsehood circulated by his enemies to his
prejudice. “But far more dangerous are those who began when you
were children and took possession of your minds with their falsehoods,
telling of one Socrates, a wise man who…made the worse appear the
better cause” (λόγον,
“reason”), Tr. Jowett, 1 (1874), 316. This example does
peculiar discredit either to the learning or the mental honesty of the
author. | and playing
continually with the subtleties of controversy, fell a victim to the
slander of his own countrymen and fellow-citizens. Pythagoras, too, who
laid special claim to the virtues of silence and self-control, was
convicted of falsehood. For he declared to the Italians that the
doctrines which he had received during his travels in Egypt, and which
had long before been divulged by the priests of that nation, were a
personal revelation to himself from God. Lastly, Plato himself, the
gentlest and most refined of all, who first essayed to draw men’s
thoughts from sensible to intellectual and eternal objects, and taught
them to aspire to sublimer speculations, in the first place declared,
with truth, a God exalted above every essence, but to him he added also
a second, distinguishing them numerically as two, though both
possessing one perfection, and the being of the second Deity proceeding
from3406
3406 Rather “deriving existence from,” “proceeding
from,” gives strict idea, but may be confounded with the
technical “proceeding from” of the “filioque”
controversy, which is quite another phrase. | the first. For he is the creator and
controller of the universe, and evidently supreme: while the second, as
the obedient agent of his commands, refers the origin of all creation
to him as the cause. In accordance, therefore, with the soundest
reason, we may say that there is one Being whose care and providence
are over all things, even God the Word, who has ordered all things; but
the Word being God himself is also the Son of God. For by what name can
we designate him except by this title of the Son, without falling into
the most grievous error? For the Father of all things is properly
considered the Father of his own Word. Thus far, then, Plato’s
sentiments were sound; but in what follows he appears to have wandered
from the truth, in that he introduces a plurality of gods, to each of
whom he assigns specific forms. And this has given occasion to still
greater error among the unthinking portion of mankind, who pay no regard to
the providence of the Supreme God, but worship images of their own
devising, made in the likeness of men or other living beings. Hence it
appears that the transcendent nature and admirable learning of this
philosopher, tinged as they were with such errors as these, were by no
means free from impurity and alloy. And yet he seems to me to retract,
and correct his own words, when he plainly declares that a rational
soul is the breath3407 of God, and
divides all things into two classes, intellectual and sensible: [the
one simple, the other]3408
3408 “The one simple” is not in the text, but is a
conjectural addition of Valesius, followed by most translators.
“Consisting of bodily structure” seems possibly to be an
epexegetical phrase relating to the “all things” which he
divides into intellectual and sensible, making the intellectual as well
as the sensible to have bodily (somatic) structure. “All
things,” or “the universe,” a plural technical term,
is regarded as his mind passes to the explanation as “the
all.” This psychological probability appears a simpler solution
than the various textual conjectures. | consisting of
bodily structure; the one comprehended by the intellect alone, the
other estimated by the judgment and the senses. The former class,
therefore, which partakes of the divine spirit, and is uncompounded and
immaterial, is eternal, and inherits everlasting life; but the latter,
being entirely resolved into the elements of which it is composed, has
no share in everlasting life. He farther teaches the admirable
doctrine, that those who have passed a life of virtue, that is, the
spirits of good and holy men, are enshrined, after their separation
from the body, in the fairest mansions of heaven. A doctrine not merely
to be admired, but profitable too.3409
3409 Heinichen suspects that there has been an inversion of words here,
and that it should have been, “He further teaches the admirable
and profitable doctrine,” and “a doctrine not merely to be
admired” omitted. | For who can
believe in such a statement, and aspire to such a happy lot, without
desiring to practice righteousness and temperance, and to turn aside
from vice? Consistently with this doctrine he represents the spirits of
the wicked as tossed like wreckage on the streams of Acheron and
Pyriphlegethon.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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