Philosophy of Plotinus Vol 2 - William Ralph Inge 1918
Philosophy of Plotinus Vol 2 - William Ralph Inge 1918
Philosophy of Plotinus Vol 2 - William Ralph Inge 1918
THE PHILOSOPHY
OF PLOTINUS
THE GIFFORD LECTURES AT
1917-1918
ST.
ANDREWS,
BY
C.V.O., D.D.
;
IN
TWO VOLUMES
VOL.
II.
CO.
PATERNOSTER
ROW,
LONDON
YORK
FOURTH AVENUE
I feel certain of being on the right track when seek in that which should be the ground of that
which
is.
LOTZE.
SYLLABUS OF LECTURES
LECTURES
XII, XIII
and third
belief
centuries.
Tertullian
is
strangely materialistic
his real
seems to have been that the soul dies with the body, to be raised again at the last day by a miracle. Widely different views were held about the intermediate state. Clement and Origen accept, with some reservations, the Greek conception of immortality the resurrection of the body, though not denied, is tacitly shelved. Origen is notable as teaching a succession of world-orders, with sustained upward pro;
gress.
For Plotinus, the Soul neither comes into existence nor perishes the indestructible principle of life. He has no room for bodily resurrection and rejects the popular notion of spiritual bodies in a
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it is
semi-gaseous condition. The distinctions of individuals are not lost in the eternal world but Spirits are completely transparent to one another all that separates us here will have disappeared. Souls which have lived unrighteously are reincarnated in bodies of a lower order, and are sometimes chastised by their daemon or guardian angel. But only the lower soul can thus fall the higher part is sinless. The problem is how to maintain the true view of eternity, as supratemporal existence, without either sundering the eternal and temporal from each other, or reducing the world of time to a vain shadow. We know under the form of eternity whatever we know as sharing in Goodness, Truth, and Beauty. Eternity is the kingdom of Divine Ideas or absolute values. The doctrine of reincarnation offers us chains of personalities linked together by impersonal transitions. Nothing survives except the bare being of the Soul, and its liabilities. The doctrine has found strong support in modern times, e.g. in Krause, Swedenborg, Lavater, Ibsen, Maeterlinck, McTaggart, Hume, Goethe, and Lessing speak of it with respect.
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viii
true reality. The categories of the Spiritual World. The category of Being is unsatisfactory Thought and its Object are not a pair of the same kind as Identity and Difference, Change and Permanence. The whole theory of categories is open to criticism. Proclus supports my contention that Plotinus would have done better to discard the Platonic and Aristotelian lists, and to make Goodness, Truth, and Beauty the It would then be clear that the attributes of Spirit and its world. Spiritual World is a Kingdom of Values, Values of truly existing Reality. Goodness, Truth, and Beauty are in our experience ultimates. They cannot be fused, or wholly harmonised, but they have the characteristic of mutual inclusion which belongs to the Spiritual World. The individual Spirit is the same life as the individual Soul, only raised above itself and transfigured into the Divine image. Blessed in heaven the whole is in every Spirits are fully known to each other And they enjoy unbroken communion with the Great Spirit, part. who is really the God of the Neoplatonic religion. Individuality is not but there is distinction without separation. lost, Eternal life is not the future life.' The Platonic doctrine of immortality is very different from the wish for survival in time. The of which kind immortality physical research endeavours to establish would be the negation of the only immortality which the Platonist desires or believes in. Eternity is an experience and a conception partly latent and partly patent in all human life. It is life amid truths which are neither born nor die. The Christian schoolmen intercalated aevum between time and eternity. Spiritual creatures, as regards their affections and as regards their natural being, by intellections, are measured by time aevum ; as regards their vision of glory, they participate in eternity Aevum seems to be perpetual duration, and as such a (Aquinas). symbol or sacrament of eternity. We cannot dispense with modes of envisaging eternity which depend on spatial and temporal imagery but popular religion has impoverished the idea of eternal life by insisting on its pictures of a material fairyland.
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SYLLABUS OF LECTURES
LECTURES XVII-XIX
ix
THE ABSOLUTE
The paths of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty all lead up the hill of the Lord. Plotinus shows us all three. Dialectic is the study of first principles, which leads to intuitive wisdom. It shows us that the common source of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty must be beyond existence and beyond knowledge. The duality in unity of Spirit and the Spiritual World points to an absolute unity behind them. This unity is beyond knowledge and existence, and In considering this train of is revealed only in the mystical experience. reasoning, we must remember that (i) the nature of the Godhead is (2) we are not cut off from the highest certainly unknown to us form of life (3) we have in the mystical state an experience of formless intuition. The doctrine goes back to a famous passage in the Republic
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history. Augustine says that God is essentia, not super-essential Dionysius describes God the Father as Deus per and Erigena is not afraid to say, indetermination For Plotinus, the excellentiam non immerito Nihilum vocatur.'
'
substantia.
'
One
but
'
is
beyond
oua-ia
and beyond
Spirit.'
It is
'
what
it
willed to be,
nothing not yet present. It is all necessity, and the giver a state of wakefulness It does not think, but abides in of freedom. beyond Being.' It is infinite, in the sense that its centre is everyIt is the First Cause and Final where, its circumference nowhere. Cause of all. Plotinus does not profess to explain how plurality can emanate from unity the problem is equally insoluble for natural His hypothesis is that of Creation. The One could not be science. alone.' It creates a second nature,' without passing out of itself in doing so. The activity of the Absolute is one-sided. The manner of creation is incomprehensible by us, because it can never fall within our experience the path back to the One can be trodden in experiThe Plotinian Absolute is different from the Hegelian, in that ence. for Plotinus the world is not an essential factor in the Being of the Absolute. We cannot deny the possibility of this one-sided creative activity without surrendering the transcendence of God, an essential
it wills
: '
'
doctrine of theism. Plotinus does not call the One the Beautiful but he really puts The One is the Goodness, Truth, and Beauty on the same level. The First Beautiful, and Beauty, beginning and end of Beauty.' are formless.' The Good means the Perfect. The Good makes things what they are good for,' and we must not take this in a narrowly ethical The Good is unity as the goal of desire. The longing for selfsense. completion and self -transcendence is universal; our whole life is a Virtue is not the Good, but a striving towards its proper goal. good.' All things aspire to the Good. The Spirit in love yearns for the source of all perfection. The character of the Plotinian mysticism is best illustrated by his own descriptions. They are based on personal experience, and closely resemble the visions of God described by other mystics. The method of abstraction,' or via negativa, which is often blamed as a progressive emptying of the personality, ending in a blank trance, is really only intense concentration on what are believed to be the essentials of the quest. Plotinus never despises the rich world of concrete experience,
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x
still less
the fullness of life in the Kingdom of the eternal Ideas. Nor is there (as some have alleged) any contradiction between his philosophy and his personal religion. In some particulars the mysticism of Plotinus differs from the (i) There is no occultism or prevailing type in Catholic Christianity, thaumaturgy in it, and no lore of Divine favours and supernatural visitations. There are no bodily showings and no revelations imparted during ecstasy. (2) There is in Plotinus no trace of the experience of dereliction, the dark night of the Soul.' The absence of this experience characterises philosophical as opposed to emotional mysticism but it is also connected with the comparatively slight consciousness of sin and alienation from God in the Neoplatonists. (3) The ecstatic state is for the Neoplatonist a very rare experience, and is reserved for those who have climbed the heights of Divine wisdom. The mystics of the cloister, on the other hand, found it by no means uncommon, and tended to regard it as an encouragement often vouchsafed to beginners. Here much must be attributed to expectation and tradition, and something to the greater strain of monastic discipline. The mystical state always follows intense mental concentration, and is not confined to religious contemplation. Poets and musicians have described similar experiences. The importance of ecstasy in Neoplatonism has often been much The mystic does exaggerated, as has that of Nirvana in Buddhism. not crave for absorption or annihilation, but for deliverance from the fetters of separate existence he longs to know that there is nothing between himself and God. There is and must be an element of illusion in the vision the mind which thinks that it contemplates the One But the idea of the One really visualises symbols of the unlimited. is capable of inspiring love and devotion for the source of all goodness,
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and beauty. The object of this love is never personalised, as in Christianity. But the Christian mystic also transmutes the objects of his veneration into Ideas, and knows them, and his fellows, no more after the flesh.'
truth,
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Conversio fit ad Dominum ut Spiritum. Christian Platonism invests Christ with the attributes of the Neoplatonic.
AND AESTHETICS
The connexion of Ethics with Metaphysics became closer all through the course of Greek philosophy, and at its latest stage the fusion is almost complete. For Plotinus, the course of moral progress begins with the political virtues, which include all the duties of a good citizen but Plotinus shows no interest in the State as a moral entity. After the political virtues comes purification. The Soul is to put off its lower nature, and to cleanse itself from external stains that which remains when this is done will be the image of Spirit. Neoplatonism The conflict enjoins an ascetic life, but no harsh self-mortification. with evil is a journey through darkness to light, rather than a struggle with hostile spiritual powers. Repentance is not emphasised. The desire to be invulnerable underlies all Greek philosophy, and in conseThe quence the need of deep human sympathy is undervalued. philosopher is not to be perturbed by public or private calamities. Purification leads to the next stage Plotinus puts enlightenment.
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SYLLABUS OF LECTURES
the philosophic
for
xi
life above active philanthropy, though contemplation We ave incomplete unless it issues in creative activity. the activity of Spirit.' His disparagement of mere action which is not based on spiritual enlightenment is quite defensible. Free will means we are not free until our highest selves are liberated, spiritual activity Freedom does not belong to our desires or passions, nor can we control the general order of the world. But our true selves are not cogs in a machine we are the machine itself and the mind which directs it. Each Exaggerated determinism destroys the idea of causation. Soul is a little first cause,' and the Universal Soul is above the antithesis of freedom and necessity. Necessity includes freedom.' The highest but the noble doctrine stage hardly belongs to ethics unification that there is progress even yonder,' depends on the doctrine of the One. Love, the activity of the Soul desiring the Good, is never transcended. In spite of this, the moral isolation of the sage may be regarded as a defect in Neoplatonic ethics. The Religion of Plotinus is really independent of the Pagan Gods and their cultus. He allegorises the myths in the most arbitrary manner. But he believes in the damons, who rule the intermediate sphere between earth and heaven. This was a current belief of the time, which has no inner connexion with his philosophy. Similarly, magic and sorcery, though he dislikes and minimises them, could not be repudiated. Theurgy is no integral part of Neoplatonism but the school fell into it later, and even helped to elevate superstition into a dogma. Prayer, especially the prayer of quiet, was the life of religion for the Neoplatonist. All things pray except the One.' The mainfaith begins as an experiment spring of religion is experimental and ends as an experience. God is at first an ideal, and at last an Man may worship either the Universal Soul, or the atmosphere. Great Spirit, or the ineffable One. The difference between Neoplatonism and Christianity have often been exaggerated. Augustine finds all Christianity in the Platonists, except the Incarnation. His criticism remains the most penetrating comparison of the two creeds. The Incarnation and Passion of the Son of God, with the acceptance of for others which do not those doctrines imply, refute the suffering philosophy of Plotinus they complete it. But the attempt of some Christian Platonists to equate the three Divine hypostases of Neoplatonism with the Trinity was not successful. The Beautiful includes, for Platonists, all that is worthy of love and admiration. It is thus impossible to separate aesthetics from ethics and religion. The beauty of the Soul is to be made like to God. Plotinus makes an advance in aesthetic theory in refusing to make symmetry the essence of the beautiful. The forms of beauty are the mode in which the Universal Soul stamps the image of itself on Matter. The Soul in contemplating beauty identifies itself with the formative activity of its own higher principle. Art does not copy nature it creates, like nature, after the model of the spiritual world. His identification of ugliness with absence of form is less happy. Ugliness is false form. But Plotinus is again valuable when he finds in art the recognition of hidden sympathies in nature, which enable us to translate beauty into another medium. Most modern writers on aesthetics are indebted to Plotinus.
him
'
is
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xii
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
There are disquieting resemblances between the period which ushered in the downfall of ancient civilisation and the present worldBut we must remember the Greek conviction that the calamity. nature of anything is its highest development, and find comfort in the spiritual heights often attained by individuals, which may be an earnest of the achievements of humanity in the far future. The educated classes must prepare to practise an austerity of life like that of the ancient philosophers in the grievous time that probably awaits them. The whole heritage of the past is at stake together we have a sacred tradition to preserve. Christianity, Platonism, and Civilisation must stand or fall together. Christianity and Platonism agree in maintaining that values are absolute and eternal, and that spiritual things must be spiritually discerned. The Platonist can reconcile this with reverence for reason and science. The too facile optimism of Plotinus in dealing with evil must be corrected by the Christian doctrine of vicarious In our day we have most need to remember that suffering suffering. Our altruistic hedonism is a warning symptom, not the disease itself. has thrown our whole view of life out of perspective. We need to examine the conditions of real happiness and unhappiness, which have very little to do with external goods. Our false view of life presents civilisation to us in such an ugly aspect that we dare not face the facts or obey the laws of science, but fly to sentimentalism, ultimately the most cruel of all moods. We can help our fellows best by purging our own spiritual vision. The problems of civil government seem to be at present insoluble. The only deliverance is to correct our standard indivisible goods which are of values, and to set our hearts on the not lost by being shared. To preach this is the duty of religion and philosophy, and not to be the jackal of any political party. The Neoplatonic mystic must be prepared to outgrow many early enthusiasms, and to break every mould in which his thought threatens to crystallise. The danger of arrested development is aiways present. Life is a schola animantm ; and we must be learners to the end.
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THE PHILOSOPHY OF
PLOTINUS
LECTURES
XII, XIII
*
THE
to
Greeks, like the Jews, soon outgrew the barbarous notions about survival which are almost
among savages. Both peoples, and especially the Jews, for a long period attached very little importance to the life after death and when they came at last
universal
;
the belief in immortality a part of their religion, this belief was not even historically continuous with the
ideas of primitive soul-cultus, which had their centre in the performance of pious duties to the departed spirit. This belief in a shadowy survival could lead to no doctrine
make
The ruling idea in all Greek thought and death was that deathlessness is a prerogative of the gods. The gods, and the gods alone, are the immortals. In the national Greek religion, before it was influenced by the beliefs of other nations, there was no
of real immortality.
life
about
tendency to break down the barrier between the human nature and the Divine. Greek ethics were largely based on the maxim that man must know his place. There had no doubt been instances, so it was believed, when the souls
1 The great importance of this subject has seemed to me to justify a more lengthy excursus, or introduction, dealing with the growth and varieties of the belief among Greek thinkers, than a strict attention to proportion would have allowed.
II.
had been admitted into the company of the but these allowed to share their immortality and gods were exceptional and miraculous favours, which in no way affected the doom of ordinary men. The popular belief was that after death we have nothing to look forward to except the unsubstantial and unenviable conof heroes
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men outworn
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The philosophical and religious belief in immortality came to the Greeks not from the Olympian religion, but
religion associated with the worship of Dionysus. It was perhaps the fundamental sanity and self-restraint of the Greek genius which led them to
view with superstitious awe and amazement the manifestations of religious excitement with which they came in contact among other peoples. Even more than other nations, they were disposed to attribute the wild ebullitions of Oriental and semi-barbarous tribes to a Divine madness (Oela jmapla) or possession by a god (evOavari* It was especially Dionysus, the Thracian god, 007x09). who makes men mad.' 1 He was probably the god of of dancing dervishes before he became religious ecstasy the god of wine, which produces similar effects. For our
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religious
present purpose the important thing to note is that excitement produced an inner conviction or
experience of the Divine origin and destiny of the human soul. The author of the Contemplative Life, in a remarkable sentence, says that the bacchanals and corybants
'
continue their raptures until they see what they desire.' 2 That ecstasy is a form of madness was fully admitted.
Galen defines
1
it
as
'
'
brief
madness/ as madness
Herodotus,
4. 79.
t<rr) t
'
is
chronic
fa
avOpwTrovs,
But even
Homer
knew of Maenads ira.XXo/J.fr'r) jj.ey6.poio difocrvro fj.awa.8i. Kpa.dirjv. The deep impression which this orgiastic worship made on the Greek is the mind literature. apparent throughout * De Vit. Cont. 2, p. 473, ol ^KX^VO^VOL /ecu Kopv^avnuvres evdovffidfavfft
If this work, which was issued fj.txpis &v TO TroOovpevov tddxriv. under the name of Philo, is a third-century forgery, as Lucius and others have argued, its value as evidence is not great but the words quoted are true of the genesis of orgiastic attempts to induce the
;
mvstical state at
all
times,
But
this did not prevent the belief that a man ' out of his mind might be the
'
organ of some higher intelligence, and that in particular Thus ecstasy the gift of prophecy is thus imparted. helped to break down the barrier between men and gods, and orgiastic worship gave an empirical support to the
philosophic mysticism which taught that there is no impassable cleft between the human and the Divine
of the idea of personality which apparent diremption in ecstasy promoted the belief in reincarnation and the transmigration of souls, which Euripides connects with Thrace and 1 On the whole, we may say that the chief Dionysus. attraction of this worship was that it led up to flashes of Sentimus intuition that man is immortal, like the gods. et experimur nos aeternos esse, as Spinoza says. The Greeks attributed the warlike courage of the Thracians to the teaching of their religion, that death is a transition to a
Spirit.
The weakening
its
followed from
happier state. It cannot be said that this mystical faith in human immortality has left many traces on Greek literature. Pindar, whose poetry as a whole does not suggest deep
it, and Euripides has a more genuine sympathy with Orphic ideas. The Greek mind remained, throughout its great flowering-time, Even in Plato's Republic posit ivist and humanistic. Glaucon, who is an ordinary young Athenian, answers the Have you not heard that our soul is imquestion, 2 mortal ? No, really I have not.' is Of the philosophers, Thales vaguely reported to have 3 But neither he nor his taught that souls are immortal. immediate successors can be supposed to have believed in the immortality of particular souls as such. This doctrine belongs to the Orphic tradition. 4 In Heracleitus
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Euripides, Hecuba, 1243. Plato, Republic, 608. Livingstone, The Greek Genius, p. 201. Diogenes Laertius, i. 24. Rohde, Psyche, Vol. 2, p. 144. Cornford, p. 179, emphasises the difference here between rhe
'
Dionysiac
and the
'
'
Orphic
view of immortality.
and Parmenides we find the two doctrines of immortality which are implicit in mysticism, separated out for the first
is the champion of the Dionysiac view death follow each other in an unending and under Parmenides, cycle Orphic influence, teaches that the Soul has fallen from the realm of light and reality to the dark and unreal world of bodily existence. This, however, is for Parmenides only the way of opinion he feels, it would seem, that the substantiality of the world of common experience is not so easily got rid of. But he will not give up the unchanging stability of
time.
Heracleitus
that
life
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eternal substance.
is
The most
interesting fragment
of
that in which he seems to enunciate, for Parmenides the first time in Greek thought, the mystical doctrine of eternity as a timeless Now, as opposed to the popular
There remains then unending succession. of an to account one give way that real Being only are there exists. upon it, showing that it is Many signs 1 unborn, indestructible, entire, unique, unshakable, and
notion
of
'
unending. It never was, and it never will be, since it is all together present in the Now, one and indivisible/ 2 Empedocles vehemently repudiates the philosophy of Parmenides, probably on the ground that he reduces the world of time and change to nullity, and thus leaves no pathway from appearance to reality. His doctrine of the soul's exile and wanderings is expounded in a famous fragment. 'There is a decree of Necessity, an
old ordinance of the gods, everlasting, sealed with broad oaths, that whenever one of the daemons, whose portion
is
length of days, has sinfully stained his hands with murder, or followed strife and committed perjury, he
fiovvoyevfs. Burnet says that fj.owoyevts and comes from the Timaeus. He proposes fj.ow6v
,
is
an anachronism.
'
oi'-Xo^ei/ej
alone,
complete.'
p. 185.
XeiTrereu
u>$ &TTIJ/T
ravrri 5'
'TTI
(T^ar'
^a<rt
TroXXd
avui\edpbv <TTIV /J.ovv6yfvs re Kal d.Tpe/j.s 178' drAco-rov. TTOr' TJV Ot'5' IWCU, ^TTfl VVV tffTIV 0/J.OV 7TCU',
ytidX',
ws dyti>r)TOV ebv
/ecu
must wander away from the blessed gods for thirty thousand seasons, being born throughout that time in all manner of mortal forms, passing from one to another of the painful paths of life. For the power of the upper air drives him toward the sea, and the sea spews him earth throws him into the rays of the out upon dry land sun into the eddies of the air. One the and sun, burning receives him from another, and all loathe him. Of these I myself am now one, an exile from God and a wanderer,
;
1 This is the put my trust in raging strife/ also which Pindar doctrine, gives us in the pure Orphic The Soul sins by separating second Olympian Ode. itself from God, and after many adventures finds its way home again to Him. The fall from God is a fall from
because
harmony. and strife alien the body, with its senses, is only an blended and death. at When garment/ perishes Empedocles describes the Soul as a ratio, or harmony, he means that the complex of discordant factors (' strife ') which it contains is bound together by the principle of unity (' love '). As regards Parmenides, it may be true that he rejects the Pythagorean doctrines which he describes, and finds
love
and a choice
;
'
of
is
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Mr. Cornford says very well that Orpheus, the ideal Orphic brotherhood, is a Dionysus tamed and clothed and in his right mind/ In the Orphic legend, it
of the
'
XeXd^aat
jStoio,
rpis
fj.vpias
s
upas
airb
paKapuv
d\d\tja-0ai t
iravTola. did
xpovov
eidea.
/3i6roto jUeTaXXacro-orra
jitv
ovdas a7r^7rru<re, yaia 5' ^j atry&s rjeXiov (paedovros, 6 5' ald^poy fyt/3aXe SiWu,
TTOVTOS
5'
& x^wfa
1-
ydp
<r<pe /J.tvos
irbvrovSf SMKCI,
AXXos
5'
T&V
1
Kal
^70.1
vvv
ct/id,
0i/"ydj
6eb6ev Kal
iriffvvos.
In the
first line I
of
Bernays
p^a
for xpw<>
was the Maenads who tore Orpheus, the friend of the Muses, to pieces. The Greek spirit could not be content with orgiastic mysticism the affinity between human and divine must be realised in a calmer temper, and must be made the basis not only of a cult, but of a philosophy. But the Pythagorean philosophy, like most philosophies
;
incompatible ideas.
ised Orphism, in
press for an answer. Is the descent of the Soul part of a cosmic pulsation, a circulation of the life-blood of the spiritual world, as Heracleitus taught, or is it a thing
which ought not to have occurred, and which must be remedied by the discipline which leads to deliverance ? Is the Soul a part of nature, or is it radically alien from
nature, so that we must live our lives here as prisoners in a hostile country, or at best as pilgrims escaping from the Is the city of destruction to the far-off city of God ?
individual Soul a mere
mode
of a universal
life,
or
is it
an eternal and indestructible substance ? And is the Universal Soul a group-soul, of which individual Souls are integral parts, or is it a transcendent substance, from which individual Souls are derived, but from which they remain essentially distinct ? How Pythagoras himself was thought to have combined some of the earlier
answers to these questions
'
is
best
He taught transformed into other kinds of living beings further, that whatever comes into existence is born again in the revolutions of a certain cycle, and that nothing is absolutely new, and that all living things should be treated as akin to each other.' 1 But the emphasis is laid on the fortunes of the individual Soul and its purification or deliverance by suffering, both here and hereafter. The Pythagoreans are
of his doctrines preserved
first,
by
Dicaearchus.
that Soul
is
in Europe the inventors of purgatory. Pythagoreanism was a mystical philosophy of immortality by death unto
1
An
important
question is whether the Pythagoreans conceived of heaven as a timeless state, as we have seen that Parmenides did. Baron von Hiigel 2 has rightly insisted that all states
'
of trance, or indeed of rapt attention, notoriously appear to the experiencing soul, in proportion to their concentration, as timeless
;
i.e.
as non-successive, simultaneous,
hence as eternal.
here a conclusion drawn from the apparent God-likeness, in other respects, of the soul when in this condition, but the eternity, on the contrary, is the very centre of the experience itself, and is the chief inducement to the soul
be Divine. The soul's immortality cannot be experienced in advance of death, whilst its eternity, in the sense indicated, is or seems to be exhence the belief in perienced in such this-life states
for holding itself to
;
immortality
here derivative, that in eternity is primary/ But though the Orphic-Pythagorean aspiration to escape ' from the weary wheel of rebirths seems to resemble
is
'
the Buddhist longing for the timelessness of Nirvana, it is certain that the Pythagoreans did not envisage the future life as unconscious. In the Orphic Tablets, the Soul,
is forbidden to approach a certain spring, which must be the water of Lethe, and is bidden to draw near another, by the lake of Memory.' The beatified Soul, then, remembers its past. Here the influence of popular religion may be traced. The question as to the timelessness of the Pythagorean heaven does not admit of an answer, any more than the same question about the Christian heaven. All religious eschatology is a mass of contradictions. Although Plato has always and justly been regarded as the great champion of human immortality, it is impossible to find any fixed and definite conviction on the His views of immortality, or at subject in his writings.
^TrtTTjSetfowriv
^ &Tro6v/i<TKiv re
of the arguments by which it may be established, passed through several phases. In the Phaedo, the whole argument is that the theory of Ideas and the doctrine of the immortality or divinity of the Soul stand or fall together. 1 This position is rather startlingly different from the agnosticism of the Apology, in which Socrates"
any rate
says that no one knows what happens after death, but there is a considerable hope that the good man may find
himself in
on earth.
more congenial company than he has met with It may be that if the speech was actually
delivered by Socrates it does not contain those deeper convictions which he reserved for his friends. There is
a hint at the beginning of the Phaedo that Socrates has more convincing arguments than those which he used when addressing his judges and it is likely enough that
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he would not make confession of his mystical faith to a mixed and mainly hostile audience. In the Meno, an early dialogue, immortality is treated as a beautiful tale of priests and poets but he also says that if the truth of real being (ra ovra) is in the Soul, it must be immortal. In the Phaedo the first argument calls in the doctrine of reminiscence, which is used to establish pre-exist ence. It is inferred that the Soul remains unchanged through successive incarnations. But this is only an indication of survival for a time, not a proof of immortality. Then,
;
finding his hearers not satisfied, the Platonic Socrates argues that the idea of Soul is the idea of an entity un-
changeable and imperishable. Or, assuming the doctrine of Ideas, we may argue that since the Ideas are simple and indiscerptible, the Soul which knows them must be so too. Lastly, after disposing of the notion that the Soul is a harmony of the body, he argues that the Soul is the idea of life, and is therefore alien to death. This seems to be a fallacy 2 the proper inference would only be that the Soul, as far as it exists, is alive and not dead.
;
dj irplv Kal
a
Plato, Phaedo, 76, fcnj Avdyirr) ravrd (SC. ret elS-rj} re eli/cu Kal ravra ovdt rdde. T)fj.3.s yeywtvai, Kal ei ' It is the familiar fallacy of the old ontological proof.'
9
'
The argument ends with the well-known myth about the condition of Souls hereafter, of which Socrates feels sure that something like it must be true/ In the Republic and Phaedrus he argues no longer that
'
immortal because it partakes in the idea of life, but that it has life, indestructible life, in its own 1 'to It is not difficult/ he says in the Republic, right. subprove immortality, because Soul is substance, and stance is indestructible. Nothing can be destroyed and Soul, except by that which corrupts its own nature which cannot be destroyed even by its own evil injustice or ignorance (' a murderer is very much alive and wide awake ') can still less be destroyed by any physical agency. This argument, he adds, applies to the Soul as it really is, not to the Soul contaminated by its associathis latter is like the sea-god Glaucus, tion with flesh who is so encrusted with limpets and sea-weed that he is hardly recognisable. In the Phaedrus he argues that the cause of life is a self -moving principle, which cannot
the Soul
'
is
Every self-moving principle is Soul. By moveSoul is the ment he means any form of activity. that which and self -deter mining principle in nature
perish.
'
'
'
'
is
through its own will. If it is in a fallen state here, that must be because it has chosen to make for itself an unworthy environment, suited to its own disposition. It is God is not in fault the fault is in the chooser/ Soul of the immortal the union impossible to believe that with the corruptible body/ which only takes place because the Soul has lost its wings, is immortal/ If Plato had stopped here, his position would have been not unlike that of some modern philosophers, who hold that the world of reality is constituted by a plurality of independent spirits, each existing in its own right, very much as he at one time thought of the Ideas as distinct
indirectly,
'
' ;
'
and independent spiritual entities. In fact, the Ideas and the Souls would then threaten to coalesce. But this
1
r.
to
kind of pluralism could never satisfy Plato or any other Greek thinker. The Ideas are not the Souls of individuals, but half-hypostatised Divine attributes, in which individual Souls participate/ a word which signifies a Moreover, the spiritual and non-quantitative relation. Ideas, as Plato came to see, are not independent of each
'
other.
their
common
con-
dition of dependence upon the Idea of the Good.' Just so individual Souls derive their being from their Creator,
God. Thus a new argument for immortality appears in the Timaeus. The higher part of Souls, at any rate, is the direct work of the Divine intelligence which created
them.
God cannot wish to destroy His own work, and nothing else can destroy it. Individual Souls, then, are not immortal in their own right. They are immortal because they are made by God in His own image. And it is only the higher part of the Soul of which this can be
said. We are therefore left in some doubt how much of what we consider our Souls is really immortal. There is no abstract ego about which the blunt question to
'
be or not to be
Aristotle's
'
can be asked.
of immortality depends on his view of activity (evepyeia). Instead of the conception of substance as the unchanging substratum of change, he holds that perfect activity transcends change and motion. Activity is the actual functioning of a substance, the nature of which is only so revealed. So far from activity being a kind of movement (K/WJO-IS) he
doctrine
characteristic
1 says that movement is imperfect activity. Activity does not necessarily imply motion or change in the frictionless activity of God, which constitutes his happiness, there is neither. Change is sweet to us because of a certain defect/ The happiness of God is derived
; '
the creature of
'
ment
is
the
'
number
Cf. Plotinus, 2. 5. 3.
11
time and no movement. God is an eternal perfect so that and continuous and eternal duration, life, Being,
1 As regards the belong to God, for God is all this/ of has always the Aristotle individual, immortality been considered to give very dubious support to the hopes of mankind. In fact his treatment of the subject in the De Anima makes it fairly clear that it is only (what we should call) the 'impersonal' Nous which is immortal. The eschatology of the Stoics is vague and uncertain. In a sense, the Soul must be immortal, because nothing ever really perishes. Forms change, but the substance The destiny of the Soul, as of everything else, persists. is to be reabsorbed into the primal essence, which the
Stoics, following Heracleitus, identified with, or symbolised by, fire. But they were not agreed whether this nor absorption takes place immediately after death
;
whether the individual continues to keep his individuality till the great conflagration nor whether he falls by into the Divine essence, degrees through a course of 2 Marcus Aurelius is quite agnostic gradual purification. on the subject. Thou hast embarked thou hast made thou hast come to port leave the ship. thy voyage If there is another life, there are gods there, as here. If thou passest to a state without sensation, thou wilt be delivered from the bonds of pleasure and pain.' 3
; ' ; ;
;
Further, Cleanthes held that the Souls of all men live on till the conflagration, Chrysippus that only the Souls of the wise live after death. In a new cycle, they taught, Souls return to earth, and the successive lives of Socrates
the First and Socrates the Second will resemble each other, though (in opposition to Plato) there is no reminiscence of former lives. But in some of the later Stoics, 4 when the prejudice against Platonism had disappeared,
1
8
3
12
a real belief in personal immortality was not discouraged. Seneca believes in a heaven very like that of the Christian religion. He is able to say of death, That day which 1 you dread as your last is your birthday into eternity/ Seneca is known to have been influenced by Pythagorean
'
doctrine
2
;
but
he
is
on
'
Stoical
adduces
tality.
'
common
consent
as an argument for
The Epicureans,
;
before Plotinus. Educated men most cases believed vaguely in some sort of probably filled in their and sometimes survival, pictures of a future life with such a jumble of eschatologies as is found in the sixth ^Eneid of Virgil, which doubtless affected
in
as is well known, denied a future life but the influence of this school was declining
Roman
those
beliefs as
much
of
Englishmen.
The
common
people,
and
religiously-minded conservatives, continued to pay respect to the Manes of the dead, and believed that their spirits haunt the neighbourhood of their tombs. Etruria had contributed a less pleasant kind of spiritualism, that which maintained the old festival of the maleficent
Lemures in May. 3 Belief in survival was supported by numerous ghost -stories of the familiar type, such as are
ridiculed
by Lucian
the
chief
in his Philopseudes.
In this dia-
philosophical schools, except the are Epicureans, represented as joining in the tales of The apparitions. younger Pliny believes in haunted
logue
all
houses. For the age of the Antonines Galen is as good a witness as any. He believes firmly in Providence, but sees difficulties in all the theories of a future life. The Platonists of this period, with Plutarch and MaxiDies iste quern tamquam extremum reformidas Seneca, Ep. 102. aeterni natalis est.' 2 Through his teacher Sotion, who induced him to be a vegetarian. 3 Ovid thinks that the occurrence of this festival in May is the reason why marriages in that month are supposed to be unlucky. I found this precious superstition very rife in my fashionable West End parish, but those who held it had not read Ovid, and did not observe
the Lemuralia.
1
'
13
were the great champions of immorPlutarch bases his belief, as so many do in our day, mainly on the justice of God and the rationality of the world-order. He points out that even the most sombre beliefs about the torments of the damned are more welcome to the majority of mankind than the
tality.
prospect of annihilation. The Epicureans deprive mankind of their highest hopes, while seeking to rescue them from their fears. In two of his works 2 Plutarch recounts myths like those of the Phaedo and Republic, visions of judgment which, he would have us believe, are probably not very far from the truth. But the two pictures of the world of spirits are not alike. In the first, Thespesius, a bad man, who had apparently been killed by an accident, revives on the third day, and tells his experiences. He has found an Inferno and a Purgatorio, and a third form
of
The penalties are rather ingenious. The hypocrites are turned inside out the miser is plunged into a lake of boiling gold ; the soul of the cruel man is blood-red, that of the envious
are sent to inhabit the bodies of animals.
;
blue. In the other myth, Timarchus descends into the cave of Trophonius and sees a revelation of the spiritworld. An unseen guide explains to him that it has four The highest sphere is that of the invisible divisions.
is
One. Next comes the region of pure Spirit, ruled over by the sun. The moon is queen of the third kingdom, that of Soul. Below, on the other side of Styx, is the world
the first death 'the Soul wanders between the realms of the moon and earth. The second death finally liberates the Spirit from its association with this muddy vesture of decay. All Souls have a spark of the Divine nature in them, but in some
of
'
Matter.
After death
'
'
it is
clogged and
swamped by the
baser elements.
Some
released from the body, fly straight upwards, Souls, others wander through the middle air, others fall back
1
when
Dill,
Plutarch,
Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius, p. 520. De Sera Numinis Vindicta and De Genio Socratis.
14
Even the daemons may incur this last These and similar myths express in poetical and imaginative form the kind of theodicy which the religious mind of the Greek was at this time prepared to accept. They have an obvious resemblance to some Christian but it was not till theology came pictures of judgment under the rigid discipline of the Roman Church that
again to earth.
fate.
;
immortal life will receive the but death the impious living.' 1 The eternal dead, pious Soul is in its nature immortal it cannot perish with the decaying body. But God, who renders everything
Philo believes that
;
'
'
by balance and weight/ ordains that every Soul shall reap what it has sown. The just punishment of sin is not physical torture, but the inward furies of passion and The true hell is the life of the wicked man. guiltiness. This doctrine was especially taught by the Epicureans, and is not uncommon in classical literature. But Philo
holds that the punishment of living death the state of uttermost grief, terror, and despair, is continued and
increased after death.
whom
there
is
no forgiveness. 2
Philo says nothing of the resurrection of the body, nor of the last judgment, nor of the Messianic
The
of immortality does not fall within the scope of this book. But the writings of the Alexandrian school of Christian
theology throw a good deal of light on Neoplatonism, and they are perhaps especially useful in relation to the problems of human immortality. Clement and Origen represent not so much Christian tradition as the atmosphere of learned and educated thought at Alexandria in the half century before Plotinus migrated to Rome.
They were
1
2
loyal and,
in
Philo, Post. Cain. n. See references in Drummond, Philo Judaeus, Vol. 2, 322-324.
15
antipathy to secular culture which at other times and places has erected a barrier between sacred and profane
studies.
Origen in particular
is
and when they differ. The future life had from the first a far greater importance in Christian teaching than it has in Philo or any other Jewish writer. The destruction of the world by fire, the resurrection of the dead with their bodies, the great assize, the eternal reward of the good and the eternal punishment of the bad, were in the first age of the Church
to philosophical
'
While the Messianic hope lasted, the end of analysis. the age seemed so near that small interest was taken in the questions whether the Soul is essentially immortal, and what will be its condition between the day of death and the general resurrection. It was only when educated Gentiles, and Jews of the Dispersion, who had never been
ardent Messianists, became interested in Christianity, that the philosophical doctrine of the immortality of the Soul had to be set by the side of the religious prophecy of
the resurrection of the body. Christian teaching was unanimous in insisting that in some way or other the whole man, and not merely his
ghost,
is
immortal.
'
The doctrine
of St.
that though flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, a spiritual body/ on the nature of which he does
not speculate, is prepared for everyone, or for all the redeemed. The bodies of those who happen to be alive at the end of the existing order will be changed into this spiritual essence. Great confusion prevailed in the the whole Some Christian church on subject. early thinkers were strangely and frankly materialistic. Tertullian says that the Soul is 'nothing if it is not body.' 1 Souls are kept in the lower regions till the day of the Lord/ a vague phrase which is meant to cover his real
' ' '
Tertullian,
De Anima,
'
nihil
si
non
corpus.'
16
conviction that the Soul dies with the body, and that both are raised again by miracle at the last day. 1 This, and so he speaks however, he could not openly admit
;
Soul as remaining in a deep slumber till the day of judgment. Justin condemns as unchristian the doctrine that the Soul is taken to heaven at the death of the body such a view does away with the necessity of a resurrection. Theophilus will not answer the quesof the
;
is
naturally neither, but is capable of becoming either one or the other.' 2 A common view seems to have been
it is
that those
that Souls are by nature both material and mortal, but who receive the Spirit (Trvevjma) live for ever.
it
would be
unjust for the Soul alone to suffer for sins which the body incited it to commit. Theology was in an awkward intermediate state.' dilemma, especially about the
'
Either the souls of the saints and martyrs have perished, and must wait for their resuscitation till the last day, which was receding into a very dim future, or the Soul must be capable of living apart from the body, as a superior and deathless principle subsisting in its own right, which was precisely the point at issue between Platonism and Christianity. Such was the problem which the Christian school of Alexandria endeavoured to solve. With some reservations,
as a natural
endowment
of the Soul.
The
spirits in prison,
to
preached, could accept His message more easily because they were delivered from the burden of the flesh. After death, souls are sent to purgatory, where
whom Christ
inflicts
no vindictive punish-
1 What other conclusion can we draw from such words as the 'Mors, si non semel tota est, non est. Si quid animae refollowing non vitae magis miscebitur mors quam diei nox. manserit, vita est Anima indivisibilis, ut immortalis, etiam indivisibilem mortem exigit credi, non quasi mortali, sed quasi indivisibili animae indivisibiliter accidentem.' Z> Anima, 51. 8 Theophilus, Ad Ant. 2. 24.
:
17
the Saviour of
education,
die.
It is
them till they repent. The Logos is Our life in time is essentially an and our education does not cease when we continued till we are fit to enjoy the beatific
all.
It would be possible to quote statements of Clement which do not agree with these views. He admits frankly that he does not write down all that he thinks there is an esoteric Christianity which is not for everybody. But it is plain that he leans towards the doctrines which
vision.
The
resurrection of the
body
tated
;
is
an
otiose
dogma
in his creed.
The body
of
were bound to believe, was resuscibut the Alexandrians did not believe that His
like ours.
body was
Origen takes the step which to every Greek seemed the logical corollary of belief in immortality he taught the pre-exist ence of Souls. The Soul is immaterial, and therefore has neither beginning of days nor end of life. Further, it must be immortal because it can think Divine its love of thoughts and contemplate Divine truths God and desire for Him are also signs that it belongs to the eternal world. So convincing is this Platonic faith to him, that he cannot restrain his impatience at the crude beliefs of traditionalists about the last day and the resurrection of the dead. The predictions in the Gospels cannot have been intended literally. How can material bodies be recompounded, every particle of which has passed into many other bodies ? To which body do these molecules belong ? So, he says scornfully, men fall into the lowest depths of absurdity, and take refuge in the 1 pious assurance that everything is possible with God.' We shall not need teeth to masticate food in the next world, and we need not suppose that God will provide the wicked with new teeth to gnash with/ 2 The Christian doctrines of the destruction of the world^by fire and
; ' *
OUTOJS
rivos o$v &TTCU <rwyua iv rrj di/aarcura ; nai /cat ^tera rairras ras diropiat cirt
*
Id. p. 535.
i8
not of Platonism but of Stoicism. The Stoics a is of that the end taught brought about world-period a that creation and and by conflagration (eKTrvpcocri?)
;
renovation are the work of the seminal Logoi.' These Stoical doctrines in truth are difficult to reconcile either with Platonism or Christianity but Origen had a difficult course to steer between the Gnostics, who thought that the Soul can exist without a body, and the simple believers really the inheritors of the Jewish Messianic tradition who hoped for such a resurrection as that which Ezekiel saw in the valley of dry bones, in preparation for a new life under quasi-terrestrial conditions. So he adopted the Stoic doctrine of the conflagration in a manner which we will consider presently, and main;
' '
'
is
is
'
sown
a seed, and finally produces another body true to type. 1 But this involves him in great difficulties. Samuel in the Old Testament appears to Saul in the form of an old man Moses and Elijah were seen at the Transfiguration in their former shapes. It is plain, then, that the Spirit is clothed with a spiritual body before the resurrection, and the general resurrection is tacitly abandoned. Moreover, though the seminal Logoi are forms,' the spiritual body which they create must be totally unlike the forms which we know here. If we were destined to live in the water, we should have to be changed into fish since we are to live in the spiritual world, we must have an ethereal body, without organs or limbs which will be useless in that state of existence. Lastly, what part ot our personality is the seminal Logos ? It cannot be Spirit, and it cannot be Body. Is it then the Soul ? But if it is buried in the earth like a grain of wheat, we are
;
'
'
'
1 Jerome, an unfair critic, no doubt, says that Origen taught corporales substantias penitus dilapsuras, aut certe in fine omnium hoc esse futura corpora quod nunc et aether et caelum et si quid aliud
'
intelligi potest.'
19
The inherent contraeschatology have never been more forcibly exhibited, precisely because Origen was not the man to glide over difficulties. As for the conflagration and the end of the age,'
traditional
' '
'
Origen, as is well known, follows the Stoics in teaching, quite contrary to the Christian tradition, that there will be a series of world-orders. But whereas Greek philosophy
could admit no prospect except a perpetual repetition of the same alternate evolution and involution, a neverending systole and diastole of the cosmic life, Origen
holds that there is a constant upward progress. Each world-order is better than the last, and the whole process is working out a single design of the Creator. The conflagration
it
is
would not do to
though, Origen adds, really a purifying fire tell this to everybody, since the fear
;
on many But the truth is, that as all Spirits were created blameless, all must at last return to their original perfection. 1 The education of Souls is continued in successive
of endless perdition exercises a salutary restraint
sinners.
worlds.
A comparison of Origen and Plotinus, who resembled each other in their devotion to truth, and in lovableness and nobility of character, cannot fail to be instructive. In treating of the all-important subject with which we
are
now
concerned, Origen
is
is
beset
by
difficulties
from
which Plotinus
;
has not only to reconcile, if he can, the conflicting opinions of the great Greek philosophers he has to solve, if possible, the most formidable problem of Christian theology how to make room for the Jewish philosophy of history by the side of the Platonic philosophy of eternal life. He falls into but it is while strugcontradictions, as w e have seen gling with these that he strikes out the noble theory of
free.
r
He
Even if Origen was harassed into denying the logical consequence of his doctrine (Rufinus, De Adtilteratione Libronim Origenis), that the devil himself will ultimately be saved, it is plain that no other conclusion can be drawn from his arguments. For Origen 's defence against
1
20
a stairway of worlds, superimposed one on another not in space but in time, and leading up, by their ascending grades of perfection, to the consummation in which
'
God
shall
be
all in all.'
The ascent
of the Soul,
which
Plotinus describes as an inner process of the individual, is in Origen's philosophy writ large in the life-history of
the universe
itself.
It is as if
Neoplatonic system were travelling, with all individual For Plotinus, the Souls, towards the heavenly city. Universal Soul can always pray and aspire, but it seems to have no history. Whether Origen's vision of cosmic progress is tenable scientifically is another question. In the history of philosophy his theory holds a place as an interesting attempt to give the world a real history, within the Divine scheme, without at the same time admitting progress or development in God Himself. The main passage in which Plotinus deals with the immortality of the Soul is the seventh chapter of the Fourth Ennead. There are, he says, three possible answers to the question whether the Souls of individuals
are immortal.
Either the individual, as such, is immortal or he entirely perishes, or part of him perishes and another part lives for ever. Man is not a simple being,
;
but
is
compounded
of
Body and
If
Soul.
is
then the body is an integral of be we cannot us, entirely immortal. But it is a part truer view that the relation of the Soul to the Body is
dissoluble needs
no proof.
like that
of
Form
instrument.
The Soul
The Soul
the
'
exists in its
own
right
it
It is itself
one and simple activity in living/ 1 and as such it is indestructible. Can anyone doubt this, asks Plotinus, who considers the capacity of the Soul to behold and contemplate pure and eternal realities, to see even the world that is illuminated by Spirit, to mount up to God
4. 7.
912,
/u'a
<7a
- <i'<m rty upx^J Kivrjireui, luyv r<$ ^u^i'^y <rw,ua7C diSowa. Kal TT\^ cvepyeia tv T$ ^v.
21
Purification and likeness within itself ? education bring us to the knowledge of the highest and all these spiritual glories are beheld by Soul, things not as things outside itself, but as things in which it shares, as its own inmost nature. The Soul has life and being in itself, and life can never die. Even the lower
them. from the body, no longer which are not extinguished 1 Such faculties survive but death, by potentially only. as opinion, reasoning, and memory are not used in the spiritual world, not because they need bodily organs, but because they are superfluous under the conditions of Disembodied Souls may still act on the eternal life.
in
The
world, benefiting
oracles. 2
in
As for the resurrection of the body, Greek thought would have been horrified at the idea that the Soul will be swathed to all eternity in what Empedocles alien garment of flesh/ called the Resurrection, says Plotinus explicitly, is an awakening from the body, not
'
with the body. 3 Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God, neither can corruption inherit incorrupt ion. But Plotinus does not need the hypothesis of an ethereal He does not help out spiritual body/ his notion of the spiritual world by peopling it with creatures in a semi-gaseous condition an expedient which had been tried by many of the Stoics. His rejection of a bodily resurrection is a necessary consequence of the very doctrine on which he bases the immortality of the Soul. Nothing that has true being can ever perish, 4 nor can it ever come into existence. There are no new
'
1 Whittaker shows that there was some hesitation among 6. 4. 16. the later Neoplatonists as to the survival of the irrational soul.' 3 8 3- 6- 6 4- 7- 15* "All that is at all Lasts ever past We may compare Browning's " Kein Wesen kann zu nichts zerf recall"; and Goethe's alien, Das
'
-
Ewge
22
Souls
eternity.
The lower
has been illuminated by the higher, may accombut the fate of the after it leaves the body lower Soul depends on our manner of living. It is not easy to answer the question how far For Plotinus individuality is maintained Yonder. of true existis the character source and highest unity of the ence, separation very sign imperfection and defect of reality. Soul Yonder, he says explicitly, is Thus individuality undifferentiated and undivided. 2 And yet in heaven is hardly a prize to be striven for. Souls are Logoi of Spirits, and each represents a distinct This distinctness can entity in the spiritual world. never be destroyed. But the distinctions of Souls, 3 Disthough not lost, are latent in the world of Spirit. carnate Souls are in a sense absorbed into the Universal 4 Plotinus believes Soul, and help it to govern the world. in and describes a blessed state in which the Souls of but the just men made perfect live in joy and felicity condition and crown of this felicity is precisely their liberation from all that here below shuts them off from the most complete communion with each other. The question is not whether in a state of blessedness the circumference is indefinitely enlarged, but whether the centre remains. These centres are centres of consciousness and consciousness belongs to the world of will it comes into being for the purposes of will, when the will has to grapple with new conditions. It is there is a life below connot conterminous with life is a and life above what we mean by there sciousness, consciousness. The metaphor of a centre of consciousness is purely spatial, and the idea of a continuing state
;
;
4.7. 14.
iter in
2
non
esse.'
23
purely temporal.
In the spiritual
actually meaningless. problem may sphere has richness of content ; an infinite existence Spiritual the eternal world is no undifferentiated jelly/ And this
'
the
be
'
They among Souls. see themselves in each other/ They have then characteristics of their own which are not merged in the unity of
rich
life
We may further assume that since every world represents a unique purpose in the Divine mind, and since all psychic ends, though striven for in time, have their source and consummation in eternity, this, the inner meaning and reality of each individual life, remains as a distinct fact in the world of
all spiritual life.
life
in this
Spirit.
whether it likes it Mysticism/ says Keyserling, or not, ends in an impersonal immortality/ But impersonality is a negative conception, like timelessness.
negated in timelessness is not the reality of the present, but the unreality of the past and future. Time is only forbidden to devour itself. So impersonality,
is
'
'
What
'
'
it is
means simply the liberation of the idea allowed to expand as far as it can.
;
How far that is, we admit that we do not know clearly but the expansion is throughout an enrichment, not an The inWhen Keyserling adds impoverishment. stinct of immortality really affirms that the individual If this were is not ultimate/ we entirely agree with him. not true, how could men die for an idea ? Souls which have lived unrighteously are sent into other bodies as a punishment, and a man's daemon or guardian
'
:
angel
when it is out of the body. 1 Punishments are proportioned by Divine law to offences. 2 But the notion that virtue is hereafter rewarded by pleasure and comfort, while vice is chastised by torments,
may
Plotinus says repugnant to the later Platonism. if any man desires from a virtuous life anything beyond itself, it is not a virtuous life that he
is
severely that
1
3.
4 6;
I. 6. 6.
4. 3. 24.
24
desires.
This was the opinion of the Alexandrian school generally. Origen speaks with contempt of those Christians who take literally the temporal promises and threats of the Old Testament. He is ashamed to think that the
heathen, whose moral sense
is more advanced than to a such to inducements virtuous life, may hear of accept
the teaching which is commonly given in the churches. Origen will never believe that health, power, riches, or other advantages of the same kind, are the end of virtue to say this would be to admit that these vulgar rewards
;
are of greater worth than virtue itself. 1 The bad man, 2 says Plotinus, is doomed to dwell with shadows here and hereafter he is punished by being depraved in his Soul
;
into a lower place in the scale of being. 3 must, however, remember that for Plotinus, though not for Proclus, it is only the lower part of the Soul that
and degraded
We
can sin and be punished. 4 This inferior part he sometimes calls 'the image of the Soul.' 5 The higher Soul is
sinless.
How
far, it
may
Soul's destiny affect what Christian theology calls salvation ? Can the Soul be lost ? The answer would seem
to be that the
self
which we
'
'
call
when we
are thinking
of our future prospects in time or eternity, may or may not be identical with the higher Soul which has its place
We gain our Souls our our thoughts and interests, by identifying personal actions, our affections and hopes, with this pure and eternal essence, which is ours if we will. The Soul of the bad man may be lost, but not the Soul which he would have called his if he had not been a bad man. The Soul which cannot be lost is that which he calls Spirit in Soul (vov$ cv V^Xtf)- So in Origen the Spirit seems to be an impersonal power which is and is not part of the If the Soul is disobedient to the Spirit, if it Soul.
indefectibly in the spiritual world.
' '
'
1 8
Commentary on Psalm
3
4.
*
3. 2. 4, 8.
i. i.
12.
i. i.
ii
4. 3. 27,
32.
25
Similarly, immortality in the vulgar sense, the survival of the empirical ego, is in a sense a goal which we may win or lose, or win imperfectly. So
we can make ourselves, during our earthly life, instruments for the purposes of God which He intends to realise through our means, we give indestructible value and reality to our life. We are what we love and care
far as
abut.
things.
activity, another by thought, another by desire. The souls, thus contemplating different objects, are and become that which they contemplate.' There are others, however, which contemplate only some vain phantom
which it world by
'All souls,' says Plotinus, 1 'are potentially all Each of them is characterised by the faculty chiefly exercises. One is united to the spiritual
of time, soon to pass into nothingness. Those who so live are not living the life of Souls in any true sense. For
it is
and we as
in
it
passing.
of human immortality, not only for the philosophy which is the subject of this book, but for any philosophy of religion, must be my justification for offering some further reflexions upon it before
ending this lecture. Immortality may be understood in three ways. It may mean unending continuance in time or a state which is absolutely timeless or a state which transcends time, but for which the time-series has a meaning and importance. The popular notion of eternity is that it is a series of moments snipped off at one end but not at the other. This life is a similar series snipped off at both ends. The individual comes into being at one point of time, and is launched into eternity at another. His birth is commonly regarded as a quantitative addition to the sum of existence. This belief hardly belongs to philosophy. It is part of the naive conception of human
;
;
'
'
'
'
4- 3- 8.
26
which popu-
elements of the contributed concrete and strength by positive Jewish tradition, has not discouraged. It is well known how long the geographical heaven and hell held their own in popular Christian teaching, in fear of losing the
indeed they have not yet ceased to hold it. There are parts of Christendom in which it is unorthodox to deny the existence of a subterranean torture-house, which in the Middle Ages furnished a plausible explanation of volcanic eruptions. Modern astronomy has destroyed the popular Christian cosmology, and has thereby probut the parallel foundly modified religious belief doctrine of a temporal eternity still survives, though the difficulties attending it are no less formidable. This doctrine postulates the ultimate reality of time as an unending series of moments, but destroys it again by giving no permanent value to each moment as it passes. The series is never summed and leads to nothing. Further,
lar belief
;
the popular notion of eternity destroys all essential connexion between our present lives and our future state. We are to be rewarded or punished but these rewards
;
of a tribunal,
and are
only externally connected with the acts of which the tribunal takes cognizance. Nevertheless, Kant admits the idea of an unending process, adding that in the mind of God this process takes the form of a timeless attainment. But an unending process can surely not be the symbol of any attainment whatsoever. If any purpose is involved in it, that purpose must be eternally frustrate.
The idea of eternity as timeless existence is clearly by Plato. He says in the Timaeus that while the Father was ordering the universe, He made, out of eternity, which abides in unity, an eternal image moving according to number, which we call time. Past and future are relations of time, which we wrongly ascribe to the We say that it was and shall be, though Divine essence. we can rightly say only that it is/ 1 How this teaching
stated
'
27
The problem is how to maintain this view of eternity as supratemporal existence, without either sundering the higher and lower worlds entirely from each other, or
reducing the world of time and change to a vain shadow. The view of Plotinus is, as we shall see, that eternity is the sphere of the ultimately real, above the forms of
space and time, in which all meanings and values, all real distinctions, are preserved, and in which the Divine
attributes of beauty, goodness,
fully operative. in the scale of being,
and
and truth are fully realised The Soul determines its own rank for it is what it loves and desires
nature to aspire to the eternal the things of time under Our mind, so far as it under1 We should add stands, is an eternal mode of thought.' that so far as it loves the true, and wills the good, and sees the beautiful, it is an eternal mode of life. Whatever can be known under the form of eternity is to that extent
It is its
know
'
eternal,' as Spinoza says again. All that participates in the attributes of the eternal world, as they are known to us namely, goodness, truth, and beauty, can be known under the form of eternity. By participation in
certain disposition of the intellect, Intellectual feelings. goodness is a just appreciation of values, positive and negative. Goodness of the
goodness
will,
mean a
and
will is
a steady desire and purpose to make the positive values actual in the world around and within us, and to
suppress the negative. In feeling, goodness is an emotional attraction towards all that is pure and noble and
lovely
and
of
good report.
of
By
truth or wisdom
mean
the
correspondence
idea
with
fact.
Intellectual
wisdom is the knowledge of the laws, physical, psychical, and spiritual, by which the world is governed. In the will, it is consent to and active co-operation with these
laws,
which are
its
own
1
28
but created by the Divine wisdom itself. This consent and co-operation constitute the freedom of the will. In
feeling, it is the love of God's law. By beauty I mean the expression of a true idea under an appropriate form. As in the two other cases, there is a beauty of thought,
of action,
It is
and
of feeling.
by living resolutely (as Goethe said) in the whole, the good, and the beautiful, that the Soul wins its eternal life. As we rise to this sphere, we apprehend more and
more
significant facts
about existence.
The lower
facts
are not lost or forgotten, but they fall into their true place, on a greatly reduced scale. Mere time-succession,
as well as local position, becomes relatively unimportant. The date and duration of life are seen to be very insignificant
facts.
Individuality, as
determined by local
distinctions of
and not on
On the character, is seen to be a very small matter. other hand, the great unselfish interests, such as science and love of knowledge of all kinds, the love of
art
in its purest
and beauty in all its forms, and above all goodness form unselfish affection are seen to be
the true life of the Soul. In attaining this life it has in a sense to pass out of the normal soul-life into a higher it has passed from death sphere, not dominated by time
:
unto
time.
life,
life
Christ says quite explicitly that we can only save our Souls by losing them that is to say, the Soul must
sacrifice
what seem
own
'
interests,
which it will one day call its own. The Soul thus enters heaven by ascending in heart and mind to the things that are above above itself.
in the service of the higher life
'
'
'
The
is
all
that the true values are valid always and everywhere order of the universe is just, rational, and beautiful and that those principles which exalt us above ourselves and
;
'
whom we
open heaven to us are the attributes of the Creator live and move and have our being.
in
29
(TraXtyyevecrta.)
not follow the fashion and discuss the survivals Researches into the civilised religions. of are the interesting to the anthrosavage psychology have some would and importance to the student pologist, of comparative religion, if we could have any confidence that European travellers can ever really understand the But the Platonist and mentality of primitive races. Aristotelian can have no sympathy with attempts to poise a pyramid on its apex. For us the nature of religion I/ is what it may grow into and our starting-point, if we turn to history, must be the conceptions of early civilised
of
totemism in
In this case we begin with Egypt, from which, according to the tradition of antiquity, Pythagoras derived his doctrine. In Egypt the theory of transmigraraces.
human
who
tion
to transmigrathe soul ultimately returns into human form and, though there is no escape from the cycle when once it has started, the Soul may gain deliverance after return1 In India, good and bad alike transing to human form.
are
;
and there is no deliverance from rebirths. migrate Hence the Buddhist revolt against the doctrine. 2 Em;
Jevons, Introduction
to the
of Karma, which properly means action/ is much older than Buddha. In Buddhism its basis is the inexorable law of psychical Educated Buddhists do not believe in individual retricontinuity. bution e.g. that an idiot is a man who in a former state misused his
The theory
Buddhism does not believe in permanent faculties. psychic individuality. Actions and their consequences are indissolubly linked together, but the notion of individual retribution belongs to the illusion of the ego/ which this philosophy seeks to eradicate. What we call a person is only the transient embodiment of past activities. It is only in considering the whole of humanity as bound together, like the parts of a universal whole, that we can seize the full signifiintellectual
' '
30
become a god, which indeed it has always been. another good witness to early Pythagorean teaching, holds that only the bad are condemned to
will
Pindar,
transmigration, the good being admitted to a state of happiness in a place which was variously described as the sky, the air, Elysium, or Olympus.
of transmigration offers us chains of 1 personalities linked together by impersonal transitions.' Nothing survives except the bare being of the Soul, and,
The doctrine
'
we may
add, its liabilities. But Plato does not hold the Souls do not all doctrine in an uncompromising form
:
drink enough of the waters of Lethe to forget everythe importance of recollection in his writings thing is well known. Leibnitz thought that immortality and without recollection is ethically quite useless many others profess that such an immortality would have no attractions for them. But others would be satisfied to know that they will live on in the great spiritual interests with which they identified themselves they could say with Browning, Other tasks in other lives, God willing.' It is not continuity of consciousness which they prize, but perpetuity of life amid the eternal ideas. The doctrine has found many supporters in modern
'
'
'
'
'
times.
The philosophy of Krause is on this arid some other subjects of special value to a Neoplatonist. Pflei'
There cance of the doctrine of Karma (quoted from Prof. Narasu). are no creators or created, and men are not real beings (Kuroda). If Nevertheless, liberation from the bonds of the past is possible. the will was free, it would be impossible to change our character by education. Precisely because the will of man obeys motives and depends on causes, he can transform himself by changing his environment and regulating the motives of his will (Narasu). Karma, so regarded, is impersonal perpetuity, modifiable by disinterested volition. It is clear that Karma and Heaven-Hell are two alternative theodicies, which cannot be blended without confusion. If we adopt the former, punishment, like sin, is finite, and belief in eternal life is quite independent of any idea of compensation. Attractive as the belief in reincarnation is, it seems to have no intuitive sanction. 1 Bosanquet, Value and Destiny of the Individual, p. 267.
'
' ' '
31
derer, who writes most sympathetically about Krause, thus sums up his views about the life of the Soul. 1 Man's whole vocation is likeness to God in this life, or the un-
folding of his godlike essence in his own distinctive way as an independent active being, according to his three
faculties, true
knowing, blessed
feeling,
and holy
willing
it is
and doing.
first
That
himself aright
he should distinguish aright what he is as spirit and what he is as body, and how these two are related to each other. As spirit, man knows himself in the light of his knowledge of God to be an eternal, unborn, and immortal rational being, destined to fulfil in infinite time his divine destiny as a finite spirit an infinite number of times in an infinite number of periods
of all necessary that
or life-centres.
The
souls of
men upon
natures
of the universe,
tion,
which suffers neither increase nor diminuin and with God as an eternally perfect
infinite
number of life-periods, develops itself to its maturity, and then declines to the point of returning to its unity in God. But this death of one life-course is at the same time a beginning, a second birth into a new
life-course/ The doctrine of reincarnation was taught by the Manicheans and Cathari, by Giordano Bruno and the theosophist Van Helmont. Swendenborg believed
men who lead bestial lives will be reincarnated in the forms of the animals which they resembled in characthat
ter.
Goethe and Lichtenberg dallied with the idea of Hume declared transmigration more or less seriously that metempsychosis is the only doctrine of the kind worthy of attention by a philosopher Lessing speaks the respectfully of it, without being himself a believer
; ;
friends of Lavater at
quite in the
manner
1
32
Peter had
come
to
life
Never will a Schopenhauer says of metempsychosis, be more with myth closely connected philosophical
truth.'
Plotinus, as we have seen, says that the true awakening of the Soul is the awakening from the body, not w ith
r
the body. Successive reincarnations are like one dream after another, or sleep in different beds. 2 It is a universal law that the Soul after death goes where it has
it longed to be goes to its own place/ as was said of Judas. Particular Souls are in different conditions. Soul, as Plato says, wanders over the whole heaven in various forms. These forms are the sensitive, the rational, and even the vegetative (</>VTIKOI>) The dominating of the fills Soul which the function part belongs to it the other parts remain inactive and external. In man the inferior parts do not rule, but they are present however, it is not always the highest part which rules the lower parts also have their place. All parts work together, but it is the best part which determines our Form as man. When the Soul leaves the body, it becomes that faculty which it has developed most. That is why we ought to flee to the higher, so as not to fall into the life of the senses, through association with sense-images, nor into the vegetative life, through abandoning ourselves to the pleasures of uncleanness and greediness we must rise to the Universal Soul, to Spirit, to God. Those who have exercised their human faculties are born those who have lived only the life of the again as men as lower The choleric become wdld animals. senses, with the lustbodies suitable to their character beasts,
; '
.
'
Fourier thought that the souls of planets will be reincarnated, Leroux is another Frenchman who has held
3. 6. 6.
etS TOV TrpOf'l]KOVTQ. TOTTOJ'. ^. 3. 24,
the doctrine.
*
33
ful and greedy become lascivious and greedy quadrupeds. The merely stupid become plants they have lived like vegetables in this life, and have prepared themselves only to be turned into trees. Those who have been too fond of music, but otherwise have lived pure, become unreasonable tyrants, if they have no singing birds
;
Dreamy
man again or if this pursuit, he has successful in he been indifferently 1 is reborn as a social animal, a bee for instance.' a at Platonic his hand is Plotinus obviously trying be for to he this in and once, seems, slightly myth passage, amused at the picture which he is drawing. In another 2 passage he shows how distributive justice may be exercised among those who are reincarnated as men. Cruel those who have misused their masters become slaves
; ;
The murderer is murdered wealth become paupers. himself the ravisher is reborn as a woman and suffers the same fate. As for the Souls which have freed themselves from the contamination of the^flesh, they dwell where is reality and true being and the divine, in God such a Soul as we have described will dwell with these and in God. If you ask where they will be, you must ask where the spirituarworld^is and you will not find
;
' ; ;
it
doctrine
truth.
of
I think, that Plotinus does not take the reincarnation very seriously, as scientific
Sometimes he speaks of a inconsistent. 4 sometimes the bad Souls disembodied purgatory as lower are reborn have we animals, and some(as seen) times retributionjn kind falls upon them in their next life as human beings? Porphyry and lamblichus both refuse
is
He
for
to believe that
l
,
human
2
3- 4- 2.
3- 2. 13.
by
their
daemon,
4. 8. 5.
II.
34
tradict Plotinus lightly. 1 The fact is that Plotinus is not vitally interested either in the question of individual
survival in time, or in that of rewards and punishments. As Dr. McTaggart says 2 of Hegel, he never attached much importance to the question whether Spirit was
'
eternally manifested in the same persons, or in a succession of different persons. Dr. McTaggart adds that no
1
'
philosophy can be justified in treating this question as But perhaps Plotinus and Hegel would insignificant/ agree in answering that it is not so much insignificant as
meaningless. Dr. McTaggart
a strong believer in reincarnation, and his chapter on Human Immortality is very instructive. In comparing the philosophy of Lotze with that of Hegel, he blames the former for making his God something higher than the world of plurality, and therefore something more than the unity of that plurality. There is no logical equality between the unity which is Lotze 's God and the plurality which is his world. The plurality is dependent on the unity, but not the unity on the plurality. The only existence of the world is in God, but God's only existence is not in the world/ No clearer statement of the fundamental difference between Hegel and Plotinus could be made. The view of Plotinus is precisely that which Dr. McTaggart blames in Lotze. Dr. McTaggart proceeds to say that on this theory any demonstration of immortality is quite impossible. That
is
' ' '
.
to say, unless I am as necessary to God as God is to me, there can be no guarantee that I have any permanent have already seen place in the scheme of existence.
is
We
how
1
Souls have
ova-la
real
being
is
Augustine, De Civ. Dei, 10. 30. Porphyrio tamen iure displicuit. Stobaeus, Eel. I. 1068, ol d TrepL Hoptfitipiov &XP 1 T & v toftpuTtlviAv piuv. and ^Eneas of Gaza, Nemesius, De Nat. Horn. 2 (about lamblichus) Theophr. p. 61. Proclus (in Tim. 5. 329) tries to prove that Plato never meant that human Souls can inhabit the bodies of beasts. 8 Hegelian Cosmology, p. 6.
;
35
They
Absolute, but are created by Him. It is an essential attribute of God that He should create, but His creatures
are not parts of His being.
and
immortal because they possess ova-la there is a qualitative difference between creatures that have ova-la and But the empirical self, about those that have it not. whose survival we are unduly anxious, is a compound which includes perishable elements. And this composite even trees have character is found all through nature a share in Soul, in true being, and in immortality. Our immortal part undoubtedly pre-existed, as truly as it will survive but the true history of a Soul is not what Aristotle calls an episodic drama, a series of stories disconnected from each other, or only united by Karma/ The true life of the Soul is not in time at all. Dr. McTaggart says that the relations between selves are the only timeless reality.' Plotinus would certainly not admit that relations can be more real than the things which they relate and he would also deny that Souls find themselves only in the interplay with other Souls.
;
'
'
On the contrary, it is only in self-transcendence that the individual finds himself and he is united to his fellows
;
not directly but through their common relationship to God. Dr. McTaggart asks, How could the individual^, develop in time, if an ultimate element of his nature was But what ground have destined not to recur in time ? we for supposing that the destiny of the individual is to develop in time/ beyond the span of a single life ? It is V a pure assumption, like the unscientific belief in the
'
' '
But a Neoplatonist might arrive at reincarnation by another road. Since the nature of spiritual beings is always to create, is not the Orphic aspiration to escape from the grievous circle after all a little impious ? Must not work, which means activity in time, be its eternal destiny ? The active West, on the whole, sym' '
36
Give her the wages of going Why should not the saved Soul brave and new ? The Orphic forth on adventures go and Indian doctrine of release seems to be condemned by the Neoplatonic philosophy, when it has the courage to follow its own path. The beatified Soul has its citizenbut it must continue always to produce ship in heaven its like on the stage of time. In what sense these successive products of its activity are continuous or identical with each other is a question which we must leave to
pathises with Tennyson's on and not to die/
' '
'
'
those
whom it interests. To us their only unity is in the source from which they flow, and in the end to which
they aspire.
LECTURES XIV-XVI
THE SPIRITUAL WORLD
Nou?
votja-is
votjrd
have already noticed the peculiar difficulty of finding equivalents for the most important terms in the philosophy of Plotinus. It was unfortunate that we could find no word except Matter for v\t], which is above all things immaterial. For Xo'yo? there is no single English word. It is quite different from the
' '
WE
'
ists
Logos of Christian theology, whom the Christian Platoninvested with the attributes of the Plotinian Not/?. 1 Creative activity comes near the usual meaning of
'
^vx*i again
is
often nearer to
is
Life
'
than
'
Soul/
Even more
serious
'
the difficulty
Modern
'
writers on Neoplatonism
' '
have chosen
'
intellect,'
'
intelli-
gence/
thought/
reason/
these are misleading. lectualist (in the sense in which Hegel has been called an intellectualist or panlogist '), nor, in the modern
'
He does not exalt the discursive sense, an idealist. reason (Sidvoia or Xoy^r/xo?) to the highest place. These are the activities proper to Soul, not to the principle 2 The discursive reason has its function higher than Soul. in separating, distributing, and recombining the data of
Cf. (e.g.) Clement, riyeftovovv 6 0e?o? \6yos . .
1
Strom.
7. 2. 8,
im-iv
rt>
ws d\7?0ws &p-%ov re
ctXT/Trros al<rdri<rei.
/ecu
t.^*
doctrine
Ammonius
TJ
^vxn
&
eavr?)
tvrlv
&TO.V
XoylfrTo.i,
tv
T$
l>(j.
QTO.V VOTI.
37
38
experience. In itself, as Aristotle says, it moves nothing. For this reason, its world is not wholly real. But Noi/? beholds all things in their true relations without the
And we
he
is
how
far
modern
idealism, that things are real when and because they appear to a mind which creates and contains them.
By far the best equivalent is Spirit. It need not cause any confusion with Tn/evyua, for this word is very little used by Plotinus, and does not stand for anything important in his system. It has the right associations. We think of Spirit as something supremely real, but incorporeal, invisible,
and
timeless.
Our
familiarity with
the Pauline and patristic psychology makes us ready to accept Spirit, Soul, and Body as the three parts of our nature, and to put Spirit in the highest place. 2 St. Paul also teaches us to regard Spirit as superindividual, not so much a part of ourselves as a Divine In all these ways, Now? and life which we may share.
Spirit correspond closely.
TO
It is
votjrov (or
Then, if we call Not/? Spirit, ra vonra) must be the spiritual world.' more difficult to find words for the verb voelv, and
'
the substantive
'
i/oV"'?.
'
They
are
usually
translated
'
To thought/ which is misleading. think is Xoy/fecr&u, and 'thought' is Sidvoia, both of which belong to the life of Soul. We must be content for ww/w, 3 with spiritual perception "or intuition
to think/
1
and
'
'
'
'
and perceive/
text.
behold/ or know/ for the verb. It will be convenient sometimes to retain the Greek words in the
In these three
Spiritual
Spirit,
'
'
'
World
we have the
1 This does not mean that logic is superfluous in the ascent to the noetic view of things. Thought is subsumed in the activity of vow. 2 Keyserling says that this psychology is still familiar to all students in the Eastern Church.
3 Cf. 5. i. 5, Zcrriv TI vorjtns o/ocwts bpCxra. Origen (Contra Celsum, Nouy, for the Christian Platonists, 48) calls it ai'crflT/cm oik caV0??T77. is almost equivalent to \6yos and irvev^a, which tend to flow together in their theology.
i.
39
but
it
and be
active there, without ceasing to be itself. For Plotinus, ^/reality is the spiritual world as known by Spirit, or Spirit
as
knowing the
spiritual
world.
the fully real and the completely true. 1 Most commentators on Plotinus have not emphasised this nearly enough.
They have made either the Absolute, or Soul, their starting-point, and have taken one of these as the pivot
of the whole system or they have opposed the spiritual and sensible worlds to each other as if Plotinus meant them to be two real worlds set over against each other. 1 They have left- untested the popular errors that Platonism is a philosophy of dualism, and Neoplatonism a philosophy i/of ecstasy, and have neglected the numerous passages which should have taught them that both these statements are untrue. We shall not understand Plotinus
;
realise in the first place that ova-la corresponds to what in Mr. Bradley 's philosophy is called nearly as reality opposed to appearance, and, secondly, that this reality is neither thought nor thing, but the indis-
unless
we
and
thing,
which reciprocally
The unity of vovs, v6r)<ns, and vorjrd is well brought out in a passage of Maimonides, quoted in a French translation by Bouillet. Tu connais cette celebre proposition que les philosophes ont enoncee a 1'egard de Dieu, savoir qu'il est I'intellect, Fintelligent, et I'intelligible, et que ces trois choses, dans Dieu, ne font qu'une seule et meme chose, dans laquelle il n'y a pas multiplicite. Comme il est d6montre que Dieu (qu'il soit glorifie !) est intellect en acte, et comme il n'y a en lui absolument rien qui soit en puissance, de sorte qu'il ne se peut pas que tantot il pergoive et tantot il ne perceive pas, et qu'au contraire il est tou jours intellecte en acte, il s'ensuit que lui et la chose percue sont une seule et meme chose, qui est son essence et que cette action de percevoir, pour laquelle il est appele intelligent, est I'intellect meme qui est son essence. Par consequent, il est perpetuellement intellect,
'
;
que si Ton dit que I'intellect, qu'un en nombre, cela ne Dans s 'applique pas seulement au Createur, mais a tout intellect. nous aussi I'intellect, 1'intelligent, et 1'intelligible sont une seule et meme chose, toutes les fois que nous possedons I'intellect en acte mais ce n'est que par intervalles que nous passons de la puissance a
;
i'acte.'
2
The following
STJ
passages,
;
among
others,
throw
IT
light
on
;
this point
8. 8,
5.
4. 2, vovt
Kal dv TCLvrbv
paypar a
Trcurci
40
2 1 imply each other. Ova-la is defined as that which belongs is of that which belongs to or an essential part itself, Mr. 's itself.' two criteria of reality It possesses Bradley that is to say, universality and inner harmony. It needs it exists neither supplementing nor rearrangement
to
and in perfection. Spiritual perception (VOYJO-L^) the apprehension of incorporeals 3 it is a seeing of the invisible. 4 It is the activity of Spirit 5 a phrase which might suggest to a modern idealist that vov$ creates the
eternally
is
; ;
certainly not the meaning of Plotinus. Timaeus of Plato, that Spirit sees the says, quoting the Ideas which dwell in real being/ What Plato calls the living being (faov) is not you? but voyrov. Spirit Are /sees the Ideas which dwell, in the spiritual world. ' these Ideas external to the Spirit which sees them ?
votird.
But
6
this
is
He
'
If they were, it could only possess the images of them, not the Ideas themselves ; there would be no direct But we cannot contact between thought and thing. admit this for though doubtless Spirit and the spiritual world are distinguishable (erepoy eKarepov), they are not separate or separable. Plato, when he says that vov$ sees the vorira, means that it possesses them in itself. The votjrov is vow, but vov$ in a state of unity and calm, while the vovs which perceives this vov? abiding in itself is an energy proceeding from it. In contemplating it, it becomes like it, and is its vow because it perceives It is in one aspect vovs, in another vonrov. (voei) it.' The Spiritual World, he says in another place, 7 cannot be outside Spirit, for then what link could unite them ? How then could we distinguish vdwis from alcr6ti<ri? which only beholds types and images of reality ? Can we be satisfied to say that justice, beauty, and goodness, the Ideas which Spirit beholds, are strangers to itself ? On the other side, the Spiritual World (i/o^ra) must either
; '
}
6. 3 4C. C. Webb (The Relations of God and Man, , pp. 157-159) has ellent excellent remarks on true knowledge as inherent in NoGs.
.
some
'
d/j.eyeduv
5-4-2.
avrfX^tj, 4. 7. 8. 3.9.
i.
5> 5
5. 5. I. x<
.
41
Spirit.
and
intelligence, or it
'
must have
'
In the latter case, the vorjra make up one thing with (6 TT/OWTO? you?), Spirit, and this thing is the first Spirit Are not then Spirit, the Spiritual World, and Truth 1 all
'
one P
'
If
we wish
1/01/9,
votird,
possible,
we must
concede to i/ou? the intimate possession of reality. Therefore Spirit, the whole of reality (=ra votjrd), and 2 Yet the relation between them truth, are one nature.' is not bare identity. The perceiving Spirit must be one
'
and two, simple and not simple.' 3 That is to say, if you? and vorird were diverse, they could not come together Each of if absolutely one, there could be no thought. them (of the vonrd) is Spirit and Being, and the whole is all Spirit and all Being. Spirit by its power of perception posits Being, and Being, by being perceived, gives to Spirit perception and existence. The cause, both of spiritual perception and of Being is another,' i.e. their common principle, the One. 4 The relation between them is one of essential identity actualised under the form of essential reciprocity. That the two sides of reality are of equal rank, and not one derived from the other, is plain from what has been quoted, and from several other
;
'
passages.
itself,
and
Spirit, in beholding reality (TO, ovra) beheld in beholding entered into its proper activity,
is itself.' 6
'
'
and
1
this activity
'AX?70eia
is
one
the correspondence between 9eupla and TO an equivalent of vbqffis. Afodiqffis, he says, conveys not dX^eta, but 56a, because it is passive (5. 5. i). 'Truth' requires the activity of the perceiving mind. In 5. 5. 2 dX^^eia is denned as self-consistency, and identified with voOs.
strictly
eeuprjTov.
Practically, it
is
3- 9- 3 /*ia roLvw $6cris vovs, TOL ovTa iravTa Kal dXiJ0a. dirXoO*' /cat ou% airXovv Set elvai. 5- 6. I, Tb voovv dec v Kal dvo elvai. 5- * 4 fxaffrov d avrCjv vous /ecu 6v GT(. Kal rb ffv^iro.v Tras vovs Kal TTOLV
6v, 6
5
^v
mistranslates vovs by Denken,' tries to prove that for Plotinus Denken is prior to its object. On this Richter (Neoplat. Stud. 3. 74, 75) says rightly: Wenn in der geistigen Welt der Begriff und das gedachte Ding identisch sind, so ist das nicht so zu verstehen, als ob der Begriff des Dinges das Ding selbst ist, sondern vielmehr das
'
'
who
vous /card rb votiv i)0t(TTdj TO 6V, TO 5e ov rw voeivdat T+ v$ Sidbv TO TOV d voeiv amov ctXXo, 8 Kal Tq> OVTL. Zeller (p. 568), 6/j.ou vous 7iVerat Kal ov (=vof]Tbv}. e.g. 5. 2. I,
'
'
ist
BegrinV
5. 3, 5.
42
The that seeks, but as one that already possesses.' 1 being of Spirit is this beholding of itself in the spiritual
'
world. 2
is
are one 3 ;
a,
and actuality are identical. New? and and votjvis is the activity of vov$. The
however, are the product not of i/ou? but of the spiritual nature (vorjrtj 0wn?) proceeds, like the rays from the sun, direct from the One, and not through the medium of vov$.* Reality is that which is 5 If Plotinus were a modern seen, not the act of seeing.' idealist, there would be no need of a super-essential alltranscending principle. Monism would be achieved, or
One.
The whole
'
rather aimed at, as in so many modern systems, by whittling away one of the terms. We have seen how far
is from attempting this solution. These quotations are perhaps enough to show that the famous dictum, the spiritual world is not outside (OVK eu> vov TO. votira), does not bear the sense Spirit which it would have in the mouth of a post-Kantian
Plotinus
'
'
But the problem puzzled Plotinus own disciples. Porphyry wrote an essay in refutation of the doctrine which he attributed to his master, hoping in this way to induce Plotinus to explain himself more But Plotinus only smiled, and asked Amelius clearly. to remove the misunderstanding/ A controversy followed between Amelius and Porphyry, which resulted in These the submission and recantation of the latter. but in dealing with so essays have of course perished
idealist.
' ;
important najd difficult a point in the Neoplatonic philosophy, it may be worth while to let Plotinus explain his
doctrine
'
We
of spiritual percep-
nor as impressions stamped upon it, thus refusing to Spirit the immediate to do so would be to condemn the possession of truth
;
tion as things
5. I. 4, i>oet ov
frTuv dXXa
3 *
2
5
5. 3. 12.
43
Spirit of ignorance in spiritual things, and to destroy the reality of Spirit itself. If we wish to maintain the possibility
of truth, of
reality of
is,
instead
which only gives us an image of the object, and forbids us to possess it, to unite ourselves with it and become one with it, we must allow to true Spirit the possession
of everything. So only can it know, and know truly, and never forget or wander in search, and the truth will be in it, and reality will abide with it, and it will live and know. All these things must appertain to the most for where else shall we find the worthy and blessed life the noble ? On this condition only will Spirit have no
;
for so Spirit
is itself,
and
knows that its own principle is and that that which comes next above itself, [the One] after the One is itself and none else can bring it any surer knowledge than this about itself it knows that
clear to itself
;
so Spirit
it
Absolute but with with not other, truth, therefore, agrees any it is, and what it is, itself it says nothing outside itself that it says/ 1 The same argument is developed in the ninth book of the Fifth Ennead, 2 which I will translate in a slightly abbreviated form. Spirit is not only in potentiality. it is It does not become knowing after being ignorant
exists in very truth, in the spiritual world.
;
'
always active
and always Spirit. It exercises its power from itself and out of itself, which implies that it is what it knows. We must not separate the knowing Spirit it is only our habit from the objects of its knowledge in dealing with the things of sense that makes us prone
;
make separations in the world of Spirit. What then is the activity of Spirit, in virtue of which we may say that it is the things which it knows ? Plainly, since Spirit
to
it knows and posits reality. Spirit The objects of therefore is all that really exists.
.
Sa-
5-
9- 5-8-
44
spiritual knowledge cannot be in the world of sense, for sensible objects are only derivative. The vorira existed before the \vorld ; they are the archetypes of sensible
things,
Spirit.
'
the Spirit the law of being. This is To know is the same as to be and the knowledge of immaterial things is identical with the things known. Thus Spirit and the real world are one. Spirit contains all things in itself, not locally, but as it possesses itself. Yonder all things are together and yet remain distinct, as the Soul may possess many sciences without conis
first
itself
fusion.
'
\J
sciences (cTria-Twat) which exist in the reasoning Soul are some of them of sensible objects (though this
The
kind of knowledge ought rather to be called opinion) these are posterior to the facts, being images of them others are of spiritual things and these are true sciences,
:
Spirit into the reasoning Soul, and not concerned with the objects of sense. In so far as they are scientific knowledge, they are identical with their objects, and have within them both the spiritual object and the it is faculty of spiritual vision. For the Spirit is within and with itself, always companying always active, though not needing to acquire anything, as the Soul does but in But the itself and is all Spirit stands things together. in the into world not were being objects spiritual brought by Spirit ; God, for example, and movement, did not come into existence because Spirit thought them. So when it is said that the Ideas are voSja-eis, if it is meant that the spiritual world only exists because Spirit thought The object of this knowledge it, the statement is untrue.
coming from
must
'
exist before
knowledge of
it.
Since then j/oV<? is knowledge of what in Spirit, that which is immanent is the
1
is
immanent
Form
True knowledge
of
(e7ri<rr^7/,
reality
the thing
known and
knower.
45
this
?
the Idea
(ISea).
What
is
Spirit
is not spiritual being (voepa the is And each idea but from different Spirit. Spirit, is each form each all and is the of whole forms, Spirit Spirit, as the whole of science is the sum of its theories ;
ova- la).
Each
idea
each theory is a part of the whole, not separated locally but having its power in the whole. This Spirit is in itself, and possessing itself in constancy is the plenitude of
If Spirit had been thought of (TrpoeTrevoeiro) things. as prior to being (i.e. before the vonra existed), we should have had to say that the activity and the thought of
we
produced and perfected all existences ; but since are obliged to think of being as prior to Spirit, we must insist that all existences are in the preceding Spirit, and that activity and voqa-i? come to existences, as the
Spirit
activity of fire joins itself to the essence of fire, so that immanent in Spirit, 2 have Spirit as
their activity. But being is also activity ; the activity of both then is one, or rather both are one. Therefore Being and Spirit are one nature, and so are all existences
and the
and the corresponding Spirit form and shape of being and its activity. In separating by our thought being and Spirit, we conceive of one of them as prior to the other. but For the Spirit which separates is in fact another the unseparated and unseparating Spirit is being and all
activity of being
;
things.'
as
This last chapter is as important as it is difficult. Spirit it is in itself does not attempt to separate itself from we go wrong as^soon as we think of the spiritual world the two as subject and object, still more if we think of
;
them as Form and Matter, or as creator and created. But our Spirit/ which is Soul exercising its highest faculties, cannot help using the categories of subject and
'
1 I am not sure of the meaning of this difficult sentence. Creuzer, Taylor, and Bouillet read v &VTOS for frbvros, wrongly, I think. Volkmann and Muller keep v 6vra. But I have no doubt that Ficinus is right in reading
'
46
object.
something
mind taking knowledge of something which it certainly did not create by thinking. And so we involuntarily conceive of one as prior to the other we either think as subjective idealists, or we affirm that the spiritual world is outside. Spirit.' The Spirit that neither divides nor is divided is no part of us we pass into it only when we awake out of ourselves and find ourselves in the presence of the One which is beyond existence. For Spirit, when it is absolutely undivided and undividing,
' ' ;
' ' ' ;
'
'
is
few more quotations may be added, though my ' contention has already been fully proved. If Spirit-initself (avrovov?) were the creator, the created would
have to be inferior to Spirit, but close to Spirit and like but since the creator {the Absolute] is beyond Spirit But why is the Spirit, the created must be Spirit. creator not Spirit ? Because vorja-is is the activity of
;
Spirit.'
Thus vovs and voyrov and Being (TO ov) are one and the same thing, and this is the First Being:
it
'
is
also
(ra
OVTO),
or
voip-is
and
the First vov? possessing all rather identical with them. votjrdv are one and the same,
realities
2
But
if
way to know
it
itself ?
were, embrace TO voyrov, but one does not yet see how
itself.
life is (evepyeia) and not a mere potentiality (Svvafjug) not a stranger to it nor adventitious TO voeiv is not an accident to it as it would be to a stone or lifeless body and voiirov is the First Reality (ova-la y Trpdrrtj). Now if voyrov is an activity, and the first activity, it must be
; ;
5. 4. 2.
'
The argument
'
is
of vow, is
perfected
and denned by
'
that since j/^cm, which is the activity its object (the voyrdv), vovs can'
5.
3.
5.
47
the noblest yoV<?, and objectively real (owrMw 1/0170-19). And as this v6ri<ris is completely true, and the first i/oVr9,
first 1/01/9. It is not 1/01/9 only potentially, be distinguished from votjw, otherwise its essence (or reality, TO ova-Me? avrov) would be only potential. If then it is an activity and its essence (ova-la) is activity, it must be one and the same with this activity. But Being and vorjrov are also one and the same with
it
must be the
it
nor can
their
all
activity.
Therefore vov$ votjrov, and i/oVn? are Since the vowu of vow is TO votjrov
y
and TO voyrov is vov$, 1/01/9 will know itself. (vo}]<rei) by the yoVn? which is itself, the
is
It will
vorjrov
know, which
also itself. 1
It will
;
know
itself,
and the
i/oVn?
will
and the
each other.
He
be seen, is not content with making Spiritual World correlatives implying asserts something like what Christian
theologians, in discussing the attributes of the Trinity, and the two natures of Christ, called Trepixvpytrt? and
communicatio idiomatum. Spirit and the Spiritual World flow over into each other. In another chapter 2 he says is the But voya-is seeing TO activity of 1/01/9. ov, and turning towards it and perfecting itself, as it were, from it, is itself indeterminate (aoptrros) like vision (0^9), but is determined by TO vonrov. For which reason it has been said that forms and numbers come from the indeterminate Dyad and the One 3 and forms and numbers are 1/01/9. Wherefore it is not simple, but many, and exhibits a synthesis, but within the spiritual
:
order,
tinct
[i.e. it
one].
itself vorjrdv,
and
also
vow
so that
it is
two.
There
in
further another
vov? arise
Thus,
1 8
the
VOIJTOV
A
voei, 5. g.
remaining
itself
aur6s
Am*
This appears to be a quotation, but I cannot trace it. A doctrine of this kind is attributed to Plato in the Metaphysics of Aristotle.
5. 4. 2.
48
nothing, differing in this from the seeing and knowing faculty, is not without consciousness, but is self-contained
and independent, and has complete power of self -discernment it has life in itself and all things in itself, and it knows itself by a kind of self-consciousness in an eternal 1 stability and intuition, other than the intuition of vov?. If then anything comes into being, while the voyrdv remains in itself, this comes from voyrov when the So then, when voyrov remains in votirov is most itself. its proper character, that which comes into being comes
;
from it, without any change in the vo^rov. When then it remains as voyrov, that which comes into being comes as voij<ri9 and this being i/oVn? and deriving its power of thought from its source (voovva atf ov eyeWo) for it has none other becomes vow, another yo^roV, as it were, an imitation and image of the first/ In this difficult passage the order of priority is voyrov, voya-is, vov?. But
;
this precedence
by making
only possible because Plotinus begins include votja-is and vov$. In 5. 9. 7 he says that the ideas (aStj) are not strictly vorja-eig ' or if they are, we must give TO voov^evov a priority
is
votjrov
before this
votjo-is.'
that
not rigid. as if to prove the doctrine that the whole is implicit in each part. It would be a mistake to stiffen classifications which their author has deliberately left fluid. He was well aware that sharp distinctions and hard boundarylines belong to the logical faculty (Sidvota), not to vov?,
no slave to his own technical terms. They are They seem to throw out organic filaments/
and that these methods are inappropriate when we are considering the stage above the discursive intellect. In the relations of vow and voijrd we see a complete reconciliation of the One and the Many, of Sameness and Otherness and if this is so, it is manifestly impossible to give distinct characters to Spirit on the one side and
;
1
i]
KaTa,v6r)ffis
T)
avrov avrb
vov
t>6r}<riv.
crfyws
Kara
TTJV
avr6.
49
the Spiritual World on the other. Reality is not to be identified either with Thought, or with a kind of transcen-
nor can
dental physical world which is the object of Thought ; we arrive at it by forming clean-cut ideas of these
'
somehow
'
joined together.
activity
it
is
who
'
and The
;
is
done,
dialectic
of the eternal world but within that world a principle prelogic is powerless to analyse for the Divine Ideas penetrate each other, and defy every attempt to
up to the threshold
it
them
as intellectual counters. 1
The Ideas
e'lStj,
which
have
frequently translated Forms/ In one place, as we have just seen, Plotinus says that the voyrd immanent in vov?
and vorja-is the iSea. It is easier to say eiS>j, what the Ideas or Forms meant to Plotinus, than what Plato's Ideas are explained as they meant to Plato. substances self-existing by Herbart, Pater, and Zeller. Stallbaum, Richter, and others say that they are God's
are the
'
thoughts/
Others again, as Kant, Trendelenburg, Lotze, Achelis, and many recent writers, interpret them as a kind of notions of the human mind. It can hardly be
denied that Plato's own views changed considerably. In the Republic the theory of Ideas is no longer a hypothesis, as in the Phaedo, but an ascertained truth. There are Ideas of justice, beauty, and the good these are always
;
Our knowledge
Aristotle's Psychology illustrates the Plotinian doctrine of vovs Aristotle anticipates Plotinus when he coijrcl at many points. says 4-rrl TUV &vtv VXrjs rb avrb tart rb voovv Kal rb vooi>ii.tvov. Wallace, in his fine Introduction to this treatise, shows that Aristotle is nearer to Plato than his rather carping criticisms of his master seem to suggest. must remember that they are criticisms frcm within; Aristotle
and
We
50
of the
clearer
than
of sensible things
;
faculty which is variously called yv(*>M, yvuxris, eTna-TiiM, The verbs used vov<s, TOV vorja-ts, StdXeyecrOai Suva/mis.
are
iSeiv,
aTrrea-Oai,
'
Oeaa-Oai,
'
;
all
and
'
infallible
knowledge.
it
The Idea
is
beyond existence
truth, as known.' Students of the lower sciences dream about real existence (TO 6V), but cannot see it in their
waking moments.' The queen of the sciences is dialectic (which means metaphysics), because it deals with real' existence. The Idea of the Good is the final cause of the it enables Plato to bridge over the chasm universe Plato's objective between the One and the Many. idealism is most clearly defined in the Symposium and Phaedo ; in the Republic it is less uncompromising. In
;
the Theaetetus the categories take the place of the Ideas, which means that the Ideas are tending to become forms
As Plato grew older, the vision faded he attached more importance to the dialectic and less to intuition. He seems now to allow movement in the Ideas corresponding to progress in the thinker's mind. In the Sophist it is suggested that true being is that which has the power of acting and being acted upon (Troieiv KGU But the definition is not explicitly accepted TTcw-xefi'). by the Eleatic stranger, who seems to represent Plato himself. At the same time, the value of outward impressions is increasingly recognised, and the notion of being is extended to individual things. Being is sometimes absolute, sometimes relative, while not-being is always relative, since it arises from a disharmony of Thus not -being is not one of the categories notions. Error is a mistake as to how the Ideas are (yevtj). related to each other. The doctrine at this stage is that the sensible world is built up according to the Ideas
;
of thought. 1
but
The change from ef5>; to ytvij seems to point in do not mean to imply that for Plato the /xfyerra
this direction;
only subjective.
51
which exist in the mind of God, and which pass thence into our minds by the observation of concrete parIn the Timaeus the Ideas are the models ticulars. according to which the Demiurge brought order into
the world.
But how can an individual Soul participate in an Idea ? The difficulty for Plato was not that the Idea is for a concept, and the Soul a self-contained Person neither of these statements is true. The difficulty arises from the residuum of materialism in the notion of Soul and this Plato is trying to shake off. Is the Idea divided
;
'
'
among
who participate in it ? This is imwe must cease to think in terms of possible we must rise to the conception extension and quantity of a spiritual world, which has its own laws. The doctrine I/
the Souls
;
but
if
not,
in Plato, as
and mysticism he grew older, the logician and metaphysician If the mystic in gained at the expense of the mystic. him had been slain, he might have turned his Ideas into mere concepts, the creations of the human mind, as some of his modern interpreters have done for him but as soon as he sees his argument leading him in that direction, he breaks out in revolt against it. 'In heaven's
of Ideas belongs to the philosophy of
; ;
name, are we to believe that movement and life and soul and intelligence are not present in the ultimately real ? Can we imagine it as neither alive nor intelligent, but that, grand and holy as we hold it to be, it is senseless, immov>l In the Parmenides the theory of able, and inert ? 2 Mentalism is explicitly raised. Socrates suggests that the puzzle about the unity and plurality of Forms may be solved if the Forms are taken to be only thoughts
'
in Souls
'
i.e.
theory, the
in
common
of the
any
class,
and the
are the
1
work
Plato, Sophist, 249. A useful word coined by Sidgwick, instead of the Idealism.' The reference to the Parmenides is p. 132,
1
ambiguous
52
except such as is conferred by our thought. The refutation of this suggestion is so concise and complete that it may be quoted. Can there be individual thoughts which are thoughts of nothing ? Thought Impossible/ ' must be of something ? Yes.' Of something which
'
'
'
'
'
'
Of something which is.' Must it not be of a which single something, thought recognises as attaching to all, being a single form or nature ? Yes.' And will not the something which is apprehended as one and the same in all, be an Idea ? From that again there is no escape.' Then if you say that everything participates in the Ideas, must you not say
is,
or which
is
not
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
made up
else
of
that
The latter view is no more rational than thoughts ? the previous one.' 1 A thought musrt always be a thought of something it cannot create its own object by willing to think of something which does not yet exist. An ^Idea is not the process of thinking, but the object of thought. There was never a time when Plato did not hold this view. The Eleatic disputants in this dialogue are not combating the existence of Forms as the objects of knowledge they are only raising a doubt whether Socrates has succeeded in establishing a connexion between the Ideas and the objects of sense. Parmenides and Zeno wish to discredit sense-perceptions (Kara/3d\\iv ra? ata-Ofocis) and they maintain that Socrates has not succeeded in rehabilitating them. Plato's object in this dialogue seems to have been to suggest that Socrates' theory of participation needed more clearing up, a
;
'
'
'
53
Natorp, who have fathered their modern on Plato, seem to me to have introduced psychologism into the study of Platonism. Plato cerconfusion great hold that did not VOY\TO. depend for their reality on tainly
alvQriTa,
is real.
my opinion very far simply^force/ from Plato's manner of conceiving them, at any period
the Ideas are
is
in
of his
\1
life.
the Ideas are not general concepts, and not the Plato more activity of our own Souls, what are they ?
If
and more tends to identify them with the thought of God, which, as we must be most careful to remember, is also
the will of God.
later
Mr. Cornford thinks that in Plato's are withdrawn from the world the Ideas thought
inaccessible
is
to
of
some
forms
He
'
which can divide and analyse, but not create. At the Apex is enthroned that very Intellect itself. We call it Reason, God, the Good but it is idle to pretend that it can create the world.' But we have already seen that Nou? does not mean the Intellect, and that Platonism has other words to express the operations of the discursive reason. If it is idle to pretend that God can create the world, the whole of Platonism, and most of the higher religions, must go by the board. Mr. Cornford thinks it an unworthy object for the supreme Will to desire to create an imperfect copy of But the imperfect copy exists, and must be perfection.' accounted for. And perhaps religious philosophy has not been entirely unsuccessful in finding an explan; ' '
'
ation.
Taylor, from a different point of view, to objects saying that the Ideas are thoughts of God,' and does not believe that Plato ever held this opinion.
Professor
'
He has successfully demolished the notion that subjective idealism can be found in Plato and he argues that we
;
cannot escape from the objections which have proved fatal to this philosophy by supposing the world to con-
54
sist
He
quotes
from Bolzano a paragraph which expresses his own view It follows no doubt from and, as he thinks, Plato's the omniscience of God that every truth, even if it is
;
neither
known
to
known nor thought of by any other being, is him as the omniscient, and perpetually present
in his understanding. Hence there is not in fact a single truth which is known to no one. But this does not prevent us from speaking of truths in themselves as truths
in the notion
nowise presupposed that they For though to be thought is not included in the notion of such truths, it may still follow from a different ground, i.e. from the omniscience of God, that they must at least be known by God, if by no one else. ... A thing is not true because God knows it to be true on the contrary, God knows it to be true because it is so. Thus, e.g. God does not exist because God thinks that He exists it is because there is a God that God thinks of Himself as existing.' Professor Taylor illustrates this argument by the example of the discovery
it is
whereof
one.
of
Neptune
of course
existed long before there were any human astronomers, and if there were no astronomers on other planets within
sight of Neptune,
by no
though observed proceeds, And though it be to in reasonable believe an omniscient God who may did know about the perturbations [of Uranus] and their
it
less,
finite intelligence.
He
'
cause before we suspected either, it is pure nonsense to say that God's knowledge of the existence of Neptune is what we mean by the existence of Neptune. For we should then have to say that what Adams and Leverrier discovered was not Neptune but the fact that God knew about Neptune/ Now I am afraid that this pure nonsense is exactly what the Neoplatonic Platonism
' '
1 I believe that difference from Professor Taylor is only a slight difference of emphasis. I should say that God cannot think without As Proclus says (In Parmen. 844) ipso facto actualising His thought. ws voi Troiet, KCU ws TTotet voet, Kcu del eKarepov. Proclus defines the Ideas as voepol \6yoi.
my
'
'
55
his
be the truth.
Bolzano,
in
polemic
against subjective idealism, seems to me to have fallen into precisely the error which Plotinus requested Amelius
votjra
to explain to Porphyry, the error of placing the outside vov<s.' God does not know of Neptune
'
has observed a planet revolving round the sun in an outermost ring He knows of Neptune because He made Neptune, and without His sustaining will Neptune could not exist for an instant. Plotinus would say that the real Neptune is neither a lump of gases and minerals, nor a notion in the mind of God, but a realised Idea, in which it is quite impossible to separate the creative will from the thing willed. The real Neptune is of course (to the Platonist) immaterial. The Neptune
because
;
He
'
is not an independently existing congregation but an imperfect likeness, constructed and perceived by Soul, of the real Neptune. Soul, as Proclus says, is the living world. It is not thought as opposed to
of science of atoms,
thing
is
own world, as Spirit is its own world. It within the confines of real existence (ova-ia) ; just but it is more loosely integrated than the world of Spirit, and therefore the particulars which compose it are not,
;
it is its
when taken
Soul
the
apart,
be.
The world
it
of
/coVyuo?
real
but
cannot be
pulled to pieces without admixture of error. The planet which Leverrier observed is part of the /coV/Jo? fam/co?.
it
takes
its
and
infers that
God knows
of
Neptune
'
:
really exists.
In the quotation from the Parmenides, the dilemma is If everything participates in the Ideas, must posed not you say that everything is made up of thoughts, and that all things think or else that there are unthink;
the hypothesis that all things ing thoughts think worth considering ? Professor Taylor argues that the world cannot consist exclusively of Souls, because
?
'
'
Is
'
we suppose
stones
ourselves to
know
of
many
things, such as
56
states.
tion
which is not a relation between minds or states of mind. Platonism is certainly not consonant with the fashionable pluralism, which ^divides the world into minds, which exist for themselves, and things, which
worth
is
exist
Against this philosophy it is that a spiritual world with Eucken, insisting, not the same thing as a world of spirits, which
environment. The difficulty of deciding whether (e.g.) a lobster has an objective existence or wherever else the pluralist chooses to draw his arbitrary line is enough to discredit the whole theory. Nature knows no sharp dividing line between conscious and unconscious life the distinctions between animate and inanimate,
;
organic and inorganic, are apparently breaking down under modern investigation. 1 But these difficulties do
-ever
not affect Platonism or Neoplatonism. No Platonist a is that there Soul or an Idea of separate supposed a pebble or a pen. 2 All things are in various degrees
'
'
this
kind of panpsychism
which is often disguised materialism. We do not get rid of materialism by merely banishing the word. Proclus, instead of 'all things think,' says 'all things pray.' The doctrine of Plotinus is that so far as every thought in Spirit is also an eternal Form of being, all the thoughts of Spirit are Ideas. Spirit embraces all the Ideas, as the whole its parts. Each Idea is Spirit, and Spirit is the The Kingdom of the Ideas is the totality of the Ideas. true reality, the true beauty. They are unity in divers3 and in Their number cannot be ity, diversity unity.
idealism,
hotly denied, even by some distinguished scientists. seems to indicate a bridge between living and non-living matter (Moore, Origin and Nature of
1
This
is still
57
immeasurably great, for beauty and order are inseparable from limitation, and the number of 1 There possible Forms is not, strictly speaking, infinite. are as many Ideas Yonder as there are Forms Here. The only objects here which are not represented Yonder are such as are contrary to nature/ There is no Idea of
though
it is
'
deformity, or of any vie manquee. 2 Chaignet thinks that the Platonic doctrine of Ideas is not organic in the system of Plotinus, and that it is
'
'
perhaps only retained out of respect for Plato. It is certainly not easy to distinguish the Ideas from Spirits, and from the creative Logoi. Zeller says that in the Enneads, as in Philo, the Ideas verdichten sich into Spirits, which are not merely thoughts in the great The Spirit, but spiritual Powers, thinking Spirits.' relation between the Ideas and Nou? cannot, he adds, be more closely defined without bringing to light the
'
'
'
'
namely, that of ranging substances under each other, sometimes in the relation of logical subordination, sometimes in that of parts to a whole/ Kirchner blames Zeller for identifying the Ideas with Spirits, and the two words are certainly not interchangeable. Perhaps the most important thing that can be said about the ei'cfy of Plotinus is that he has found in the creative Reason which is at once in our minds and immanent in the world, the bridge between thought and thing. Spirit does not create the spiritual world but it does create
;
|/
the ordered universe as known by the discursive reason, and the reason which knows it.
Categories
(yevrj)
said,
In Plato's later dialogues the Categories, as has been tend to displace the Ideas. The first table of Categories is in the Theaetetus, repeated and enlarged in the
Sophist and Parmenides.
1
The
first
place in
Vol.
4, p,
all
enumera-
7- 1-3; 6 . 6. 18.
298.
58
tions
is
ova-la (TO eivai, ov) and its opposite TO The Same and the Other, Similarity and The One Dissimilarity, are also common to the three. and the Many are dropped in the Sophist Permanence and Change (Stability and Movement) are omitted in the Not -Being is to be dropped, as it turns Theaetetus. Otherness/ These out to be only another word for ywn are not identical with the Ideas. There is no place among them for Truth, Beauty, or the Good. The older
'
'
'
way
criticised
2 and Plotinus subjects them to by modern philosophers an acute and hostile examination in the first book of the Sixth Ennead. It is the more remarkable that the later
Neoplatonists, except Syrianus, passed over Plotinus' The work, and preferred the Aristotelian treatment. fact is, I think, that, as Ravaisson says, Les genres de Plot in sont des attributs inseparables de I'toe c'est ce avec une fausse les nomme, qu'il analogic categories par 3 I am much d'Aristote, les premiers genres de I'toe.' more disposed to agree with Zeller, who minimises the importance of the Kategorienlehre in Plotinus, than with
'
and Richter, who find in it the key to the The long discussion of the Categories in the Sixth Ennead seems to me the least interesting part
Steinhart
whole system.
of the
whole book. There are, according to Plotinus, three parrs of categories, each pair consisting of opposites, which are reconciled world. These are, Spirit and Being, in/rftie spiritual
Thought and Thing (vovs and Identity (erepo'rj;? and TOVTOTW] ment, or Permanence and Change
or
;
Difference
The
ides, p.
3 *
references are Theaetetus, p. 185 Sophist, p.254 Parmen2 Cf. Vol. i, p. 191. 136; Timaeus, p. 37. Ravaisson, Essai sur la Metaphysique d'Aristote, Vol. 2, p. 412.
;
;
vovs
dv,
erepdr^s, TavTbrys,
del d
Kal
59
But he is not quite consistent about this classification. Sometimes he omits the first pair and makes four catel sometimes, as in the important passage which gories 2 We he enumerates five, leaving out 1/01/9. follows, must lay down these three categories, since Spirit knows each of them separately Being, Movement, and Stability. In knowing them, it posits them, and in being thus seen, they exist. Those things the existence of which is bound up with Matter, have not their existence in Spirit but we are now speaking of the non-material, and of non-material
;
'
things
we say
known
by Spirit. Behold then pure Spirit and look at it earnestly, not with your bodily eyes. You behold the hearth of
Reality
it
;
(overlap ea-riav)
and a
life
sleepless light
you
see
shining in divided ;
you
see in
it
and
spiritual vision
which
is
directed not on the future but on the present, or rather on the eternal Now and the always present, and on In this spiritual vision itself, not on anything external.
in the or knowledge reside activity and movement fact that it is directed on itself reside reality and being
;
(v over la KOI
TO
ov)
both sub-
ject and object are known as truly existing, and that on which it rests is known as truly existent. 3 For activity
directed on itself
not Reality (ova-la), but the source for being is is being (TO ov) 4 but the act of is seen, not the act of seeing seeing also possesses being, because its source and object is being. Now since being is in act and not in potentiality ov Swa/mei), it 5 connects the two terms (evepyeta, again and does not separate them, but makes itself being,
is
of the activity
and makes being itself. Being is the most stable of all things, and the foundation of stability in all other things, and possesses nothing that is not absolutely its own. It
1
6. 2. 15, 19.
6. 2. 8.
which
4
6
jSXtyis,
an important statement.
6o
is
move
end
in
for
movement
movement. The
;
Idea
(idea)
as being the term of Spirit, but Spirit is its movement so that all things are one, movement and stability, and Each of the are categories which exist in all beings.
beings posterior to these is a definite being, a definite He goes on to say stability, and a definite movement/
that
if
we analyse
;
and Movement, we shall find that they are both identical and different so that we must add Identity and Difference,
In this chapter without introducing Sophist, clearness into a very obscure argument.
making up
follows
Plotinus
Plato's
Plotinus
elsewhere
is
Being
(6V)
and Reality
Beifig
different.
between and Reality are (ova-la). Being from the others "abstraction iouricTby
distinguishes
'
carefully
but Reality is (i.e. the other two pairs of categories) with Movement, Being together Stability, Identity, and Difference.' We have seen that Being (ov) is identical with vorirov in abstraction from vovs. Therefore it has
;
the same relation to vov$ as a-ravis to Klv>ia-i$. But it is surely an error to make vow and voyrov a pair of categories by the side of the other two pairs. For the
antithesis of Stability and Movement, and of Identity and Difference, belongs to the sphere of discursive reason, the Soul-world. They only become categories of Spirit when
their contradictions are
harmonised by being taken up into a higher sphere. But when they thus cease to be contraThat which is dictories, they cease to be themselves. is neither in in and at motion rest, yet always always motion nor at rest, in the common sense of the words. It is true that motion and rest are ideas which imply each other but the very fact of their real inter-dependence, combined with their apparent mutual exclusiveness, stamps them as imperfect ideas, which are transcended
;
61
life of Spirit. Change and Permanence are ideas which belong obviously to that range of thought of which time and place are necessary forms. Identity and Difference are contradictory relations which, if they can both be asserted of the same terms, prove that the terms have been imperfectly underBut the unity in duality of stood, or wrongly divided. vov? and vorirov belongs to the sphere of real existence. It is only transcended in the Absolute, which is beyond
'
existence.'
The third
pair of categories,
we may venture
Thought (Sidvota) and its Object, which present the same kind of difficulties as the other two pairs. And all three pairs are not strictly yevrj rov 1 WTO?, but forms of thought in the Soul-world.
to say, ought to be
erepov)
External nature appears to us as a collection of objects with no inner connexion. The main task of Soul, and above that, of Spirit, is to systematise and unify. In a sense Identity and Difference are not so much categories by the side of the other pairs, as (taken together) the relation in which each member in the other pairs stands to its correlative. Or we might say that the antithesis between Identity and Difference is the most fundamental, and that until we understand how it
in juxtaposition,
1 Aliotta, whose Idealistic Reaction against Science (1912) is one of the ablest of recent philosophical books, defends the Platonic cateCertain categories are presupposed in our ideal reconstrucgories. tion, but they do not include cause, substance, quantity, time, or mathematical space, but rather other categories which are really primitive and fundamental, and are conditions essential to the thinkableness And of any form of experience. Such are Identity and Diversity. we have presupposed the category of Being, that is to say, the affirmation of facts as existing.' Plotinus (6. 2.18) refuses to place vovs among the ytvt), because it is made up of all the others (adv derov K TTO.VTUV) True vovs is Being with all the others and already the whole of existence, but &v taken alone and isolated (^bvov KO.I \f/i\bv \a/j.pavbThis is as much as is an element (o-rocxetoz/) of Spirit.' fjifvov) to say that ov when used as a category is not the same as vorirbv. If so, it is difficult to say what it is, or what room there is for it in Plotinus' system. For a short summary'of controversies about Being in scholastic theology see Rickaby, General Metaphysics, Book I.
' . . .
'
'
'
62
can be transcended, we cannot hope to understand how Change and Permanence, Thought and its Object, can be unified in the world of Spirit. The great doctrine which Plotinus expresses as the
other/ is that all the barriers which break up experience into fragmentary and opposing elements must be thrown down, not in order to reduce life to a featureless mass of undifferenreconciliation of
'
the same
'
and the
'
tiated experience, but in order that each element in experience may be realised in its true relations, which
are potentially without limit. Otherness to define and emphasise each other. help
tells us repeatedly, is in each part. Individual are not parts of the one Spirit. They exist in Spirits each other each is the whole under a particular form.
Plotinus
The universal
'
is
many
in one
and one
implicit in the particular. The vo^ra are in many and all together.' 1 They
;
are not separated in the slightest degree from each other the whole Spirit lives in each centre of life. 2 There must be differentiation otherwise no communion of Spirits, no interaction on the spiritual plane, would be possible. It would not be enough that distinctions exist on the for then Spirit would need Soul in order plane of Soul 3 to come to life. Spirit itself is not simple/ any more than the Soul. The perception of differences by the Aliotta 4 says, Soul is not ethical valuation, or aesthetic, or any kind of preference, but qualitative as opposed to quantitative
; ;
'
'
difference.
Without qualitative
arises whether there can be a recognition of qualitative differences without ethical or aesthetic valuation, or any kind of preference. I believe that I am inclined to think that there cannot.
ality
is illusory.'
judgments
process
in
by the
of value enter necessarily into every cognitive Soul. It seems, however, to be true that
6. 5. 6.
3. 2. i
and
cf. 5.
8. 4.
6. 7. 13.
Aliotta..
The
p. 10.
63
able to recognise different aspects of perfection, without No kind of preassigning comparative values to them.
In the spiritual world the different felt. of aspects perfection illuminate and do not interfere ' with each other. In that world, as Plotinus says, all
is
ference need be
each,
and each
is all,
and
'
It
is
necessary to recognise that there must be diversity as In the same well as unity in the intelligible world.
Christian theology, which is just Platonism applied to the interpretation of the beliefs of the first Christians, came to recognise that the relation of God to the world
way
there
is
diversity
unity/
Spirit is simple in the sense that it is not disbut for that very reason it has everywhere cerptible
;
a rich content, which becomes explicit and differentiated in the Soul which proceeds from it. It is only when the
creative
power reaches the limit of its activity that we find simplicity, in the sense of poverty of content ; 2 in Spirit the principles of all differentiation are contained.
absolutely necessary to trace back the sources of plurality, on the lower planes of being, to the inner nature of Spirit itself. Spirit not only engenders all
It is
things;
it
is
all things. 3
it
;
Though
is
it
was
'
not, Spirit
in a state of constant
wanders among realities (eV ova-lais on the field of truth, remaining always itself.' TrXavarai), This field of truth (TreSiov aXtjOeias) is everywhere it is also subject to incessant complex and diversified movements. There is no standing still for where there is standing still, there is no thought (or spiritual percepand where there is no thought, there is no being. tion)
it
'
Reality and
vorjvis
which
1 *
Spirit
makes
in
are identical; the journeys (jropelai) the field of truth are all through
'
'
'
7&p tffxdrov
ij
air\rj,
rov S
76.
ouros
TCI
64
life
and living things/ and all within its own domain. Plotinus deals with the same subject in the Fifth Ennead. 1 The being of Spirit is seeing.' 2 But seeing involves
' ;
duality
plurality
and if the seeing is also an activity, it involves and movement as well. Thus Spirit is one in many, and many in one. We cannot even say I am this without acknowledging at the same time identity and
'
'
difference.
If
the relation
is
we no
longer have voijo-is, but that immediate and unthinkable union which belongs to the Absolute. The
element of plurality belongs not only to the voyrd, but to vovs which perceives them. We may speak of voeg as
well as of
Movement and
Stability (Kiwjtris
and
o-rao-/?)
This antinomy is another form of the last. That which changes and yet remains the same, that which moves and yet abides unshaken, is at once the same and another in its relation to itself. Greek philosophy had
' ' '
'
recognised long before Plotinus that Movement and Stability are complementary ideas, which imply each other. 3 As Kant says, 4 Only the permanent and sub'
stantial
ticipates
1 3
can change.'
'
only in a being which parin eternity that change has any meaning.
It is
2
rrji>
'
agree with Aliotta, who expresses his astonishment that Bergson should think it possible to return to the crudest belief in movement pure and simple, as the nature of reality. Bergson's fantastic mysticism reduces the world to a perennial stream of forms flowing in no definite direction, a shoreless river whose source and mouth are alike unknown, deriving the strength for its perpetual renewal from some mysterious, blind, and unintelligent impulse of nature, akin to the obscure will of Schopenhauer (Op. cit. p. 128). 4 To arise and pass away are not changes of that which arises and passes away. Change is a way of existing that follows on another way of existing of the very same object. Hence whatever changes is permanent and only its state alters (Critique of Pure Reason, Miiller's transl. p. 164). Plotinus expresses this by saying forty eis 8 XiJ-yet ?? voriais ov yap OVK dp^a^vij <rrd<rts, /ecu d0' o3 &p/j,r)Tai oi>x opfiifiaaaa orders, In opposition to Miiller and Bouillet, I Kbnjffts, ovd' eis Ktvyffiv. think that Aptafdrq and 6pfj.rj<raaa agree with v6?7<r(s, not with o-rdc-ts. Plotinus wishes us to remember that po^o-ets are not, properly speak'
'
5. 3. IO. I entirely
oixrlav
avrov 8pa<riv
elvat.
'
'
ing, in
time
(6. 2. 8).
65
Recent writers of the activist school have ignorantly represented Plato as the prophet of pure staticism. This In the Theaetetus and Parmenis very far from the truth. the of Kivtjaris as change, as well first notion ides appears as movement in space. The distinction of these two kinds of movement is introduced as a discovery of Socrates. The starting-point of this theory was the recognition of Kivrja-i? as a principle of being, justified in the Phaedrus, mentioned as known in the Theaetetus, and reconciled with the opposing principle of arrdcrig in the Sophist. The inclusion of these two under one primary kind is (says * one of Plato's most wonderful anticipaLutoslawski) tions of modern philosophy. In the Sophist 2 he repudiates staticism with something like indignation. It will be remembered that for Plotinus Spirit is perfect 3 activity. Activity is defined by Bradley as self -caused that He to nothing can be active change. argue proceeds
without an occasion or cause, which makes it, so far, that activity implies finitude, and passive, not active a variety of elements changing in time. His conclusion is that activity is only appearance. Plotinus would admit that the activity which consists in changes in time is only appearance but he would differ from Bradley by saying that the idea of non-temporal activity is not meaningless.
; ;
That
this idea
is
stand is an imperfect likeness of spiritual activity, and it needs to be supplemented by harmonising the idea of of Movement. Plotinus does not like with that Stability Aristotle's statement that Movement is imperfect 4 because there is Move(areXi? ei/epyeia) activity ment in the world of Spirit. 5 If no diversity awakened
' ' ;
'
would not be activity.' 6 It does not follow that there is Time in the spiritual world for
Spirit into
life,
Spirit
8 3 4
p. 248,
Lutoslawski, Plato's Logic, p. 364 sq. quoted above. Bradley, Appearance and Reality, p. 64.
6. i. 16.
6
6. 7.
fl
13.
6.
7.
13
II.
66
'
Movement does not need Time, which only measures the quantity of Movement/ 1 Movement, in the spiritual as in the phenomenal world, implies the operation of will not, however, in order to become activity, but in
;
order to accomplish something from which it is quite distinct. It is not itself made perfect, but the object at which it aimed.' 2 Movement in the spiritual world is its activity is not a developnot antithetic to stability
;
ment of itself into something that it was not before. The purposes of Spirit are realised, by its creative power,
as processes involving temporal succession. In these processes, subject as they are to time and place, Moveis of course opposed to Stability, though the two But this necessary counterparts of each other. movement, which might truly be called imperfect activity (areXt]? evepycta), is also imperfect movement, if we compare it with the movement of Spirit, which does not
ment
are
need Time
ment
is
a form of
stability.
for the machine to stop. of the kinetic aspect of varying laws of nature ?
and regular moveThe real change would be Are we then denying the truth reality when we postulate unThis thought
is
the starting-
point of the vitalistic philosophies of the present day, such as that of Bergson. It is said that if reality consists
unvarying general laws, illustrated by transient maniwhich in no way affect the eternal steadfastness of the laws, the time-process is without significance, and the universe has no history. Our answer is that history is always a description of the changes within some one finite unitary whole, and that these changes have a
of
festations
meaning only when regarded as states of some abiding which persists through and in them all. They are the expression of the life and purpose which constitute the unity of the whole in which they are embraced.
reality
6. I. 16.
8
6.
i.
16 and
32
6.
3.
22.
Kivyffis
is
defined as ^
K SwA/mcus odbs
els
4,
and
cf. 5. i. 4.
67
no standing still, 1 but continual movement, and movement with a meaning. Within any unitary whole there may be developments of what we call laws as well as in the processes which exhibit their working for the laws are only the methods of operation
of Soul there
is
;
adopted by the Universal Soul, and are uncontrolled by any necessity. Whether, as a matter of fact, the laws of nature are uniform, is to be decided by observation. But when we consider "the subordination of the individual
to the larger processes of the world-order, it is most improbable that our private volition should be able so to modify the course of events as to give the world the appearance of a wild system, which by its unaccount'
'
able behaviour administers shocks even to its Creator, as William James would have us believe.
is
In spiritual things, Plotinus says, persistence (OTCKTI?) their form (/xo/>0?/) and determination (0/3*07x09). 2 When
we remember the superiority of Form to Matter in his system, we seem here to find an assertion of the superiority of persistence to change, though Movement is a property of Reality no less than Stability and this, as has been
;
said,
has been regarded by many as a characteristic of Platonism. So Eucken says, The ultimate basis of life is here in the full developalways taken for granted ment of this, human activity has an important task assigned to it, but at the same time an impassable goal. When this goal is reached, activity ceases to be a mere striving, and is transformed into a state of rest in itself,
'
;
into
an activity
.
fully satisfied
.
by
its
own
exertion
and
is
self-expression.
life
Hence the
;
chief
problem
of life
as the complete unfolding and effective coordination of its own nature as the poet says, 3 the
itself,
is
to
is.'
He
con-
as something which
'
we
local
8
oToj
There is no o-rderis here below, but only ijpe.ufe, the negation of a movement,' 6. 3. 27. 5 i. 7. The reference is no doubt to Pindar's remarkable maxim, wet HO.BUV. Pyth. 2. 131. Eucken, Life of the Spirit (Engl. Tr.), p. 113,
.
68
should see as perfect, if we knew all that it contains, with what he considers the Christian view of life as in need of redemption and radical change. In Christianity, he says, eternity enters into time, and temporal happenings thus gain a value for the deepest ground and the ultimate fate of reality.' But the Plotinian view is nearer to Chris'
tianity than the pseudo-scientific doctrine of perpetual progress which often passes for Christian. In the Chris-
tian
scheme a term is set, not only to the activities of Heaven each individual, but to the world-order itself. and earth shall pass away,' not into nothingness, but into
'
a state in which no further development and change can be asserted. Both individual souls and any larger
in God's sight,
have
their places in the eternal order, when their task is done Nor is it the Christian doctrine that here on earth.
temporal happenings have a value for the ultimate fate The ultimate fate of reality never hangs in God does not evolve, and suffers no loss, the balance though He may feel sorrow, in the failures of His creatures. Temporal events determine the ultimate fate of the souls that animate bodies, but they do so not as external happenings, but as the outward expression of that upward or downward movement of the Soul which conducts it to its own place. A man is not -damned for what he does, but for what he is. Modern critics of Platonism seem to assume that if progress has its preordained limit, it must be illusory. This is the result of forcing eternity into the category of time, and envisaging This is, no doubt, the kind of it as an endless series.
of reality.'
;
'
the wages of going on, immortality that many look for and not to die.' But this is not eternal life either in the nor is it the destiny Platonic or in the Christian sense which science allows us to anticipate for the individual, or the race, or the planet itself. We are not in a position to assert or deny that there may be other tasks for the Soul But if there are, that is not eternal life, in other lives. but at best a kind of image of it, a mode of appearance.
;
'
69
The problem of change and permanence is so imporand is so vitally connected with the debates of modern philosophy, that a few more reflections may be offered upon it. Plato, like Spinoza, was deeply impressed by the timeless immutability of mathematical truth, which therefore became for him the type of the unchangeable eternal Ideas. The Soul which is in communion with the unchangeable must have itself an unSo Kant postulated an extrachangeable element. noumenal self as a background for our temporal knowledge of the temporal, and T. H. Green argued
'
'
that knowledge of succession in time can only arise for mind which is not itself involved in the time-series. 1
It is
is
as either vain or tragic, and identifies itself willingly with those parts of experience which can defy the wreckful siege of battering days.' But I believe that what the Soul values in these objects of experience is not their extreme longevity, but their quality of everlastingness. Hegel bids us banish from our minds the prejudice in favour of duration, as if it had any advantage as 2 compared with transience/ a counsel which perhaps goes too far, since ability to go on at the highest level is surely a mark of superiority but it brings out the main point, that there may be more of the eternal in fifty years of Europe than in a cycle of Cathay, in a life of thirty years greatly lived than in a selfish or vacuous existence prolonged to extreme old age.
'
'
lily of
a day
Although
It
May, and die that night was the plant and flower of light.
it fall
;
Is fairer far in
In small proportions we just beauties see And in short measures life may perfect be.' 8
In this paragraph I am indebted to G. F. Barbour in Hibberi Journal, Oct., 1907. 2 Philosophy of History (Engl. Tr.), p. 231. 3 Ben Jonson.
1
70
Belief
in the persistence of effort through unending aeons does not console us for the perishing of the finest flowers which that effort produces nor does it justify the ambition to produce new values, which will be equally
;
transient.
'
Faith can be satisfied with nothing short of nothing that truly is can ever 1 belief and this perish compels us to assert the existence of an eternal, unchangeable background, of which an unending temporal series would be at best only a symbol. Even the most definitely historical and ethical religions, such as Judaism, are rooted in faith in an Eternal Being, who is God from everlasting, and world without end, before the mountains were brought forth or ever the earth and the world were made.' Bradley has shown very clearly that progress and evolution can only be movements within a unitary
Plotinus' confidence that
j
' '
whole.
there
is
'
There
is
and
also retrogression ; but we cannot think that the Whole moves either on or backwards. The improve-
ment
unmean-
two aspects
we think
that
we have
reconciled them.
Plato himself,
'
this perfect authority, and perfect knowledge, his authority cannot rule us, nor his knowledge know us,
God has
nor any human thing.' 3 This is an objection of Parmenides, the Eleatic, to the doctrine of Ideas as expounded by the young Socrates. If the Ideas are objective existences independent of phenomena, the two systems must be cut off from each other. Plotinus, as we have seen,
So Paul Sabatier says; Ce qui a vraiment vecu, une fois revivra.' Appearance and Reality, p. 499. 8 Parmemdes, 134. The best answer to the question, If like can is perhaps only be known by like, how can God know his creatures ? that given in 6. 7. 10. XoOs can perceive the lower things because they are owd/m spiritual, though not
1
'
'
'
71
of
by no means one
stationary immobility, though there are, strictly, no inner changes in spirits. In the world of Soul the Ideas are polarised, not only into a multiplicity of forms, but into a series of successive states within unitary processes. It is, in fact, only by understanding this soul-world, the
world of the One and Many, that we can rise to understand the world of the One-Many, the world of Spirit. In making this ascent, we by no means exchange the kinetic for the static view of reality ; but we are strengthened in our conviction that the whole meaning of movement and change is to be sought in the direction taken by the
movement, and in the values which the movement, taken as a whole, succeeds in realising. These values are themselves above the antithesis of rest and motion ; they belong to the eternal world. To us, who are exposed to the stress of conflict, they abide in a haven of peace and calm beyond our reach, and it is no small part
of the longing which we have to enter into that haven, that in it each particular task is in turn finished and
then kept safe for ever. For the Soul, it may be, there is no doffing of its armour, but only a temporary repose. But a life's battle, if won, is won for ever. Its unitary purpose, if achieved, has its home secure in the world of real being. Thus our attitude towards life should be that of Browning's Rabbi ben Ezra.
'
Therefore I
summon age
heritage,
To grant youth's
Life's struggle having so far reached its Thence shall I pass, approved
term
man,
for
aye removed
;
And
I shall
thereupon
;
Take rest, ere I be gone Once more on my adventure brave and new Fearless and unperplexed When I wage battle next, What weapons to select, what armour to endue.'
72
of the religious
:
mind
vary.
Sometimes we
O Lord, my heart is sick, Sick of this everlasting Change And life runs tediously quick Through its unresting race and varied range. Change finds no likeness of itself in Thee,
;
in
thy mute
eternity.'
Blame not life it is scarce begun Blame not mankind thyself art one And Change is holy, O blame it never Thy soul shall live by its changing ever Not the bubbling change of a stagnant pool, But the change of a river, flowing and full Where all that is noble and good will grow
;
;
Mightier
still
Till it join
that
But on the whole surely Keyserling is right when he says tin if life had no temporal end it would not be ein And this would but ewiges Sein, perpetuelles Werden.' mean that we must live for ever in the consciousness of an
'
unfulfilled purpose,
desire.
'
doomed never
'
The whole system of Eckhart (says Delacroix) is a long and passionate effort to place life and movement in Being itself, and to spread the Supreme Being over the
multiplicity of the acts the synthesis of which can alone constitute it. Hardly has he affirmed the absolute
reality of Being,
its
when he
its richness.
;
immobile God, but the living God not abstract Being, but the Being of Being. The reality of God is his work, and his work is, before the birth of things, his own So in developing created things in the birth/ world of becoming, Spirit makes them enter into eternity. In God progress and regress, coming and returning, are
'
.
.
73
the act
self
they are at bottom one and the same act, by which God penetrates himself and finds himThus divine movement is at wholly in himself.
bottom repose.
himself
Becoming
is
eternal
that
is
is
to say, its
God
immobile in
and
so abides.' 1
'
Ruysbroek thus unites and distinguishes Work and Rest in God. The Divine Persons who form one God and in are in the fecundity of their nature ever active the simplicity of their essence they form the Godhead and eternal blessedness. Thus God according to the Persons
;
is
eternal
Work
petual stillness,
fruition lie
He
is
eternal
Rest.
Now
love
and
between
would work work with God. Fruition is ever at rest, for it dwells higher than the will and the longing for the well-beloved, in the well-beloved, in the divine nescience and simple love above the fecundity of nature.' 2
.
Love this activity and this rest. without ceasing, for its nature is eternal
before leaving this subject, we turn for a moment to the aesthetic aspects of Change and Permanence, we
If,
observe the curious fact that the beauty perceived by is mainly stationary, while that perceived by hearing requires change. The most exquisite note of a prima
sight
prolonged for two or three minutes, would but there is no satiety in compel us to stop our ears a or a noble picture, until the fine landscape gazing at
donna,
if
become fatigued. The Greeks, though they did not undervalue music, were on the whole more their greatest impressed by the beauties of visible form
optic nerves
;
triumphs were in sculpture, an art in which they remain unapproachable. It may not be an accident that in this race of sculptors we find also our pioneers in the cult of
Esse ipsum dat quietem et facit in Gotlich nature is ruowe.' seipso et solo ipso quiescere omnia quae citra ipsum sunt. Igitur deus in se quiescit et in se quiescere facit omnia.' Ipsum esse est quies et quietans omnia et ipsum solum.' Delacroix, Le Mysticisme en Allemagne, pp. 192, 176. a De Septem Gradibus A moris, Chap. xiv. Underbill, Mysticism, p. 521
' .
'
74
'
eternal form, the universal mould.' On the other hand, the Jews, in whom the sense of visible form is singularly blunt,
have been great musicians, and also strong upholders of the belief that it is in history that God reveals Himself.
The whole discussion of the Categories of the Spiritual world in the Enneads leaves me dissatisfied. It seems to me that when we reach the plane of the eternal verities, the Koo-juios vor]T09, we should leave these dialectical
puzzles behind, and recognise that what we deal with is a kingdom of absolute values.
now have
to
The whole
philosophy of Plotinus
tual,
is
and
;
aesthetic values.
ideals they are the constituents of Reality, the attributes under which God is known to man. Whether they should be called categories is a question which does not matter much they are the qualities which all spiritual things possess, and in virtue of which they hold their rank as
;
perfect being.
who
in which Reality can be known by are themselves the roof and crown of things,
Things truly in Goodness, participate Truth, and Beauty. These attributes of Reality, which, so far as can be known, constitute its entire essence, are spiritual ; that is to say, they belong to a sphere ot
in proportion as they
myriad products
supra-temporal and supra-spatial existence, which obeys laws of its own, and of which the world of common experience is a pale copy. I venture to think, audacious as the suggestion undoubtedly is, that Plotinus ought, when dealing with the spiritual world, to have made a clean sweep of the
Platonic
1
and
Aristotelian categories, 1
and to have
said
Bradley, as is well known, takes most of the Aristotelian categories in detail and convicts them of being mere Appearance. That is to say, they are not categories of the Kooyios voyrfc.
75
and Beauty ayaOorw, uX^Oeia, and Ka'XXo?. Let us examine his reasons for refusing to do this for he does not leave the question unconsidered. Why do we not include among the first categories the Beautiful, the Good,
;
'
the Virtues, Science (true knowledge), and Spirit P 1 If by the Good we mean the First Principle, that of which we can affirm nothing, but which we call the Good
we have nothing else to call it, it cannot be a for we cannot affirm it of anything else. category Besides, the Good is not in existence, but beyond existence. But if by the Good we mean the quality of goodness, we have shown that quality is not one of our categories.
because
; .
.
but not as The nature of Reality is good, no doubt its goodness is not a quality, the First Principle is good but an attribute. 2 But, it will be said, you have told us
;
;
One has all the other categories in it, and that each of these is a category because it is common and is seen in many things. If then the Good is seen in every part of Reality or Being, or in most of them, why is it not included in the first categories ? The reason is that it is present in different degrees there is a hierarchy of
that the
;
goods
But if by depending on the First Good. the Good which is in Being we mean the natural activity which draws it towards the One, and say that this is its Good, to gain the form of Good from the One, then the Good in this sense will be activity directed towards the Good, and this is its life. But this activity is Movement and Movement has been named as one of the categories/ 3 The answer to these various objections is that in the first place when we call Goodness an attribute of vow and povjrd, we certainly do not mean the Absolute, which we only call the Good because we have nothing else to call it/ but Goodness in its proper sense in the
all
.
.
'
This is a direct contradiction of 5. i. 4, in which foCs appears as one of the categories. He is certainly right in excluding /ouj, but the same arguments are fatal to its correlative fly, which he retains among them.
*
iov,
d\\' iv aitT$.
6. 2. 17.
76
second place that this Goodness is not a quality, but a in the third constitutive attribute of Reality as such
place that the hierarchy of degrees in Goodness
is
also
a hierarchy in degrees of Reality, the two being inseparable and lastly that though the striving towards the Good is itself a good for the Soul, the good of the within Spirit is not a KWIJO-IS, but a form of activity the field of truth/ in which movement and stability are
;
'
reconciled.
is
hardly worthy of
Plotinus.
Proceeding to the Beautiful, he uses the same argueffect. Of cVrn;/A/, which nearly we have called Truth, to the attribute which corresponds he says, Knowledge is Movement -in-itself (avroKivijvis), as being a vision of Reality and activity, but not its it may be subsumed under Movement, or possession
or both.' It is contrary to Plotinus' own doctrine to say that in the spiritual world there can be
Stability,
o\fr/9
without
$9.
have seen already that the disciples of Plotinus were dissatisfied with his spiritual categories. It was satisfactory to me to find that the view which had already
has the powerful support of Proclus, the ablest thinker of the school next to Plotinus himself. There are three attributes (he says) which make up the essence of Divine things, and are constitutive of all the
occurred to
'
We
me
higher categories
(ro</>ia,
icccXXo?)
Goodness, Wisdom, Beauty (ayaOorw, and there are three auxiliary principles,
second in importance to these, but extending through all the divine orders Faith, Truth, and Love' (-TnVn?, 1 In another place 2 he explains the aXijOeta, cpw). Goodness, Wisrelationship between these two triads. and dom, Beauty are not only the constitutive attributes of the Divine nature as such they are also active causes. When they are exerting their activity, they take respecFaith gives tively the forms of Faith, Truth, and Love.
;
'
77
1 Truth reveals things a solid foundation in the Good. all things in leads all Love real existences. knowledge
The ultimate attributes of Reality are values. And an unmixed advantage, in considering them, to get rid of the quantitative categories which are only valid of temporal and spatial relations. The intellectual puzzles about sameness and otherness, movement and stability, do not help us at all to understand the spiritual
it is
They only convince us of the inadequacy of the comprehend the things of the Spirit The attributes of Reality are values. But values are
world.
discursive reason to
.
nothing unless they are values of Reality. Truth, for example, is, subjectively, a complete understanding of the laws and conditions of actual existence. 2 It is the true interpretation of the world of sense, as knowable by Soul when illuminated by Spirit. Objectively, it is an ordered harmony or system of cosmic life, interpreted in terms of vital law, and nowhere contradicted by experience. If, as is notoriously the case, perfect law and order are not to be found in the world of ordinary if perfect Beauty and Goodness are not experience to be discerned by the Soul except when it turns to
;
Spirit, we have to suppose that these imperfections are partly due to our faulty apprehension, and partly to the essential conditions of a process which is doubly
split
is
may
so disintegrated be realised
The great difficulty in this scheme is one which is by no means created by the scheme itself. It is rather a fundamental problem of all philosophy and a system
;
Hebrews, u.
i.
identify
Faith with the mystical vision. 8 Neoplatonism throughout assumes that Truth is the conformity of Thought to Thing.' In spite of the heavy guns that have been brought to bear on this first principle of scholastic epistemology, I see no reason to abandon it. It is what we all mean by Truth and I agree with Fechner that in philosophy there comes a point where a man
; '
must trust
himself.'
78
which brings it out clearly is so far superior to a system which ignores or conceals it. The difficulty is that judgments of value give us an essentially graduated world while judgments of existence are riot so easily graduated. In judgments of value every object is what it is only in a relation of better or worse as compared with other objects, or of estimated defect in relation to an absolute standard. But judgments of existence are not naturally An arranged in an ascending or descending series.
;
object either
is
or
is
not.
ments with which science is occupied establish no generic difference between the smaller and the greater. The scientific intellect would be satisfied with a single realm of objective reality, all on the same plane, as distinguished from a shadow- world of false opinions (\fsevSels S6ai), to be suppressed wherever recognised. Science has no beautibusiness with the categories good and bad,' ful and ugly/ and has no absolute standard whereby
'
'
'
'
'
'
It is true to approve or condemn any phenomenon. as now to its are enemies that, beginning point out, it has frequently set up an absolute standard, that of univer-
called causation,
enigma the deviations from .complete regularity which the investigation of nature brings to light. This, however, is only one of many instances in which of value intrude unnoticed into an abstract
judgments
method
of
inquiry when it attempts to deal with the concrete The unconscious assumption is that the order actual.
of nature
must be
perfect,
absolutely regular. to distinguish between normal and abnormal phenomena, and to recognise degrees of abnormality. But these 'are
value- judgments
:
and that the perfect is the This assumption obliges the scientist
the abnormal phenomenon is, so to as a law-breaker, although its existence convicted speak, is in truth not a breach of the law but a confutation of it. However, a severer dependence upon observed facts, and a distrust of generalisation, are now characteristic of
79
scientific research. Speaking generally, the scientist aims at a valuation which shall nowhere be contradicted 1 while the metaphysician endeavours by experience
j
so to interpret experience that it shall nowhere contradict his valuation. But this latter can only be achieved
if
scale,
the contents of experience are arranged on a graduated according to their relative approximation to an
standard not realised in finite experience. Morality and Art can face the possibility that their ideals are not fully realised anywhere or at any time, though in admitting this possibility they confess their faith in a
absolute
supra-spatial and supra-temporal kingdom of spiritual existence. The Platonist believes that he has the witness of the Spirit to the eternal reality as well as to the validity of his ideals, and he resolutely rejects the ex-
pedient of throwing them into the future, as if there were a natural tendency in the universe to improve itself. His ontology therefore compels him to identify Reality
and
culty of postulating degrees of existence corresponding with degrees of value. No one will pretend that he has
succeeded in clearing this conception of its inherent difficulties. It is tempting to say, with Bradley, that but are we not graduation belongs only to Appearance then in danger of breaking the link which connects the world of phenomena with the world of Spirit ? There is, in point of fact, no graduation given to us in the physical world graduation is entirely the work of our value; ;
judgments interpreting phenomena. But these valuefor judgments claim to be also judgments of existence that which has no existence has no value. If then graduation is only Appearance, we are left, it seems to me, with a perfect world of the Ideas over against an undifferentiated world of Matter. The former, it would seem, has no existence, and the latter no value nor is it possible
; ;
This clause
is
from Miinsterberg.
8o
that of Plotinus, is that existence is most adequately conceived under the form of spiritual values, rather than under the form of substance. It is only when we think
a term which suggests ponderable quantito be or not to be leaves no is Science in truth escape. occupied with certain values those which Plotinus calls order and limit (jcoV/xo? or rdt<; and Tre/oa?), and looks for them in the objects which it examines. From this point of view, all real irregularity is a problem, and the only solution of the problem is to show that the irregularity is only apparent. failures of purpose/ as ArisSimilarly the apparent totle calls them, in soul-life, are problems for the philoBut the notion of imperfect existence/ taken sopher. in itself, does not seem to me to involve any contradiction when applied to immaterial things. It is also a principle of the philosophy of Spirit that since all the world of becoming is radically teleological, it can only be understood by the method of valuation. All the increase As Lotze says in a very fine passage of knowledge which we may hope to attain, we must look for, not from the contemplation of our intelligent nature in general, but from a concentration of consciousness upon our destiny. Insight into what ought to be will for there can be alone open our eyes to discern what is no body of facts, no course of destiny, apart from the end and meaning of the whole, from which each part has received not only existence but also the active nature in
of substances
ties
'
'
'
'
'
which
it
The
Truth
glories/ three attributes of the divine nature, Goodness, (or Wisdom), and Beauty, are ultimates, in our
They cannot be fused, or wholly harmonised. a noetic There parallelism between them, with that character of mutual inclusion which belongs to spiritual existences. 2 Popular theology quite justifiably fuses
experience.
is
3, Chap. 5. A very clear and thoughtful treatment of this theme may be found in Mr. Glutton Brock's little book, The Ultimate Belief (1916).
8
1
81
them, with the help of a quasi-sensuous imagery, into a kind of unity, in which all three suffer equal violence. The aim of popular religion is practical it gives us a but its working hypothesis and a rule of conduct
;
;
demonstrably The philosophy of Plotinus does not permit us faulty. to acquiesce in such accommodations. It shows us why
science,
ethics,
and
aesthetics
are
all
we must expect
to find
some
difficulties insuperable,
by
yet
see
insisting that there is a stage, which reached, where they will disappear.
through a glass darkly, but then face to face/ Meanwhile we have our revelation, imperfect though it is, of these three attributes of God, a threefold cord not quickly
broken.
It follows
from
as a
kingdom
two
'
of values, that
this conception of the spiritual world it is the goal of the will and
these
to be
faculties,
ethical ideal
an element of spiritual perception but the which is here realised is of no private interpretation. It is not my will, but the will of God, which is done Yonder. In concluding this section, we may mention that Eucken and Miinsterberg both regard a self-contained system of pure values as one of the desiderata of modern philosophy.
is
;
Would
it
if
Life
is
the supreme
by and known to
See especially p. 20. The philosophy of the spirit tells us that spirit desires three things and desires these for their own sake and
;
for any further aim beyond them. It desires to do what is right for the sake of doing what is right to know the truth for the sake of knowing the truth ; and it has a third desire which is not so easily stated, but which I will now call the desire for beauty without giving any further explanation of it. These three desires and these alone are the desires of the spirit ; and they differ from all our other desires in that they are to be pursued for their own sake, and can indeed only be pursued for their own sake.'
H.
82
We
of Plotinus with
regard to the Universal Soul and its relations to individual Souls. 1 shall not be surprised to find Universal Spirit
We
holding
Spirits.
much
The
'
Great Spirit Let us suppose, he says, that Spirit is not yet attached to any particular being. We may find an
nead. 2
the same position in relation to particular chief passage in which he deals with the is in the second chapter of the Sixth En'
analogy in generalised Science, which is potentially all the sciences, but actually none of them. So Universal Spirit, enthroned above particular Spirits, contains them all
and gives them all that they possess. The Great Spirit exists in itself, and the particular Spirits exist equally in themselves they are implied in the Universal Spirit, and it in them. Each particular Spirit exists both in itself and in the Great Spirit, and the Great The Spirit exists in each of them as well as in itself. Great Spirit is the totality of Spirits in actuality (eW/>ye/a), and each of them potentially (Swa.fj.ei). They are particular Spirits evepyela, and the Great Spirit Swa^ei. As to the source of particular Spirits, he says that when the Great Spirit energises within itself, the result of its activity is the other Spirits, but when outside itself, Soul. Thus the Great Spirit. is exactly analogous to the Universal Soul on the next rung of the ladder. The Great Spirit, as the manifestation of the ineffable Godhead in all its attributes, is the God of Neoplatonism. 3 This fact is obscured both by the completeness with
potentially,
;
which
it
is
divested of
all
anthropomorphic attributes,
and by the mystical craving for union with the Godhead itself, which has been commonly supposed to be the starting-point and the goal of this philosophy. But it is
2 6. 2. 20, 21, 22. See especially 4. 3. 4. Plotinus occasionally calls the One 0c6s, e.g. in i. i. 8 ; but those modern critics who habitually speak of the Neoplatonic Absolute as ' God only mislead their readers.
'
83
only as Spirit that the Godhead is known to us as a factor in our lives. We have the power of rising above our psychic selves to share in the life of Spirit and this communion, which may be the directing principle of our
;
inner and outer life, is, except in rare moments of ecstasy, the highest degree of worship and spiritual joy to which a human being can attain. The life of religion consists
in
of Spirits
and
it is
here
that philosophy also reaches her goal. Those Christian philosophers who, following the deepest doctrine of the
Fourth Gospel, have placed salvation in communion with the Logos-Christ, are in a position to understand
the Plotinian doctrine of Spirit. Such similes as that of the vine and its branches, and such sayings as Abide in me, and I in you/ illustrate the relation of the Great
'
Neoplatonism.
In ascending to Spirit, the Soul loses itself in order to find itself again. We present ourselves a living sacrifice,
life
and
this
is
Love
joins the
discontinuity of living beings to the continuity of life, and mirrors in the subjective sphere the objective unity of individuals. Love is the psychical expression of the
natural unity of living creatures, and of their union with God. This doctrine is common to Neoplatonism and
Christianity.
The consciousness of eternal values, and love for them, are primary and instinctive affections of the Soul. And since these values are not coincident with individual
inexplicable unless the ultimate do not, in our consciousreality super-personal. and then pass by abstracwith the individual ness, begin
is
We
tion to the general, but the general works in us as such see resemblances before we see the immediately.
We
objects which resemble each other. The primitive law is not association, but rather dissociation. The objective interconnexion of life is a fact, and the highest expression of
84
each individual
not
itself
life.
and infancy indicate how little the individual is. We are drawn into supraindependent life whenever we find it impossible to rest in personal the present moment, which alone belongs to us whenever we rise above the mere animal plane, we in truth forget The fact that ourselves and enter into a larger life.
The physiology
of birth
our psycho-physical ego is for all of us object not subject (this is indisputably true) is itself a sufficient proof that 1 we, in our deepest ground, are far more than it. And yet the individual is not a link in the chain. He is the chain itself. The whole is not the race,' as known to the historian or anthropologist. The race, so
'
studied, is an organism more loosely integrated, and therefore of a lower type, than the personal life. But in the spiritual world the race is one each is all,' as
' ;
Plotinus says in the passage quoted below. The differences which keep spiritual things from fusing but, as completely arc qualitative differentiations
;
Plotinus says in an interesting passage, they are evepyeiai and \6yoi rather than qualities. 2 These distinctions, which do not involve separation, are a good thing, 3 be-
cause they add to the richness of the real world, which includes not only the diverse (ia<j>opa), but opposites 4 It is not (ei/di/rm). easy to answer the question whether there are differences of value among the votjra. 5
Their common life is so much more than their individual The life that the question has not much meaning. inferior values, if such there be, are raised to the level of perfection by their intimate unity with the whole spiritual world. On the lower levels real inferiority exists, because
So Eckhart says, Men differ according to flesh and according but according to Thought (=vovs) they are one man, and this one man is Christ,' Delacroix, p. 203.
1
'
to birth;
8
6. 7. 8-10, otiru ptKrlov. 3. 2. 16. Plotinus says that beings in the eternal world are unequal, but not imperfect (6. 7. 9). Each has realised the nature which it was intended to attain ; but there is a natural hierarchy there, as here.
6. i. 10.
'
'
And
^/cet
\//VXTI
x e W ov
v v
'>
an ^ 2
6. I, for
qualitative
85
avenues
of
intercourse
with
things
Yonder are
obstructed.
It is plain that the individual i/oy? is the same life as the individual V^XV* on ly transformed into the Divine 1 Inimage and liberated from all baser elements.
maintained by the something unique in each Spirit but it is no longer any bar to complete communion with all that is good, true, and beautiful in others. And this state, so far from being a mere ideal, is the one true reality, eternal and objectively true existence, the home of the Soul, which has its citizenship in heaven. Mr. Bosanquet says, 3 In every true part hence in every member of an infinite whole there is something corresponding to every feature of such a whole, though not repeating it. ... It would certainly be true of a genuine infinite that if we speak of whole and parts at all, the whole represents itself within every part/ This is exactly the doctrine of Plotinus with regard to vonra. Their characteristic in relation to each other is mutual the inclusion/ which is another way of saying that relations between psychical states cannot be expressed 4 Each part of the whole is infinite/ 5 quantitatively/ Each vonrov is intrinsically multifold/ 6 Each is a whole, and all everywhere, without confusion and without separation/ 7 In a fine passage, 8 one of the noblest in Plotinus, the condition of beatified spirits is thus described. A pleasant life is theirs in heaven they have the Truth for mother, nurse, real being, and nutriment they see all things, not the things that are born
dividuality
is
;
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
voes
2
In 4. 3. 5 he says that individual souls are the \6yoi of particular within vovs, made more explicit.' 4- 3- 5 aTroXemu ot-5^ TUV &VTWV, ir<l KaKet ol voej OVK aTrdXouJ'rcu, 6'n
'
tTfp^rrjTt
%x ov T^-ai/rd
4
6
7
The Value and Destiny o/ the Individual, p. 298. Lindsay, The Philosophy o/ Bergson, p. 50.
6. 7. 13.
I. 8. 2,
5. 3.
<rrlv (KaffTov
/ecu
10.
/cat 01)
S\ov
TravraxT} TT&V.
5. 8. 4.
rvytt&*nu dXXd
^>
01)
xwph.
The
MSS.
in reading a5
x upl*i
u ^ surely
ov
must be
right.
86
and
and they see die, but those which have real being themselves in others. For them all things are transparent, and there is nothing dark or impenetrable, but everyone is manifest to everyone internally, and all things are For everyone manifest for light is manifest to light. has all things in himself and sees all things in another so that all things are everywhere and all is all and each is
;
;
all,
and the glory is infinite. Each of them is great, since the small also is great. In heaven the sun is all the stars,
and again each and all are the sun. but it prominent above the rest
; ;
also
There a pure movement reigns for the movement, not being a stranger to it, does not trouble it. Rest is also perfect there, because no principle of agitation mingles with it/ William Penn, the Quaker, shows how Love can anticiThey pate the state of beatified Spirits here on earth. that love beyond the world cannot be separated by it. Death cannot kill what never dies. Nor can Spirits ever be divided that love and live in the same Divine Principle, the root and record of their friendship. Death is but crossing the world, as friends do the seas they live in one another still. For they must needs be present, that love and live in that which is omnipresent. In this Divine
'
One thing
glass they see face to face ; and their converse is free as well as pure. This is the comfort of friends, that though
they
may be said to die, yet their friendship and society are in the best sense ever present, because immortal/
Life in the Spiritual World
attractive description of the state of beatified that Spirits quoted above, from the eighth book of the Another brief passage may be added. 1 Fifth Ennead.
is
The most
After having admired the world of sense, its grandeur, and beauty, the eternal regularity of its movement, the gods, visible or invisible, the daemons, the animals and
'
87
contains,
we may
rise to
the archetype
is
;
we may
there contemplate all the spiritual objects which are of their own nature eternal, and which exist in their own
knowledge and life, and the pure Spirit which presides over them, and infinite wisdom, and the true kingdom For it of Kronos, the God who is KO/OO? and 1/01/9all that embraces in itself all that is immortal, all Spirit, should is God, all Soul, eternally unchanging. For why And it seek to change, seeing that all is well with it ? ? in itself whither should it move, when it has all things is much It Being perfect, it can seek for no increase.' the same as Plato's description in the Phaedo : When the Soul returns into itself and reflects, it passes into another region, the region of that which is pure and everlasting, and feeling itself kindred immortal and unchangeable thereto, it dwells there under its own control, and has rest from its wanderings, and is constant and one with 1 Aristotle itself as are the objects with which it deals/ of is same spiritual conception really not far from the
'
ought not to pay regard to those who exhort we are men we ought to think human things and to keep our eyes upon mortality. Rather, as far as we can, we should endeavour to rise to that in us which is immortal, and to do everything in conformity with what is best for us for if in bulk it is small, yet in power and dignity it far exceeds all else that we possess. Nay, we may even think of it as our true self, for it is the supreme element and the best that is in us. If so, it would
'
life.
We
us that as
1 may quote a parallel from a modern Platonist, who by an early and glorious death has passed into the better world which was often in his thoughts.
We
[We
will]
there
;
Spend in pure converse our eternal day Think each in each, immediately wise Learn all we lacked before hear, know, and say What this tumultuous body now denies And feel, who have laid our groping hands away And see, no longer blinded by our eyes.
;
; ;
(Rupert Brooke).
88
is
1 properly our own.' In the spiritual world finite beings exist as pulse-beats of the whole system finite relations are superseded by complete communion. All the faculties of the Soul must
;
be transmuted to suit these eternal conditions. There a constant can be no reasoning (Xoyio-juios) Yonder activity (evepyeia ea-Tuxra) takes the place of dubitative 2 Nor can there be any memory for all v6tj(ri? reasoning. 3 is timeless. In the spiritual world all is reason (Xo'yo?)
; ;
and wisdom
4
;
'
Spirits
'
living
The calm of the (Oewpia fwora). contemplation 6 Spirit is not an ecstatic condition, but a state of activity/
Its rest is
unimpeded energy.
This raises a question, which affects the roots of the Neoplatonic philosophy, whether even in heaven there can be satisfaction without tension. For if there be no such thing as unimpeded activity, the only escape from this troublesome world of change and chance would be into the formless Absolute and the dreamless sleep of Nirvana. We should lose the /coo-yuo? i/o^ro?, and with
it
almost all that makes Plotinus an inspiring guide. The world would be cut into two halves, both of which could be proved by analysis to be unreal. The answer,
I
think,
is
that in the spiritual world the opposition free action, like that between rest
is
transcended. Of course the Spirit cannot ; but the condition which calls out the expenditure of its energy is willed and accepted, so that We must not forget if there is tension, there is no strife.
and motion,
energise in vacuo
is a close parallelism between the world All that Yonder and that which we know Here below. is there is here/ as Plotinus says. The difference is that what we see here in a state of partial disintegration,
that there
'
Aristotle, Ethics,
Bk. x.
4. 3. 18.
&
4 See the long discussion in 4. 4. 3. 3. 5. This is one of many passages which show 5. 3. 7. was from the Schwarmerei of the extreme mystics. 3
3. 8. 8.
how far
Plotinus
89
amid a war of jarring elements, is there known as vigorous and harmonious life. The forces which here seem to
thwart the operations of the Universal Soul are not destroyed there/ but minister to the triumphant and
'
healthful activity of Spirit. Plotinus raises the curious question, what room, if 1 His any, there is for the arts and sciences in heaven.
answer
is,
symmetry and
harmony, they are rooted in spiritual reality, and have their place in the higher sphere. Greek aesthetics always
in art.
overvalued the importance of symmetry and proportion A modern Platonist would be right in enlarging
this answer,
all art
which expresses an
eternal or spiritual meaning has its place in the eternal world of Beauty, while all science which succeeds in the
In heaven 'the Soul is the Matter of Spirit/ 2 which means that the self -transcendence of the Soul is achieved
the passive instrument of Spirit, turning gaze steadily towards God and heaven, and trying, as a medieval mystic says, to be to God what a man's
by making
its
itself
'
hand
is
to a
man/ When
is
it
it
finds
is
it
that 'there
3 nothing between/
moulded by
is
it
and from one and the same with the world of Spirit this blessed state it will not change. 4 for it In knowing God, the Spirit knows also itself will know what it receives from God, what God has given
' ;
to
it,
1
and can
give.
In knowing this,
it
will
know
itself
S\ov
'In heaven '=&. Plotinus uses ovpavbs=b /c6<r/xos, TO 5. 9. ii. &ov, rb irw, rb 6'Xo>. See Bouillet, Vol. i, p. 243. But he also uses ovpavbs of an intermediate sphere between ^ct and tvravda, in which
memory
Souls.
3
first
appears,
I
4. 4. 5.
I
2
heaven/ because
the
-
home
^te? in of beatified
'
3. 9. 3. Cf. a ^ so 5- I 6* 4. 4. 2, ffTpa,<pfiaa ovdtv /uerai> ?x * 4. 4. 2, oi/Tws oPc Hxov<ra OVK &v /zera/SdXXoi, dXXa ?x ot & v dr/^Trrws irpbs v fi/wa ra3 VOIJTI^ rainrbv 6/J.ov J-\QVffa TTJV crvvalcrdijffiv avrijs, u>$
go
for
of them.
it
If
one of God's gifts, or rather the sum-total then the Spirit will know him and his powers,
itself
will
know
all
from him
it is
that
it
because seer and seen are the same. For this reason Spirit will know and see itself, because to see is to become oneself the thing seen.' 1 Thus the Soul can pass without any abrupt change into the eternal world, and find itself at home there. There is nothing between/ as Plotinus says again and again. It is only a question of words whether we call the our Spirit,' or whether we still pure Spirit in the Soul call it Soul. 2 We are kings when we are in the Spirit.' 3 Nay, we are no longer mere men, when we ascend to that height, taking with us the best part of the Soul/ The discursive reason (Stavota) can discern the handwriting,
'
'
'
'
'
'
as
it
were, of Spirit.
It
judges things by
its
own
canons,
which are given to it by Spirit, and testify that there is a higher region than its own. It knows that it is an image of Spirit, and that the handwriting which it deciphers in itself is the work of a writer who is Yonder. Will it then be content not to go higher ? No. It will proceed to the region where alone complete self-consciousness and self-knowledge exist the realm of Spirit. 4 So
'
the Siavota of the true Soul is Spirit in Soul/ 5 It is difficult to picture to ourselves a state of existence
no longer reason, because we know we shall not talk, because we shall which intuitively know each other's thoughts a state in which we shall be all eye/ 6 St. Augustine uses the same language and 7 Origen has applies it to the angels and beatified Spirits. much the same doctrine about the relation of Soul to
in
which we
;
shall
in
'
Spirit that
1
we
6.
find in Plotinus
all
52
In
3. 7i. 6.
is
&>rwy pbvov
*
\l/vxn
when
it
becomes
6
vovs.
He
also uses
vov* /ic0eK76s.
7
5. 3. 4.
Augustine,
De
29
22. 29.
91
When
is
body, and not only follows the Spirit but becomes in the Spirit, must we not say that it puts off its soul-nature, and becomes spiritual ? >l But Plotinus will not let us
is the child of Spirit and that the higher or barren. The felicity of can never be, is, principle is over into the Logos and flows which Soul, Spirit always 2 of As activity Spirit. Shakespeare says
'
Heaven doth with us as we with torches do Not light them for themselves for if our virtues
;
:
Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touched But to fine issues nor Nature never lends
:
The
smallest scruple of her excellence, But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines Herself the glory of a creditor,
use.' 3
necessary for us to be carefully on our guard against interpreting the Neoplatonic Yonder as merely the future life. It is intimately bound up with present
'
'
experience.
Every worthy object of human activity, the mechanical arts, belongs at least in part to including the eternal world. 4 Spirit is the universal element in
worthy occupations. Spirituality means a persistent attitude of mind, which will never be immersed in the particular instance. The Soul is able to recognise spiritual
all
law in the natural world, and in recognising it, Soul itself becomes more spiritual. Escape from the thraldom of change and chance is always open and the return journey, which is the magnetic attraction of Spirit, is always open too.
;
5. i. 3. Origen, De Oratione, 10. Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Act i, Sc. i. * And cf. 5. 5. 2, where it is stated explicitly that Spirit 5. 9. ii. knows the life of Soul.
1
92
It possesses all
Spirit possesses all things at all times simultaneously. things unchanged in identity. It is ; it
knows no past
co-exist in
or future
x
;
all
an eternal Now.
Each
of
them
is
Spirit
and
Being
'
Spirit, univer-
sal Being.' 2
we
call
In what
petuity (aiSiorw) consist ? Are perpetuity and eternity 3 In identical, or is a thing eternal by being perpetual ?
any case eternity must depend on one common character, but it is an idea composed of many elements, or a nature either derived from the things Yonder or united to them,
or seen in them, so that all spiritual objects taken together make one eternity, which nevertheless is complex
powers and in its essence. When we look at its complex powers, we may call it Being or Reality, as the substratum of spiritual objects we may call it Movein its
;
as the Rest, as their permanence as of these call Difference it we plurality principles, may their unity, Identity. 4 A synthesis of these principles
life
;
; ;
ment, as their
them back to life alone, suppressing their differand considering their inexhaustible activity, the identity and immutability of their action, their life, and their thought, in which there is no change or break. In
brings ences,
contemplating all things thus, we contemplate eternity see a life which is permanent in its identity, which possesses all things at all times present to it, which is not first one thing and then another, but all things at
;
we
1 Mr. Bertrand Russell (Mysticism and Logic, p. 21) quotes as typical of the mystical attitude towards time the following from a Persian Sufi Past and future are what veil God from our sight.
'
How
*
3 *
5- I- 4-
In i. 5. 7 he says we must not confound T& Plotinus thus finds in eternity all the
x/>oj/t/c6>
del
T$
93
It contains all perfect and indivisible. a as in without things together,' single point, anything it remains identical and suffers no passing from it
which
is
Being alvrays in the present, because it has never anything nor will acquire anything, it is always what 2 it is. it is the light which Eternity is not the substratum from it. Its of no futurity it admits proceeds identity is always now, the same. That of we which always cannot say, It was,' or it will be/ but only, 'it is that, the existence of which is immovable, because the past has taken nothing from it and the future can bring
change.
lost
;
'
'
'
nothing to it, that is eternity. Therefore the life of the real in reality, in its full, unbroken, and absolutely un-
changing totality, is the eternity which we are seeking. Eternity is not an extraneous accident of spiritual it is with it and of it. It is closely bound up reality with reality, because we see that all the other things which we affirm to exist Yonder are from and with reality. For the things which hold the first rank in being must be in and with the highest existences. This is to be said
' ;
of the
Beautiful,
it
and
also
of
Truth.
Some
of these
were in a part of the whole of Being, while others are in the whole because this whole, being a true whole, is not composed of parts, but engenders the Further, in this whole, Truth does not consist in parts. the agreement of one thing with another, but with that of which it is the Truth. The true whole must be a whole not only in the sense that it is all things, but in the sense If so, it can have no that nothing is wanting to it.
qualities are as
;
future
1
for to
it is
to imply
Augustine expounds the doctrine of Plotinus in his own words. [Sapientiam] pertinent ea quae nee fuerunt nee futura sunt sed sunt; et propter aeternitatem in qua sunt.et fuisse et esse et futura esse dicuntur sine ulla mutabilitate temporum. Non enim sic fuerunt ut esse desinerent, aut sic futura sunt quasi nunc non sint, sed id ipsum esse semper habuerunt semperque habitura sunt. Manent autem non tamquam in spatiis locorum fixa veluti corpora, sed in natura incorporali sic intelligibilia praesto sunt mentis aspectibus, sicut ita in locis
'
Ad quam
De
Plotinus uses this Aristotelian term (inroKeifj.fvot') both of Matter as the receptacle of Forms, 2. 4. i, and, as here, of voTjrd. Cf. 6. 3. 4.
94
wanting, that it is not yet the whole. Again, nothing contrary to its nature can happen to it for it is impassible. And if nothing can happen to it, it has no future and no past. In the case of created things, if you take away their future you take away their existence, which consists in continual growth but in things that are not created cannot the idea of futurity without ousting you apply them from their position in Reality. For they could not belong originally to the world of real being, if their life were in a becoming and in the future. The blessed which are the have even any in rank not beings highest desire for the future for they are already all that it is their nature to be they possess all that they ought to have possess nothing to seek for, since there is they no future for them, nor can they receive anything for which there is a future. The world of Spirit can admit nothing which belongs to not-being. This condition and nature of Reality is what w e mean by eternity the word aiwv is derived from TO ael ov that which exists
that something
'
; .
. .
for ever.
'
x
. .
.
What then
;
eternal world,
nature
if
we do not cease to contemplate the we remain united to it, adoring its we do not weary in so doing, if we run to it
if
if
we may be eternal like it, contemplating eternity left, and the eternal by that which is eternal in ourselves ? If that which exists in this manner is eternal and everit follows that that which never sinks to a lower nature, and which possesses the fullness of life must be perpetual. Eternity then is a sublime it is identical with God. Eternity is God manithing his own nature is it ; Being in its calmness, its festing
existing,
self-identity, its
permanent life. We must not be surto find for everything Yonder prised plurality in God is multiple on account of its infinite power. That is
;
Aristotelian
De Mundo,
i. 9.
95
of
and that
because
it
which we
nothing. speak essentially infinite, Eternity then may be defined as life which is infinite because it is universal and loses nothing of itself, having no past and no future. Since this nature, so all-beautiful and eternal, exists around the One, from the One, and to the One, never
.
loses
'
leaving it, but abiding around it and in it and living like Plato speaks with profound wisdom when he says " that eternity abides in One." 1 In these words he implies that Eternity not only reduces itself to unity with itself,
it,
but that
is
it is the life of Reality around the One. This what we seek, and that which so abides is eternity. That which abides in this manner, and which remains the same, that is to say, the activity of this life which remains of itself turned towards the One and united to it, and which has no illusory life or existence, must be eternity. For true being consists in never not being and
never being different that is to say, in being always the same without distinctions. True being knows no gaps, no developments, no progress, no extension, no before or after. If it has no before or after if the truest thing that we can say about it is that it is ; if it is in such a way as to be Reality and life, we are again brought to the notion of eternity. We must add, however, that when we say that " Being is for ever," that there is not onetime when it is and another when it is not, we are speaking with a view to clearness; "for ever" is not used quite If we use it to express that Reality is incorrectly. destructible, we may mislead ourselves by using words 2 applicable only to the many, and to persistence in time. It might be better to call eternity "that which is,"
;
simply.
lent
1
But as
"
"
that which
"
is
is
of
Reality,"
and as some
iroTf.
rr\v tyv\T]V
els HKftaffiv
;
TOV
/-IT?
am
iri,\etyovT6s
meaning
96
Becoming
necessary.'
"
for ever
"
seemed
It is plain from this passage, and from all that Plotinus says about the eternal world, that his conception of eternity is widely different from the hope of continued
existence in time, to which many persons, though by no means so many as is often assumed, cling with passionate
Ghost -stories have no attraction for the Platonist. does not believe them, and would be very sorry to have to believe them. The kind of immortality which psychical research endeavours to establish would be for him a negation of the only immortality which he
desire.
He
'
'
desires
and believes in. The difference between the two hopes is fundamental. Some men are so much in love with what Plotinus would call the lower soul-life, the
surface-consciousness
up the content
known
to ourselves,
that they wish, if possible, to continue it after their bodies are mouldering in the grave. Others recognise that this lower soul-life is a banishment from the true home of the
Soul, which is in a supra-temporal world, and they have no wish to prolong the conditions of their probation after the probation itself is ended, and we are quit of our body of humiliation.' Nor does Neoplatonism encourage the belief that the blessed life is a state which will
'
only begin for the individual when the earthly course of the whole human race has reached its term. This theory of the intermediate state as a dreamless sleep finds
'
'
Earth, lie heavily upon her eyes Seal her sweet eyes weary of watching, Earth Lie close around her leave no room for mirth
;
With
its harsh laughter, nor for sound of sighs. She hath no questions, she hath no replies. Hushed in and curtained with a blessed dearth Of all that irked her from the hour of birth With stillness that is almost Paradise. Darkness more clear than noonday holdeth her,
;
3- 7-
3-6.
97
Until the morning of Eternity Her rest shall not begin nor end, but be And when she wakes she will not think
;
it
long.'
'
The morning
of Eternity/
it
appears,
is
new series, snipped off at one end but not other. And the waiting time before that hour
of a
must be a period of unconsciousness, in which the Soul is neither dead nor alive. This unphilosophical conception is very unlike the doctrine of Plotinus. For him, to win admittance into the eternal world, which lives in an everlasting Now, is to awake out of sleep. But the And, sleep is the surface life of common consciousness. as he says, we can take nothing with us which belongs to the dream-world of mortality. The Soul which lives Yonder in blessed intercourse with God is not the compound (rvvOerov) which began its existence when we were born. Nothing which can never die was ever born. Our true self is a denizen of the eternal world. Its home is in the sphere of eternal and unchanging activity
' '
Yonder, even while it energises in the execution of finite but Divine purposes here below. Eternity is an experience and a conception partly latent and partly patent in all human life. It is in part denned to our consciousness negatively. Of things in This thing is outside that. They place and time we say cannot coincide or amalgamate hence they are different. And again we say, This thing comes after that. The former must disappear before the latter can arrive hence they are different. But our minds tell us that there is a large class of things of which these statements are untrue. These things do not interfere with each other or displace each other. They are alive and active, but they are neither born nor die. They are constant without 1 inertia Our they are active but they do not move.
:
totle
See Dr. Schiller's excellent essay on the Mpyeia in the volume called Humanism.
;
&Kivr)<rias
in Aris-
II.
98
knowledge
know-
but our customary habits of thought and modes of speech confuse us. To be honest, we can think most clearly of eternal life when we divest the conception of its ethical associations but this is to cut the nerve which links the temporal and the eternal. It will lead us to acosmism, for this world will then have no meaning or, since outraged nature has her occasional revenges/ we may swing round into materialism. And the interpenetration of time and eternity in our consciousness, though it may spoil or confound the symmetry of our metaphysics, is, after all, a fact of the Reason seeks soul-nature, in which we live and move.
ledge of the temporal order
;
'
to divide them, assigning to Caesar and to God what belongs to each but in the true spiritual experience they are not divided. Time is a child of eternity, and re;
'
sembles
its
parent as
all
much
as
it
can.!
The most
illum-
inating of
prophetic writings are those in which the set in a framework of eternity, such as the
life
of Christ, or
Words-
worth's interpretations of wild nature. And the sense of contrast between the temporal and the eternal existence, which are both ours, has produced some of the
noblest utterances of religious meditation.
'
Such
is
the
thought which inspired the goth Psalm, or the following words of Augustine, Thou, O God, precedest all past and times by the height of thine ever-present eternity thou exceedest all future times, since they are future, and when they have come and gone will be past time. Thy years neither come nor go but these years of ours both come and go, that so they may all come. All thy but these years abide together, because they abide our years will all be only when they will all have ceased to be. Thy years are but one day and this thy day is not every day but to-day. This thy to-day is eternity.' 2
;
.
.
1 Schopenhauer has the remarkable thought that Time is the form in which the variety of things appears as their perishableness.' 2 See also Confessions, 11.24; Augustine, Confessions, 11.13. De Trin. 12. 14 In Psalmos, 101.
'
99
becomes a stately procession This images across a background of eternal truth. does it and of ours does not pass within thee, yet day of no means have within since all these thee, pass things 1 all.' unless dost contain them thou somehow passing, The natures of Time and Eternity are so diverse that it is very difficult to bring them into vital relation with each other. We might have expected that Plotinus would have resorted to his favourite expedient of introducing an intermediate category which should partake of the nature of both/ I do not find that he has done so. 2 But the Christian schoolmen of the Middle Ages, who on this subject are in direct descent from the Neoplatonists
of
'
through the highly respected Boethius, did make this The analysis of the concept aevum, which attempt. stands between Eternity and Time, is of great interest
to the student of Neoplatonism.
is
taken mainly from the work of the very able and learned Jesuit, Bernard Boedder. 3 In the strict sense, he says, Eternity implies an existence which is essentially without beginning and without end. But no creature can be essentially without beginning and end and internal succession. If such a creature exists, it owes its eternity to the will of God. But God is essentially eternal. As the First Cause, He can have had no beginning. Absolute necessity of existence must be identical with His essence He can therefore never cease to be. And His existence is unchangeable therefore it cannot contain any different successive phases or modes of being. Boethius defines Eternity as
; ;
1 Id. 10. 27. miss in Plotinus what Augustine (Confessions, 20, 21) also missed in him, the lesson of Divine love and human humility which the descent of the Eternal into time suggests to the Christian.
We
7.
Proclus does draw distinctions in his treatment of eternity. The and rb aidiov (perr/ooatwi'toj (as it is irpo everything else) is a lower form of rb aMviov is an aiSifrrrjs There petuity) (eternity). which is /card, xp^ov. There are 6vra which are not in the full sense atwj/ta. This doctrine may have been one of the foundations of the scholastic doctrine of aevum. 3 Natural Theology, p. 243 sq.
One
is
loo
'
a simultaneously full and perfect possession of interminable life.' Eternity, thus defined, is identical with the highest life conceivable, the self-activity of infinite intellectual will.
This
'
life is
interminable/ because
'
it
endures
'
simultaneously possessed because it is neither capable of development nor liable to defect. In God is neither past nor present nor future. As Boethius expresses it, the passing Now makes time, the standing Now makes eternity.' The duration of
'
of absolute necessity.
It is
God
is
is
one everlasting state, the duration of temporal liable to a succession of states really distinct from
is
called aevum.
In
aevum there
is
perfection of a created Spirit. Nevertheless, Spirits are not quite above time or succession for though the specific perfection of their substantial being is unalterable, they can pass from one thought and volition to another, and the Creator may cause in them now one and now another Their essential being is above accidental perfection. to accidental modification of but are liable time, they called time belongs The duration duration. temporal
Time properly to Matter. St. Thomas Aquinas says has an earlier and a later aevum has no earlier and
:
'
but both can be connected with it eternity has neither an earlier nor a later, nor can they be connected with it.' Spiritual creatures,' says Aquinas
later in itself,
; '
as regards their affections and intellections, are measured by time as regards their natural being, they are measured by aevum ; as regards their vision of glory,
again,
;
'
they participate in eternity.' Baron von Hugel 1 has yielded to the temptation to find in the notion of aevum an anticipation of Bergson's duree. But as Bergson is far from holding the doctrines about Time and Eternity which are common to Neoplatonism and to the Catholic Schoolmen, it is not likely that he should need or acknowledge a conception which
1
101
was expressly designed to mediate between them. The scholastic aevum is something which (in participates the Platonic sense) in Time and Eternity, as these words are understood by St. Thomas. It is, in fact, the form which belongs to Soul-life, as Time belongs to the changes of Matter, and Eternity to the life of Spirit. A modern Neoplatonist may find the conception useful in explaining the relations of the Soul to Time and Eternity, though it is of little or no value in bridging the chasm between temporal succession and the totum simul. We prefer to confess/ says another modern interpreter of the Schoolmen, 1 that we do not know how to effect the translation of Eternity into Time/ Eternity is above and beyond us, though in it we live and move and have
' '
our being.
If
we understood
relation
it,
we should understand
But
this can-
Time
not
also,
and the
between them.
be,
without
transcending the
conditions
of
our
finite existence.
Eternity is, on one side, an ethical postulate. Without the whole life of will and purpose would be stultified. 2 All purpose looks towards some end to be realised. But if time in its course hurls all its own products into nothingit,
ness
if
there
is
all
happenings in time are defined, and by which they are judged, the notion of purpose is destroyed. The existence
of
human
will
travel quite freely over time and space they are not confined to the present whether we realise it
or not, in every thought
Our minds
we imply
that Reality
is
supra-
temporalJ Both Time and Eternity are involved in every act ofour moral and rational life. And it is through our experience "of Time that we come to know Eternity. As Baron von Hugel says, 3 Time is the very stuff and
'
John Rickaby, General Metaphysics,' p. 214. Cf. Rothe, Stille Stunden, p. 219. He who believes in a God, must also believe in the continuance of life after death. Wit out this,
*
there would be no world which would be thinkable as an object (Zweck) for God.' 8 Eternal Life, p. 38* sq.
?
102
means in and by which we vitally experience and apprehend eternal life. ... A real succession, real efforts, and the continuous sense of limitation and inadequacy are the very means in and through which man apprehends increasingly (if only he thus loves and wills) the contrasting yet
not eternal life, though in its entirety and meaning it is very near to it. It may be called the eternity of the phenomenal world. This thought has been very nobly expressed in a fine sonnet by Sidney Lanier
:
'
Where thought
at thy soft recalling voice I rise is lord o'er Time's complete estate, Like as a dove from out the grey sedge flies
Now
To tree-tops green where coos his heavenly mate. From these clear coverts high and cool I see
every time with every time is knit, to all is mortised cunningly, is sole or whole, yet all are fit. Thus, if this age but as a comma show
How
of large-worded years, calmer soul scorns not the mark I know This crooked point Time's complex sentence clears. Yet more I learn while, friend, I sit by thee
My
Who
Eternity is that of which duration is the symbol and sacrament. It is more than the totality of that which strives to express and imitate it. But Time resembles it as
' '
'
Time exists, in an eminent sense/ in eternity. We must therefore beware, when we tread the mystic's negative road, lest we cut
far as
it
can/
All that
we
'
find in
ourselves off from knowledge of God. When we say that God, or eternity, is not like this/ we mean that Reality is glimmering through its appearances as something higher than they, but not as something wholly alien to them. Therefore we need not discard those modes of envisaging eternity which clearly depend on temporal and spatial imagery. Such imagery cannot be dispensed for the symbols of substance and shadow equally with
' ;
103
belong to this world, and do not take us much further than those of co-existence and succession. Nevertheless it cannot be denied that popular religion, by insisting on its local and temporal imagery, has not only impeded the progress of natural science, but has
sadly impoverished the idea of eternal life, and in the minds of very many has substituted a material fairyland
for the true home of the Spirit. The Jewish tendency to throw the golden age into the future has its dangers, no less than the early Greek tendency to throw it into the
past.
LECTURES
XVII, XVIII,
XIX
THE ABSOLUTE
(TO
ev,
TO irpwTov, TO ayaQov)
goal of the Intellect is the One. The goal of the Will is the Good. The goal of the Affections of Love and Admiration is the Beautiful.
We
;
something other than a numeral that the Good is not merely that which satisfies the moral sense and that the Beautiful is not merely that which
;
One
causes aesthetic pleasure. We have seen that Goodness, Truth, and Beauty are the attributes of Spirit and the Spiritual world. They are
the three objects of the Soul's quest. They may be represented as the three converging pathways which lead up and they furnish three lines of the hill of the Lord 1 The spiritual world must be this is the concluproof. sion of the dialectic, which convinces us that the idea of
;
perfect.
1
'
plurality implies that of unity, that of imperfection a this is the claim of the ethical It ought to be
Bradley
is
here again a valuable guide to understanding Plotinus. form implies a substantial totality beyond relations and above them, a whole endeavouring without success to realise itself in their detail.' [This is the apex of the dialectical pyramid. But the in the Hegelian realise itself disciple of Plotinus must not take Further, the ideas of goodness, and of the beautiful, suggest sense.] in different ways the same result. We gain from them the knowledge of a unity which transcends and yet contains every manifold And the mode of union, in the abstract, is actually appearance. given (Appearance and Reality, p. 160). We must, however, remember that for Plotinus the relational form,' though it points beyond itself, is an essential character of ofola. We cannot get above vovs without falling outside it,' as Plotinus tells us.
The
relational
'
'
'
'
'
'
104
THE ABSOLUTE
sense.
It is
105
or intuition,
made by
this is the discovery of direct experience the Soul yearning in love for^its
heavenly home.
The Path of
Dialectic
The word
'
dialectic/ like
many
It of Platonism, has helped to confuse modern critics. has travelled it means literally the art of discussion, but
1 Diogenes Laertius quotes invented was Aristotle as saying that the method by Zeno, the Eleatic, from whom it was no doubt borrowed by Socrates. In the Dialogues of Plato it means the art of giving a rational account (\6yov) of things, and more especially the discovery of the general truths and principles which underlie the discoveries of particular sciences. For instance, the results of mathematical and astronomical science need to be examined by the dialectician. 2 In the Republic 3 Socrates claims that dialectic alone can
far
from
its original
meaning.
'
comprehend by regular process all true existence, and what each thing is in its true nature for the arts in
;
general are concerned with the desires or opinions of men, or are cultivated with a view to production and
construction, or for the preservation of such productions
and constructions and as to the mathematical sciences, which have some apprehension of true being, they only dream about being, but never behold the waking reality so long as they leave their hypotheses unexamined and are unable to give an account of them. Dialectic
;
. . .
away with hypothesis, in order to make her own the eye of the soul, which is literally ground secure
does
;
buried in an outlandish slough, is by her gentle aid lifted upwards and she uses as helpers and handmaids in the work of conversion the sciences which we have been We reach true science only when we do discussing/
;
'
1 a
106
away with the hypotheses which belong to some sciences and not to others. Such particular hypotheses are only postulates, and we desire to find the non-hypothetical
Dialectic, thus understood, is the art principle. of discovering the affinities of forms or ideas (etSrj), and kinds or categories (ywri), with each other. This is why
first
dialectic
is
specially
a science
which enables us to reason about each thing, to say what it is and how it differs from others, what it has in common with them, where it is, whether it really exists, to determine how many real beings there are, and where not-being is to be found instead of true It treats also of being. good and evil, of all that is subordinated to the Good and to its contrary, of the nature of that which is eternal and of that which is not. It speaks of all things scientifically and not according to simple opinion. ... It traverses the whole domain of the spiritual, and then by
analysis returns to its starting-point/
it rests,
in
logical dis-
quisitions to another art, subordinate to itself. Dialectic receives its clear principles from Spirit, which furnishes
it can receive. In possession of these combines and distinguishes its material, till
comes to pure spiritual knowledge. Dialectic is the most precious part of philosophy all existing things are Matter for it 'it approaches them methodically, 1 Falsepossessing things and thoughts in combination.' hood and sophisms it recognises only to reject them as
;
'
'
alien to itself.
of
knowledge
it
leaves
to the special sciences, seizing the general truth about them by a kind of intuition. Philosophy includes these
studies, such as the detailed application of ethical principles
dialectic, which is the same as wisdom (a-o(f>la), is concerned with the principles themselves, on which con:
1
Afjia
rots #ew/577/xacri
ri irpdy/Jiara
x ovffa"
is
^n
true
tiriffTtj /AIJ
the cor*
perfect.
THE ABSOLUTE
duct depends.
traversing
/
107
principles
which
leads
and
It passes through logic, wisdom. above it. Plotinus is at no pains to separate the intellectual ascent from the moral and the in fact he refuses to do so. They begin to mystical
up to
intuitive
at last rises
This view, so disconsuch to intellectualists (if there are any certing both in the to find intellectualism and to those who try people)
join long before our journey's end.
' '
the outcome of the conception of logic to Plato and Hegel. Logic is the the or nature of law experience, impulse towards supreme or coherence which every fragment yearns unity by towards the whole to which it belongs/ 2 The birth of
school of Plato,
is is
which
common
'
logic is
for completion.
itself
&
and worries
no
(ovSev en TroAfTr/oay^o^) when it has traversed the whole domain of Spirit. But it does not permit us to stop at the attributes of the spiritual world. Just as Eckhart, the most Plotinian of all Christian philosophers, distinguishes between God and -the Godhead, so
more
limit.
Plotinus must follow his quest of unity to the utmost The God whom we commonly worship is the
of
cannot be known.
of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty must be beyond existence and beyond knowledge.
The Absolute as
the
One
If the Greeks had had a symbol for zero, and especially that symbol had been the mystic circle, it may well be that the Pythagoreans and Plotinus would^have anticiif
who
called the
Absolute
i. 3.
4-6.
io8
nihil.
the
One
'
the negation of
all
number.
For
The
earlier
numbers and the things counted. affirmed that numbers are realities. they Plato agreed that numbers are realities, but this is part of his affirmation that there are other kinds of reality
distinguish between
this reason
besides that of sensible objects. 2 The Monad in Pythagorean arithmetic was not itself a number, but the source in which the whole nature of all numbers is implicit.
of the Monad as the undifferentiated whole, out of which particulars branched off. The true whole, as Plotinus said, is that which gives birth to the parts, not a mere collection of the parts. 3 Thus we must be careful not to give the One a merely numerical sense. In this, the numerical sense, unity and plurality are
They thought
'
'
we cannot have the one without In this sense, the Absolute One would be an impossible abstraction. But for Plotinus the Onejs the source from which the differentiation of unity and it is the transcendence of 'separability plurality proceeds In the Fifth rather than the negation of plurality. Ennead he says that 'the One is not one of the units which make up the number Two/ When we call the Absolute the One, we intend thereby only to exclude the notion of discerptibility. 4 The unity in duality^of Spirit and the Spiritual World points decisively to a deeper unity lying behind them. This is the coping-stone of the dialectic. Spirit/ he 5 first must be a hold the There cannot says, place.^ as have been above such we it, endeavouring principle to find. Spirit is at once vovs and voyrov, that is to say, two things at once. If they are two, we must find that
correlatives, so that
the other.
?7.
'
'
which
alone
If
?
is
No
before this duality. What is this ? Is it Spirit for there can be no 1/01/9 without a vorjrov
;
;
separate TO
vorjrov,
and you
will
is
no longer have
not
6
vov$.
if
the principle
1 3
we
2
are seeking
vov$, it
must,
5. 5. 6.
'
3- 7- 4-
3- 8. 9.
THE ABSOLUTE
it
109
Why then
is
to escape the dualism, be something above should it not be TO vo^rov ? Because TO as closely joined to vovs as vow to it. If then
is
it is
what can it be ? We shall answer, the source from which both vov? and votrrdv The Absolute is therefore inferred from the proceed.'
neither
vovs
nor
vorjTov,
impossibility of reducing either vovs or voryrov to dependence the two are inseparable, and the Absolute can
;
be neither of them. Another reason, for Plotinus, why neither vovg nor vorjrov can be the Absolute is that they are themselves multiple. The vornMara are not one but
'
many/ and
One
'
vovs also is
many
in one.
The name
'
The
not adequate to express the nature of the Absolute, which cannot be apprehended by any of our senses. If any sense could perceive it, it would be sight but how can we see that which has no form ? We say that the Absolute is One as being indivisible but this is to introduce a quantitative measurement, which is quite out of
is
; ;
1 Without attempting to picture to ourselves the nature of the One, we can understand that as all things participate in unity, in different degrees, and as the path to reality is a progress from lower unities to higher unities, there must be, at the top of the ascent, an absolute unity, a perfect simplicity, above all differentiation. It is not the weakest and poorest of all numbers, but the plenitude of all, and the source of all.
place.
Godhead
to form
is
any idea
(2) It is a principle of this philosophy that we are not cut off from the highest form of life the eternal and universal life of Spirit. (3) We have, in the mystical
1
6. 9. 5, 6.
no
state,
an experience of intuition which is formless and indescribable, and which is therefore above the spiritual world of Forms or Ideas. The doctrine goes back to Plato, and a little further still, for Eucleides of Megara was the first to identify the Good and the One, who is also called God and Wisdom. 1 He seems to have argued that all the Forms may be reduced to One, which alone exists. This line of thought
some Indian philosophy, an all-embracing, undifferentiated, solely existing unity has no distinguishable content whatever. Plato,
leads straight to the nihilism of
for in the Republic, 2 seeks to escape this conclusion
by
rele-
'
'
beyond Reality (eTn^i/a The passage, which is isolated in Plato, and is never referred to by Aristotle, had yet an enormous for philosophy. importance subsequent The God is not only the author of knowledge to all things known, but of their Being and Reality, though the Good is not Reality, but beyond it, and superior to it in dignity and power.' This remarkable sentence is followed by the famous allegory of the cave, in which the prisoners, when their heads are turned towards the light, see the realities which cast their In this world of shadows upon the walls of their den. true knowledge the Idea of the Good appears last of all, and is seen only with an effort and when seen is inferred to be the universal author of all things beautiful and right, parent of light and of the lord of light in this visible world, and the immediate source of reason and truth in the spiritual world and this is the power upon which he who would act rationally in public or private life must fix his gaze/ This position is half-way between that attributed to Eucleides and the doctrine of Plotinus. The Idea of the Good still belongs to the world of Real Being, and still, it would seem, subsumes the other Forms under itself but the Good itself is beyond Reality.'
' ' ;
'
'
'
1
8
i,
230
sq.
THE ABSOLUTE
It is
not clear that Plato sanctions any goal of aspiration beyond this noblest of the Forms. Alexandrian philosophy before Plotinus had pondered much upon the unknowable Godhead. To Philo, as a
was a dogma that no man may see God face to face, and live. The created cannot behold the uncreated. One must first become God which is impossible in
Jew,
'
it
Even Moses, order to be able to comprehend God/ where God darkness he into the thick entered though
'
'
dwells,
could
perceive
exists
nothing,
and
'
God
it is
folly to
than
this.
He
has properties
ties (iroioTnres).'*-
eternal, self -existent, for these omnipotent, predicates belong to Him alone.
But God
itself
:
is
He
Good itself and the Beautiful can.be apprehended by Himself alone.' Philo's
better than the
' ;
'
above space and time but not beyond Reality.' Clement of Alexandria, as a Christian, feels the same objection to saying that God is beyond Reality.' Accordingly, he declares that God is or has ova-la, but outdoes
is
*
God
the Neoplatonists by saying that He is beyond the One and above the Monad,' 2 a phrase which seems to have
'
no meaning. He is formless and nameless, though we sometimes give Him names.' Origen attaches less value than Clement to the negative road as the way to understand God's nature but he insists that a certain divine
'
'
'
is
The doctrine has had a long history in later Christian Augustine, whose earlier works are steeped theology.
God is essentia, not substantia ; God alone should be called essentia. 3 We can perhaps know what God is not, but not what He is.' 4 Dionysius
in Plotinus, says that
'
properly means sui generis, not belonging to any class. Clement, Pad., 1.8.71. But lamblichus and Proclus also speak of a Tr&.vT'r) Appyros apx^i above the One. 8 Augustine, Dg Trinitate, 7. 5.
<*7roios
2 4
De
Trinitate, 8. 2.
112
the Areopagite describes God the Father as ' superessential indetermination/ the unity which unifies every unity/ the absolute no-thing which is above all reality.'
'
'
No monad
'
of jargon, can express the all-transcending hiddenness of the all-transcending superessentially superexisting
super-Deity/ Erigena is not afraid to follow Plotinus in denying Being to God. Being, he says, is a defect, since it separates from the The things superessential Good. that are not are far better than those that are.' God, therefore, per excellentiam non immeriio Nihilum vocatur.' God is above the category of relation and therefore in the Godhead the Three Persons of the Trinity are fused. Eckhart, as we have seen, distinguishes between the Godhead and God. The Godhead is not Being, but the eternal potentiality of Being, containing within Himself
'
'
all distinctions,
as yet undeveloped.
'
'
All things in
God
But Eckhart is determined not to deprive God of Being and Life. If I have said that God is not a Being and is above Being, I do not mean to deprive Him of Being, but to honour Being in Him.' 1 But elsewhere
are one thing.'
he uses the familiar language of mysticism, calling the Godhead the silence, the darkness, or the desert. His We were theory of creation resembles that of Plotinus. in God eternally, like a work of art in the mind of a master.' His distinction between God and the Godhead enables him to insist firmly on the immanence of God in the world. Without the creatures, God would not be
'
'
God.'
more
Plotinus makes the same distinction, careful than Eckhart to maintain that
'
the creation of the lower orders of Being is necessary because the higher order is what it is, not at all in order that it may become what it ought to be. He is quite clear that the One must be independent of the world of
'
Forms.
The One
1
'
is
beyond
ova-la,
beyond
activity,
p. 174.
beyond
Cf. Delacroix,
Le Mysticisme en Allemagne,
THE ABSOLUTE
sense
113
and v6>j<ri9. 1 It is 'an activity beyond vow and and life.' 2 We may call it First Activity, 3 or First 4 since in the One there is no difference bePotency tween Svvafjiis and evepyeia 5 but strictly $vva/j.t? and evepyeia belong to over la, and cannot properly be predicated of the Absolute. It has no limit or boundary, 6
; ;
but
is
We
infinite. 7
is
what
it
is.
After
the highest attributes that we can conceive, we must add, yet not these, but something better/ We must not ascribe Will to the Absolute, if Will
ascribing to
9 implies the desire for something not yet present. we may say, It is what it willed to be/ for it is its
'
But
own
author. 10
In a more detailed discussion, he says that all Will/ and that there is nothing in him that is prior to his Will/ There is no real resemblance between this doctrine and the blind unconscious Will of
the
One
'
'
is
The One in Plotinus is not unconbut superconscious. It possesses a higher form of consciousness than the discursive reason, or even than the intuitive perception of Spirit. Plotinus calls it immediate comprehension (aOpoa 7ri/3o\ri). 11 He is careful
scious,
German pessimism.
to explain that when we speak of Will in the Absolute, we are using words incorrectly. What we mean to assert
is
that the
is
One
posits himself
(ixpia-rqcriv
eavrov), that
there
no chance or contingency in him, and that he could never wish to be other than he is. In one curious passage he says that he is what he wishes (OeXet, not /3ov\Tai) to be, or rather he projects (airopplTrrei) what he wishes into the world of Reality/ The Absolute is he is all essentially Will only as being his own cause
'
:
1 8
ovalas, 6. 8.
vovv, 6. 8. 16 ; tvtpyeia ^ Trpwr?; Avev 2O ; vtpyr}fj.a lavrov ctur6s, 6. 8. 16. 4 5 6 2. 9- i. 5- 4- i. 4. 3. 8; 6. 7. 17.^ 7 8 2. 6. 5. 9, J3v<r<r60v &irei.pov. 3. 13, &pprjTOv rfi oiXrjBeigi. 9 12. 6. 8. 13. 5- 3tiirtp
5. 4. 2 ; 5. 6. 6.
i. 7. i. It is tvtpyeia
6. 8. 16.
"
1
'
Aliotta
(p.
'
Unconscious
II. 1
says truly enough that Hartmann endows his with the same faculty. But in him this is a patent
32)
inconsistency.
H4
He is Will, because there can be nothing outside him. also all necessity, because there can be no contingency in
his
life.
1
quet,
that
Plotinus would have agreed with Mr. Bosanfor the Absohite to be a Will, or purpose,
'
of nothing in particular/
The Absolute
necessity. freedom in
is
all
no
Being absolutely free, He is the cause of the world of Spirit. We may rightly call the
giver
of
One
'the
freedom'
(eXevOepoTroiov).
All
teleology belongs to the finite world of becoming, in which the thoughts of God are transmuted into vital law.
Nevertheless, the purposes which constitute the reality of psychical life, and which live as achievement in the
spiritual world, flow directly from the One, who is what he willed to be.' Plotinus does not bind us to the fatalism
'
of
Angelus Silesius
'
Wir beten
es gescheh,
Und
Eckhart
will/
sieh, er
is
mein Herr und Gott, dein \Ville 1st ein ewge Stille/
nearer Plotinus
when he
;
'
says,
He
is
God
Plotinus also answers in the negative the question whether the One thinks (voei). 2 But he certainly does not
wrapped in eternal slumber. It from that of vou?. 3 He has self-discernment (SiaKpiriKov eavrov), which implies 4 -consciousness. It differs from vorjo-ig as of self a sort the subject-object relation being more instantaneous, being quite transcended. The only reason why 1/01/079, and ordinary self - consciousness ((rwoupQwis), are
is
mean
'
has a
true
vo^a-is,' different
'
is
of duality.
1
That which
and
cf.
Bradley,
483 sq.
6. 93. 8.
6 10
6. 7. 37. 5. 4. 2.
5. I. 7.
* 6. 7. 1 6
and
He
has
rrj
He
vovs.
^-mcrTpo^y
7r/>6s
avrb
eu>/>a,
77
Spaais
THE ABSOLUTE
not even need
itself.'
1
115
in a state of
'
wake-
ns a good deal about it or him, investing him in fact with the attributes of a personal God. The faculties of
Spirit are, after all, ascribed to the First Principle, only per eminentiam, and with apologies for the weakness of human thought. We must not say that the Absolute We must not say that he wills, and yet he is all Will. thinks, and yet he comprehends everything. We must not
and yet he is more awake than Such a Being, it may be objected, is he is not the Absolute to whom the dialectic conducts not beyond Reality/ but the reigning monarch of the
say that he
is
conscious,
we can ever
'
be.
real world.
I do not see how this criticism is to be met, any more than I can justify the various characteristics which Herbert Spencer gives to the Unknowable, and Hartmann
to the Unconscious.
'
The
Neoplatonism is not whether the dialectic really leads to an Absolute beyond existence/ It does. The question is whether this Absolute can be the object of worship, or of contemplation, without at once descending into the sphere of vov?. The mystical vision of the One will be dealt with presently. Here we are concerned with a number of statements about the One, which are intended to make us understand what he is, though we know that Plotinus was well aware that omnis strictly he is not. deter minatio est negatio ; 2 but one cannot worship the a privative. He would probably not have been seriously troubled by the above criticism, for he has no desire at all to separate his three Divine Principles sharply from each other. He might perhaps have accepted our suggestion
that the
the
God
of
1
of practical religion
is
God
tXXei^iv Trout, 3. 9. 3.
n6
Spirit, the God of our most inspired moments the Abso' lute. And these three are one.' This is not so for the
dialectic,
if
we
method of acquiring knowledge of the eternal verities and scholastic logic, which does not recognise the fluidity and interpenetration of concepts in the spiritual world, gains lucidity and cogency at the
;
I will not conceal my opinion us too much about the One.' The inevitable result is that his successors postulate some still more mysterious principle behind the Monad.
price of truth.
However,
that Plotinus
'
tells
The One as
'
Infinite
The One is fundamentally infinite.' When we remember that Matter was also defined as 'the infinite/ we may think that there is a danger of a meeting of
'
of Herbert Spencer.
think, really exists in the philosophy The abstract idea of absolute full-
ness has no determinations to distinguish it from the If they are different, abtract idea of absolute emptiness.
be argued, that is only because in the philosophy the One has already begun to differentiate Matter to receive forms. We are conhimself, and fessedly in a region where discursive thought is no longer adequate, and we cannot leap off our shadows. To mount above vow, Plotinus himself warns us, is to fall outside it. There is a profound truth in the N observation of Proclus, already quoted, that the extremes (at the top and bottom of the scale) are simple, but the intermediate are complex. But the extremes are no more identical than the religion to which, in Bacon's aphorism, depth in philosophy recalls us, is identical with the religion from which a little philosophy estranges us. With regard to the conception of the Infinite, it is perhaps true to say that immeasurableness is revealed in the act of measuring. The fact of limit (Tre/Da?) only implies the
it
may
of Plotinus
'
'
'
'
'
'
THE ABSOLUTE
indefinite
;
117
the act of limiting implies the infinite. To for to know is to is a contradiction limit but we know the fact of the infinite, for it is implied in the act of knowing. It is a common criticism, brought against mysticism of the Indian type, that it ends in metaphysical nihilism.
know
the infinite
The mystic who tries to apprehend the infinite grasps only As applied to the actual teaching of Indian thinkers, this criticism is based largely on Western misunderstanding of Eastern thought. Nirvana is not what 2 But the danger Europeans have agreed to paint it. certainly exists and the best writers on mysticism have
zero. 1
fully
admitted
it
that
we may
grasp at a premature
synthesis and simplification of experience, and so lose the rich content of spiritual life. The vacuity, passing
almost into idiocy, of many cpntemplatives is an objectlesson in the consequences of this error. But no disciple of Plotinus is likely to fall into it. He teaches us that we must gain our soul first, and surrender it afterwards there are no short cuts to the beatific vision. And the highest experience, if it comes to us, will be light, not
;
darkness.
The question whether we ought to speak of God as has often been raised. To the Platonist, infinity suggests the absence of Form, which in all objects of
infinite
an evil to others it asserts freedom from all limitations, and is therefore a proper term to apply to God. Rothe 3 says, Absoluteness and infinitude are in no way identical conceptions. Infinitude is merely with the of idea self eternity -negation added. It cannot, in sense be therefore, any predicated of God. There is no worse, no poorer definition of the Absolute than the word infinite. God in his immanent being is to be considered as entirely outside space and time, and therefore
thought
is
;
'
On
to
See A. David, Le Modernisms Bouddhiste and Poussin, The Nirvana. 3 Still JHours, p. 98.
afjus 2
called
Way
n8
is
is
just as little infinite as finite.' The root of this objection that infinitude is an idea which belongs to space ; to
it
ascribe
to
God
is
adopting the frankly metaphorical expression of the Schoolmen (following Augustine) that God has his centre everywhere, and his circumference nowhere.
is
the
is.
first
cause
is
as the
Good
must
all
that
Plotinus
quite explicit
But
it
be remembered that the spiritual and phenomenal worlds are coeternal with the One, so that causality means little more than the assertion of a hierarchy in Reality, leading up to an all-embracing Absolute in which everything is contained, and which in the world of becoming is the
final consummation of every process. The following quotation 2 will show in what relation the One stands to the world of votjrd. Whatever is en'
gendered by another resides either in the principle which made it, or in another being, if there is one between it and its source for that which springs from another, and needs another to come into existence, needs another
;
everywhere, and therefore resides in another. The lowest things are in the next lowest, the higher in the next This first highest, and so on up to the first principle. be in another ; cannot above it, principle, having nothing but it contains all the others, embracing them without dividing itself among them, and possessing them without being possessed by them.' The One, he goes on, is everywhere and nowhere all things depend on it, and differ in value according as the dependence is closer or more remote.
;
The One
is
cipx 7?,
6. 9.
atrtov
ruv
TTOLVTUV,
5. 5.
13
frjyrj
xal
an
And
THE ABSOLUTE
Plotinus was well aware that
119
how
plurality can
super-essential. Physical science is equally unable to account for differentiation, and professes ignorance as to whether ether, homogeneous electrons, atoms only quantitatively different, and elements with very different
some
Trpw-n; v\*j.
The
the same whether we begin at the top or the difficulty bottom of the scale. To regard this problem as an inconsistency specially characteristic of Neoplatonism seems to me unintelligent criticism. The solution offered by
Plotinus
is
that of creation.
to be the Absolute
by creating a world wholly dependent nor does itself, Spirit lose anything by creating the Soul-world. To say that the Absolute must be God plus the world seems to me like saying that the real Shakespeare is the poet plus the folio edition of his works. As to the motive and manner of creation, it is obvious that we cannot be expected to know much. How God creates the world we can never understand/ says Prof. Ward and many other philosophers have urged that we cannot expect to know. But if, with Heracleitus, we assume that the road up and the road down must be the same, and if we can show, as Plotinus has shown, that there is nowhere any salto mortale in the ascent of the Soul to God, it seems reasonable to infer that there are no unbridged chasms in the creation of the various orders of Being by the Absolute, though we cannot understand the first stages, because we are not God. We have not even any secure footing in the Spiritual World, the second nature we do not even know our own highest
on
'
; ' ' '
'
'
'
As Malebranche says very well reveals only that I am, that I think, that
selves.
:
'
My
inner self
I desire, that
I feel,
what
that I suffer, etc. ; but it does not reveal to me am, the nature of my feelings, of my passions, of
my
pain, nor the relations of all these to one another, because, having no idea of my soul, not beholding its archetype in God, I am not able to discover either what
120
it is,
which it is capable.' 1 If this is true, any theory which seemed to explain to us the origin of the Spiritual World would be justly suspect. Nevertheless, Plotinus throws out some suggestions for countering The existence of the world is due to the objections.
modes
of
a second nature there being (Sevrepa were no If there necessity for each principle <f>v(Ti$). ' to give of its own to another/ the Good would not be the Good, Spirit would not be Spirit, and Soul would not
necessity
2
'
'
of
One would have no object would be alone and deserted, at a standstill. For activity is not possible in a being which has no inner multiplicity, unless it acts on another. 4 The One could not be alone if it were, all things would remain hidden, having no form in the One.' 5 There is a mysterious power (a<j>aro? Svvajuus) which impels each nature to create, and go on creating down to the lowest limit of existence. Thus only can its latent qualiWithout
;
be Soul. 3
Spirit, the
it
'
'
'
ties
(egeXiTreo-Qai). Why should we supOne would remain standing still in itself ? prom envy ? Or from want of power, though it is the Fower of all things ? 6 The creation is a kind of overflow
be unfurled
(otov vTrepeppvrj) of
the One. 7
It is like
'
and heat from the sun, which loses nothing in imparting 8 itself. Another favourite word is dependence (egapThere is an unraa-Oai),* which comes from Aristotle. broken chain from the One to Matter and back. The One is present to all grades, since it penetrates all things with power. The chain is so continuous that wherever the third rank is present, there is also the second, and the
'
first.'
10
just quoted have a Hegelian sound. They that the world is as necessary to the Absolute as suggest the Absolute is to the world. Whether this view is right
1
The passages
Malebranche, Entvetien
3. 4. 3. 6.
3.2.2.
2.9.3.
5. 2. i.
unfortunate
5. 4. i. illustration is
'
now employed by
critics
"
6. 5. 4.
THE ABSOLUTE
or wrong,
it is
121
not the philosophy of Plotinus. He insists of the One in many the following sentence may serve as a sample. 1 places The Good is the principle on which all depends, to which all aspires, from which all proceeds, and which all need. In itself it is "in need of nothing (avevSee?), sufficient for
itself, wanting nothing, the measure and term of all things, giving out of itself Spirit and Reality.' The necessity which causes the real world to proceed from the First
'
'
Principle
is
The Hegelian view, it need hardly be said, takes the world into the Absolute ; for otherwise the Absolute would need something outside itself, which is a contradiction. Further, it seems to make the timeprocess an essential factor in the life of the Absolute;
for according to this philosophy, as stated by its founder, God only comes to Himself in human history. It is no
akin to the necessity for self-expression on the is not a vital necessity of growth
doubt
difficult
to say whether Hegel really means that history, something that He was
not before, for he oscillates continually between two different kinds of development, the dialectical and the historical. Some Hegelians repudiate the notion of real progress in the Divine life, and speak instead of selfThis brings them much nearer to communication. Plotinus, who himself is found saying that the One would have been hidden without a world. But the Hegelians, if I understand them, would say that without a world the Godhead would have been hidden from itself. This Plotinus would not admit. In Biblical language God made the world to make His glory to be known/ But such an expression has no meaning as applied to the inner life of the One. The activity of the Absolute is there is no reaction upon it. purely one-sided I can imagine a critic saying The One of Plotinus seems to me to be only an objectification of the categories of Cause and Substance, which analysis has driven out
' '
'
'
i.
8. 2.
122
The infinite regress has led him to of the real world. take refuge in a citadel beyond the limits of thought, where he is unassailable because he has cut his communications with Reality/ But for Plotinus there is no infinite regress, because things in time are not causes. Nor is it true that Substance, if by this is meant ova-la, has been driven out of the real world. It is not the infinite regress of causation, but the infinite progress of aspiration, which leads us to the furthest confines of Reality, and beyond them to the Now fountain-head of all that is. We cannot ever say I have reached the top, and may stop climbing/ Un
'
:
'
Dieu
as
But Plotinus
his
titles
is
as well
aware
are
for
the
One
attempts to
name
the Nameless.
Plotinus calls the Absolute indifferently the the Good ; he does not call it the Beautiful.
One and
things in them are beautiful, being the offspring and essence of Spirit. Beyond this, as we affirm, is the nature of the Good, which lies as it were behind the Beautiful So that, (Trpo/3e/3\tiiuLvov TO KaXov TT/OO avrw e'xovo-av).
speaking shortly, the Good is the First-Beautiful. If we wish to make distinctions within the spiritual world, we shall say that the Beautiful in the spiritual world is the place of the ideas, but that the Good is beyond this, as the source and beginning of the Beautiful. Or we may put the Good and the First-Beautiful on the same level. In any case the Beautiful is Yonder/ 2 Other passages
1 *
i.
TO fca\6i>. I see no reason to change ^et into Wyttenbach, Creuzer, Chaignet, and Bouillet.
ir\T]v
6. 9. teei
e??5,
with
THE ABSOLUTE
123
seem to show that he does not wish to put the Beautiful on a lower plane, especially that in which he says, he who has not yet seen him [God] desires him as the Good,
'
but he
the
who
has, admires
him
as the Beautiful/ 1
'
It is
;
One
'
'
the potency of all things. The One is the flower of all that is beautiful,' beauty above beauty/ 3 It may, as we have seen, be identified with the First-Beautiful/
' '
'
Perhaps the clearest passage about the relations of the One and the Beautiful is 5. 5. 12. We do not begin to
perceive and are awake ;
'
know and and present to 4 us even when we and it does not amaze its beholders, because it is always with them/ The for the Good unconscious desire etyeo-f?) (avalo-Orjro? proves it to be more original (apxaiorepov) than the
the Beautiful until
is
'
know
but
we
'
'
inborn,
'
'
'
'
but Further, all are satisfied with the Good with the Beautiful, which some think is advantageous for itself, not for them/ Beauty, too, is more superficial and subjective people are satisfied to be thought beautiful, but not to be thought good. Again, the enjoyment of Beauty is exciting and mixed with that of the Good is a calm delight. Even Yonder, pain the Beautiful needs the Good, not the Good the Beautiful. These reflections are rather surprising, at any rate till we remember that the Good is not to be identified with the morally good/ On this more must be said presently. The curious opinion that the enjoyment of Beauty is mixed with pain seems to come from Plato, 5 for whom
Beautiful.
all
;
not
'
'
'
'
'
'
sex-love,
epw
yXwcvVf/e/oo?, is
'
The
is
it
position of inferiority here ascribed to the Beautiful revoked in i. 6. 6. When the Soul is raised to Spirit,
Spirit,
and the
3
gifts
that
i.
6.
We may
7.
5. 8.
10.
'
6. 7. 8.
compare Psalm
;
127. 3,
Even
in sleep
God
to his beloved.'
6
works
and cf. Philebus, 48, where he says that great Phaedrus, 251 of art bring tears to the eyes.
124
flow from Spirit, are its proper Beauty, for only when it becomes Spirit is Soul truly Soul. Wherefore it is rightly said, that for the Soul, to become good and beautiful is to be made like God, because from Him comes the beautiful and the other part of reality. 1 Or rather we should say that Reality is Beauty, and "the other nature" is the Ugly. The Ugly and the First-Evil are the same, and, on the other hand, Good and Beautiful are the same, or the Good and Beauty. We may therefore study Beautiful and Good together, and Ugly and Bad together. We must give the primacy to Beauty, which is also the Good. Then follows Spirit, which is identical with the Beautiful.
Soul is beautiful through Spirit ; other things that are beautiful are so through the Soul which forms them, including beautiful actions and practices. Even bodies,
which are reckoned beautiful, are the creation of Soul for being a Divine thing, and as it were a part of the Beautiful, it makes all that it touches and controls beautiful, so far as they are able to receive it.' Thus he distinguishes Beauty (/caXXoi/*;), which he identifies with t*he One, from the Beautiful (TO /caXoV), which is Spirit.
;
The One, being formless (a/mop^ov KOI avei&eov) could hardly be TO /caXoV. Beauty is not embodied in forms 2 The First(TO AcaXXo? ov /mefioptpwrai), but TO /caXoV is.
'
'
'
and Beauty, are formless, and Beauty Yonder The One is the beginning and end of Beauty/
Beautiful,
is
'
take these passages together, we find that names for his Absolute the One, the Good, and Beauty. These are the three attributes of Spirit, carried up to their primary source, above the place where the streams divide and assume those determinations which, as Spinoza says, are always negations. There is a certain awkwardness in correlating the One and the Good/ not with the Beautiful/ but with but the reasons for it will now be apparent. Beauty
Plotinus has three
'
'
When we
'
'
'
'
i.e.
6. 7. 32.
THE ABSOLUTE
ised, is
125
A more serious criticism is that the One, thus charactera Triad of Platonic Ideas, and not the hidden source from which all the Ideas flow. Plotinus is, I think, well aware of this: Strictly, though, the three
attributes of Spirit, however exalted to their ideal perfection, are the first determinations of the Absolute, and
not the Absolute itself. The Spirit in love worships the One as the fountain of these Divine ideals, which are the highest things that we can know. Plotinus might, no doubt, have given more consideration to the relations of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty to each other, especially as the rival claims of these three ideals give rise to some serious practical and moral problems. He has not thought it necessary, because it has never occurred to him to isolate the intellect, or the artistic sense, or the moral consciousness, in the way that some modern thinkers have done.
'
'
'
the supreme object of all desire and The Good is the condition of knowledge aspiration. (2) it is that which makes the world intelligible. (3) The
(i)
the
Good
is
and sustaining cause of the world. did not in the first instance involve any moral qualities. It meant the object of desire that
creative
'
'
which we most want. Our Good is that for which we would give up everything else. Man is always a creature of means and ends he is a rational being, who lives for something. This explains the connexion between reason and the Good. Greek thought is intensely teleological, not in the sense that the world was made for men, for the universe contains many beings more divine than
; '
man/ but
1
'
is its
126
ideal
which it strives to realise. The good life is directed towards the most worthy end, and the pursuit of this end is the immanent principle which gives life its meaning and character. Virtue (apery) is not necessarily a moral it is that which makes anything good of its quality kind. Thirdly, the Good makes things what they are.
'
'
The
'
reality of things is what they mean, what they are good for ; and it is the Good which gives them their
'
and assigns them their proper task (epyov). has been said that Plotinus alters Plato's doctrine of the Good, inasmuch as for Plato the Good is within the circle of the Ideas, while for Plotinus it is above them. But this overstates the difference. For Plato the Good is the supreme source of light, of which everything good, 1 In the true, and beautiful in the world is the reflexion. 2 in he all Forms that we look at other must Republic says the light of the Form of the Good, which is the startingplace,
It
point of knowledge. It is beyond knowledge and being, or at least beyond our knowledge of being. Beauty and
Truth are the Good under certain forms. The question has often been raised whether in Plato the Form (or Idea) of the Good is the same as God. The discussion is not a very profitable one, for 9c6s is by no means an
modern theist. But the for Plato God is a because impossible, Soul, not a Form. The Form of the Good is rather the pattern which the Creator copies in making the world. the It is undoubtedly true that Plotinus exalts Good to a more inaccessible altitude than Plato has done. It is not for us only, but for the highest intelligence, that the Good is beyond being/ But if the Good is the Absolute, the question at once arises whether we can rightly use such a name for it as the Good/ Plotinus insists that the Absolute cannot be the Beautiful/ but or of source the Beautiful. the Why does he Beauty, not say that it cannot be the Good, but Goodness, or the
equivalent of the
identification
is
God
of the
'
'
'
'
'
1 *
THE ABSOLUTE
source of the
127
his
Good?
In fact, this
is
view; but in
loyalty to Plato he retains the name, and explains that in reference to us the One is the Good, and so may be
not strictly accurate. from the idea of mere moral excellence. Virtue is not the Good, but a Good.' 2 It is undoubtedly true that morality, as such, must be transcended in the Absolute. Morality lives in a radical
called
by
this
name, though
'
it is
Plotinus dissociates
'
the
Good
'
it is what it is only in contrast with its opSo Rothe 3 says that the good in God is not posite. moral good. Moral good is becoming and is destined to become real good, but it has not yet attained perfection. In attaining this perfection it ceases to be moral good. But that which only exists as one side of an antithesis cannot be the Absolute, or even fully real. We must therefore be careful not to give a strictly ethical sense to the Good as a name of the One. The Good, for Plotinus, is unity as the goal of desire.* This desire, he says, is
antithesis
universal. 5
The Good
is
desire (o/oee) for self -completion and self -transcendence, which every finite centre of consciousness feels. Our life
indeed is that desire all life is a nisus towards its proper This unity which is the Good of all finite life is also the source of .all individual being. All being begins and ends in the Good. Spirit flows over into Soul, unconand Soul returns to Spirit, consciously sciously. From the great deep to the Spirit is rooted in the One. great deep he goes.' Perhaps we should understand Plotinus' supreme category better if we called it the Perfect instead of the Good. It is valor valor um, as Nicholas of Cusa says of
;
goal.
'
'
'
Origen prefers o.yaBbr^ to rb ayaObv. Denis, p. 87. 3 i. 8. 6. Still Hours, p. 97. 6. 8. 7, TJ TOV ayadov 0uo-ts avrb T& tycrfo. Proclus (Dubner, Ivi.) says clearly ccmv r/ ayadbr-rfs tvuffis Kal TJ gvuffts ayadbr^. What Plotinus means by the Good is clear from 5. 5. 9, 8ib Kal ratTy ayadbv TWV TT&VTUV,
2
STL Kal fort Kal dv/fprijTai iravra e/s avrb eTtpuv, &TI Kal /iSXAov 6vra trepa brtpuv
&\\o AXXws.
('
Sib Kal
is
one thing
in proportion as it is
*
possesses
oixrla
in higher degree
6. 2. ii.
128
God.
'
it
needs nothing.' 1
It is
reminds us that the Good which we recognise as such is not the Absolute Good, but is relative to the stage which we have reached ourselves. 2 The Good of Matter is Form for Matter, if it were conscious, would receive it with pleasure. The Good of the Body is Soul for without it, it could neither exist nor persist. The Good
' ; ;
of the Soul
is
virtue
is
in the object the Good it gives it either order and beauty, or life, or wisdom and happiness. Finally, the Good gives to Spirit an activity, which emanates from the Good, and spreads over it what we call its light.' 3 In
Good Each
of Spirit of these
it
then, rising higher, it is Spirit. The that which we call the First Principle.
;
of
which
is
the same chapter he tries to explain how Plato in the ' Philebus came to mix pleasure with the end [of life],
thereby making the Good not simple, nor in Spirit only.' Plato was not trying to determine what is the Good the two are not the absolutely, but the Good for man same. He is anxious to prove that Plato's view was 4 establishes Plato/ he says, really the same as his own. three degrees in the hierarchy of beings. Everything is ranged round the king of all. He speaks here of things of the first rank. He adds That which is of the second rank is ranged round the Second Principle, and that which is of the third rank round the Third Principle. He also says that the First Principle is the father of cause meaning Spirit by "cause"; for he makes Spirit the 5 and also that Spirit creates Soul in the Demiurge " " bowl of which he speaks. The cause being Now, its " father must be the Absolute Good, the Principle above
'
'
'
'
' '
Spirit and above existence/ He is on safer ground when he says that the pure and unmingled Spirit of Anaxagoras is by definition detached from all sensible things,
'
'
1
4
6
3. 8. II, 5. i. 8.
6. 7. 25.
2.
6. 7. 25.
is
THE ABSOLUTE
and that the
less
'
'
129
perpetual flux of Heracleitus is meaningunless there is also an eternal and spiritual One.
Aristotle,
'
he says truly, by making his highest Principle think itself/ places it below the absolute One. The Pythagoreans, as he sees, are nearest to his own theory.
'
is
the perfection
'
to which each grade in the hierarchy aspires, and having All attained which it passes into the next stage above.
things
strive
1
after
life,
after
immortality,
and
after
True life and true Spirit are identical, and activity.' both come from the Good. The Ideas the spiritual but not the Good. world and its contents are good We cannot stop at the world of Spirit, as if the First The Soul does not Principle was to be found there. is not our supreme end, alone. to Spirit Spirit aspire and all does not aspire to Spirit, while all aspires to the Good beings which do not possess vov$ do not all seek to possess it, while those which do possess it are not content to stop there. Nou? is sought as the result of reasonbut the Good is desired before argument. If the ing
; ' ;
object of desire is to live, to live always, and to act, this is desired not as Spirit, but as good, as coming from good
It is
for it is only thus that we desire then natural for the Soul, and still more for
; '
contents us.
the absolutely perfect. Nothing else a man sees this light, he moves towards it, and rejoices in the light which plays over the spiritual world. Even here, we love bodies not for themSpirit, to aspire to
When
selves,
vorrrov is
but for the beauty which shines in them. For each what it is in itself but it only becomes an
;
object of desire
when the Good gives it colour, bestowing the grace upon object and love upon the subject. As
itself
is
moved,
it
is
filled
it is
becomes
love.
Before that,
of Spirit, for all its beauty ; its receives the light of the Good
;
beauty
is
inactive,
lies
till it
supine
1 II.
6. 7. 20.
130
before
it and wholly inactive, cold and stupid even in But when warmth from the the presence of Spirit. Good enters into it, it becomes strong and wide awake, and though troubled by what lies near at hand, it ascends
more
lightly to that
tells it
to be
as long as there is anything higher than greater. what is present to it, it rises, lifted up naturally by that
And
which implanted the love. Beyond the spiritual world it rises, but it cannot pass beyond the Good, because
there
nothing beyond. If it. abides in the region of beholds indeed beautiful and noble things, but For is not completely in possession of all that it seeks. the world of Spirit is like a face which does not attract us in spite of its beauty, because no grace plays upon its beauty. Even here we are charmed not by symmetry as such, but by the beauty which shines upon it. A living a statue which is face is more beautiful than a dead one full of life, as we say, is more beautiful than one which appears lifeless, though the latter be more symmetrical a living animal is more beautiful than a picture of one. This is because the living appears to us more desirable it is so because it has a soul it is more like the Good it is coloured by the light of the Good, and enlightened by it is more wide awake and lighter and in its turn it lightens its own environment [the body], and as far as
is
Spirit, it
1 good and awakens it/ This very remarkable passage shows that Plotinus was not insensible to the feeling of chill which repels many moderns from Platonism. The world of ideas, of perfect
possible
makes
it
is it
not after
'
all
Is it faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null ? not too much like the beautiful but cold and motionless
marble statues in which the Greek spirit expressed itself so perfectly ? 2 We have seen that Plotinus by no means intended his spiritual world to have this character. It
1 2
6. 7. 22.
Whether
this
was the
effect of
it
was new
is
another question.
THE ABSOLUTE
is
131
to be a world of
pyramid it may even seem almost forbidding. If the Soul, on getting there, were to say, I see all to admire, but nothing to love, what answer should be made ? Some later philosophers have shrunk from the cold white light of the eternal and unchanging, and have willingly embraced the warm colours and rapid changes of the world of appearance a lower sphere, doubtless, but better fitted for such beings as we are to live in. So Schiller invokes Colour rather than Light to be his companion.
and
ceaseless creativeness.
'
Wohne, du ewiglich Eines, dort bei dem ewiglich Einen Farbe, du wechselnde, komm' freundlich zum Menschen
herab.'
made
this invocation
without
The being Soul is forbidden to acquiesce in any downward movement. The only escape from difficulties is to press ever upward, in the confidence that all disharmonies will be resolved, all obstacles left behind, as we resolutely turn
false to the first principle of his philosophy.
our backs upon change and strife, and follow the gleam of the pure and undivided Unity. Even in heaven the Soul is not content with itself. It must still aspire, and its aspiration is purest and keenest when it is in full view of the very highest. 1 It is then that the Soul takes fire,
'
away by love. The fullest life is the fullest and the love comes from the celestial light which streams forth from the Absolute One, the Absolute Good, that supreme Principle which made life, and made Spirit, the source and beginning, which gave Spirit to all spiritual things and life to all living things.' 2 But, we may ask, what is there in the idea of absolute perfection, raised above all forms and all existence, to kindle this passionate love and adoration in the Soul ? If we
is
;
and
carried
love
1 Cf. Leo, Ninth Sermon on the Nativity. None draws nearer to the knowledge of the truth than he who understands that however far he advances in divine things there is always a beyond for him to seek. He who thinks that he has reached his goal has not found what he
'
sought.'
6. 7. 23.
132
have not loved our brother whom we have seen, and this warm world of adventure and change, which claims us as its own, how can we love the Godhead whom no man hath seen or can see, who dwelleth in the light that no man can approach unto ? The best answer to these questions is to consider what Plotinus has to tell us about the vision of the One. For it is unquestionably a genuine
experience of his own this ecstatic love of the Absolute. Moreover, the great army of mystics, Christian, Pagan, Mohammedan, corroborate all that the great Neoplatonist
describes to us.
The
'
'
Spirit in love
;
culmination of personal religion and is not the limited half-human God of popular religion, but the ineffable mysterious Power to whom we shrink from ascribing any human attributes whatever. But we will let Plotinus expound his doctrine and give us (so far as that is possible) his experience, in his own words. What then is there better than this wisest life, exempt from fault and error ? What is better than Spirit which
adoration
'
embraces
things,
all ?
What
?
is
life
and
universal Spirit
we answer, That which made these we must go on to ask how it made them and if
If
;
no higher principle manifests itself, the argument will proceed no further, but will stop at this point. But we must go higher, for many other reasons and especially because the principle which we seek is the Absolute which
is
independent of
all
things
and each
it follows that none of them is the That which makes being and independence Is itself being and independence, but above both. Or is the Soul in it enough to say this and pass on ? labour with something more ? Perhaps it must bring
One. is not
it is with travail-pangs, after hastening the Absolute. Nay, we must try rather towards eagerly to charm her, if we can find any magic spell against her
forth, filled as
6.
7-
35-
THE ABSOLUTE
pains.
said,
if
133
Perhaps something of what we have already were often repeated, might act as a charm. Or where shall we find another, a new charm ? For although it permeates all Truth, and therefore the Truth of which we participate, nevertheless it escapes us when we try to speak of it or even to think of it. For the disit
if it wishes to say anything, must seize such one element of the Truth and then another are the conditions of discursive thought. But how can
cursive reason,
first
thought apprehend the absolutely simple ? enough to apprehend it by a kind of spiritual intuition (voepws etyd^aa-Oat). But in this act of apprehension we have neither the power nor the time to say anything about it afterwards we can reason about it. We may believe that we have really seen, when a sudden light illumines the Soul for this light comes from the One and is the One. And we may think that the One is 1 present, when, like another god, he illumines the house of him who calls upon him for there would be no light without his presence. Even so the Soul is dark that does
discursive
It is
; ;
it
has
what
it
desired,
and
Soul, to apprehend that light, and to behold it by that light itself, which is no other than the light by which For that which we seek to behold is the light it sees.
which gives us
light,
even as we can only see the sun by How then can this come to us ?
We must not be surprised that that which excites the keenest of longings is without any form, even spiritual form, since the Soul itself, when inflamed with love for it, puts off all the form which it had, even that which
belongs to the spiritual world.
For
it is
not possible to
1 Like one of the gods of the popular mythology. Commentators suggest that Plotinus has in mind either Homer, Od. 19. 33, irdpoi6c 5t IIa\Ads'A077>77, xpfocov \i>xvov txovffa, 0dos irepiKa\\ts tirolci, or the Hymn
to
Denieter, 279,
5- 3- 17-
rrjf\
8t
0yyos
dirk
XP^
dOavAroio
\d/j.irc
{teas
auyT/s
134
see it, or to be in harmony with it, while one is occupied with anything else. The Soul must remove from itself good and evil and everything else, that it may receive the One alone, as the One is alone. When the Soul is so
and is come to it, or rather when it manifests its presence, when the Soul turns away from visible things and makes itself as beautiful as possible and becomes like the One (the manner of preparation and adornment is known to those who practise it ;) and seeing the One
blessed,
;
suddenly appearing in itself, for there is nothing between, nor are they any longer two, but one for you cannot while it is the lasts between vision them, distinguish that union of which the union of earthly lovers, who wish to blend their being with each other, is a copy. The Soul is no longer conscious of the body, and cannot tell whether it is a man or a living being or anything real at all for
; ; ;
and
has no leisure for them but when, after having the it finds itself in its presence, it goes to One, sought meet it and contemplates it instead of itself. What itself is when it gazes, it has no leisure to see. When in this state the Soul would exchange its present condition for nothing, no, not for the very heaven of heavens ; for there is nothing better, nothing more blessed than this. For it can mount no higher all other things are below it, however exalted they be. It is then that it judges rightly and knows that it has what it desired, and that there is
it
;
where nothing higher. For there is no deception there could one find anything truer than the True ? What it says, that it is, and it speaks afterwards, and speaks in silence, and is happy, and is not deceived in its happiness. Its happiness is no titillation of the bodily senses ; it is that the Soul has become again what it was formerly, when it was blessed. All the things which once pleased
;
power, wealth, beauty, science, it declares that it it could not say this if it had not met with despises something better than these. It fears no evil, while it is with the One, or even while it sees him though all
it,
; ;
THE ABSOLUTE
else perish
;
'
135
around
it, it is
content,
it
if it
thinks lightly even of formerly treasured. spiritual For spiritual perception involves movement, and the Soul now does not wish to move. It does not call the object
that
intuition
which
it
of its vision Spirit, although it has itself been transformed into Spirit before the vision and lifted up into the
abode of
Spirits.
it
When
of the One,
Even
first
mode of spiritual perception. so a traveller, entering into a palace, admires at the various beauties which adorn it ; but when the
leaves the
Master appears, he alone is the object of attention. By continually contemplating the object before him, the spectator sees it no more. The vision is confounded with the object seen, and that which was before object becomes to him the state of seeing, and he forgets all else. The Spirit has two powers. By one of them it has a spiritual
perception of what
tive intuition
is
within
it
itself,
the other
is
is
the recepitself.
by which
perceives what
above
the vision of the thinking Spirit, the latter is the Spirit in love. For when the Spirit is inebriated with the nectar, it falls in love, in simple contentment
is
The former
and
'
satisfaction and it is better for it to be so intoxicated than to be too proud for such intoxication/ If you are perplexed 2 because the One is none of those
;
things which you know, apply yourself to them first, and look forth out of them ; but so look, as not to direct your intellect to externals. For it does not lie in one place
but it is present everywhere to him and not to him who cannot. As in other matters one cannot think of two things at once, and must add nothing extraneous to the object of thought,
and not
in another,
it,
if one wishes to identify oneself with it, so here we may be sure that it is impossible for one who has in his soul any extraneous image to conceive of the One while that
1
3
paragraph
is
abridged from
6. 7. 35.
136
image distracts his attention. Just as we said that Matter must be without qualities of its own, if it is to receive the forms of all things, so a fortiori must the Soul be formless if it is to receive the fullness and illumination of the First Principle. If so, the Soul must forsake all that is external, and turn itself wholly to that which is
not allow itself to be distracted by anything external, but will ignore them all, as at first by not l it attending to them, so now last by not seeing them will not even know itself the it will come to and so vision of the One and will be united with it and then, after a sufficient converse with it, it will return and bring word, if it be possible, to others of its heavenly intercourse. Such probably was the converse which Minos was fabled to have had with Zeus, remembering which he made the laws which were the image of that converse, being inspired to be a lawgiver by the divine touch. Perhaps, however, a Soul which has seen much of the heavenly world may think politics unworthy of itself and may prefer to remain above. God, as Plato he is present with says, is not far from every one of us
within
;
it
will
though they know him not. Men flee away from him, or rather from themselves. They cannot grasp him from whom they have fled, nor when they have lost themselves can they find another, any more than a child who But is mad and out of his mind can know his lather. he who has learnt to know himself will know also whence he is.
all,
a Soul has known itself throughout its course, it is aware that its natural motion has not been in a straight line (except during some deflection from the normal) but and that this centre rather in a circle round a centre is itself in motion round that from which it proceeds. On this centre the Soul depends, and attaches itself thereto, as all Souls ought to do, but only the Souls of gods do so always. It is this that makes them gods. For a god
If
;
'
1
ir/>6
This
TOV
/J.ti>
rri
THE ABSOLUTE
137
is closely attached to this centre ; those further from it are average men, and animals. Is then this centre of the Or must we think of Soul the object of our search ?
something
coincide.
else,
"
centres
"
some point at which all centres as it were " " and circles must remember that our " " circle are only metaphors. The Soul is no
We
we
call it
a circle because
the archetypal nature is in it and around it, and because it is derived from this first principle, and all the more because the Souls as wholes are separated from the body. 1
But now,
if
man were
since part of us is held down by the body (as to have his feet under water), we touch the
all things with our own centre that part which not submerged as the centres of the greatest circles coincide with the centre of the enveloping sphere, and then rest. If these circles were corporeal and not psychic, the coincidence of their centres would be spatial, and they would lie around a centre somewhere in space but since the Souls belong to the spiritual world, and the One is above even Spirit, we must consider that their contact
centre of
is
is
and object
through other powers those which connect subject in the world of Spirit, and further, that the
perceiving Spirit is present in virtue of its likeness and identity, and unites with its like without hindrance. For
bodies cannot have this close association with each other, but incorporeal things are not kept apart by bodies ; they
are separated from each other not by distance, but by unlikeness and difference. Where there is no unlikeness,
they are united with each other. The One, which has no unlikeness, is always present we are so only when we have no unlikeness. The One does not strive to en;
always move our gaze upon it we are like a choir of singers who stand round the conductor, but do not always sing in time because their attention is diverted to some external object when they
circle us, but we strive to encircle it. round the One, but we do not always
:
We
fix
/cat tri
jja\\ov #ri
x u P tcr ^^ffai
^ eu
am
sure
whether this
138
look at the conductor they sing well and are really with him. So we always move round the One ; if we did not, we should be dissolved and no longer exist ; but we do not always look towards the One. When we do, we attain the end of our existence, and our repose, and we no longer sing out of tune, but form in very truth a divine chorus round the One. In this choral dance the Soul sees the fountain of life and the fountain of Spirit, the source of Being, the cause of Good, the root of Soul. These do not flow out of the One in such a way as to diminish it ; for we are not dealing with material quantities, else the products of the One would be perishable, whereas they are eternal, because their source remains not divided among them, but constant. Therefore the products too are permanent, as the light remains while the sun remains. For we are not cut off from our source nor separated from it, even though the bodily nature intervenes and draws us towards itself, but we breathe and maintain our being in our source, which does not first give itself and then withdraw, but
'
is
always supplying
are
we
more truly
in this lies
what it is. But when we turn towards it, and our well-being. To be far from it is isolation
us, as long as it is
alive
and diminution.
evil
;
In it our Soul rests, out of reach of has ascended to a region which is pure from all evil there it has spiritual vision, and is exempt from For our passion and suffering ; there it truly lives. present life, without God, is a mere shadow and mimicry
it
;
of the true
Spirit,
life.
But
life
yonder
is
an activity of the
peaceful activity it engenders gods also, through its contact with the One, and Beauty, and Righteousness, and Virtue. For these are the offspring
of a Soul which is filled with God, and this is its beginning and end its beginning because from this it had its origin, its end because the Good is there, and when it comes there it becomes what it was. For our life in this world is but a falling away, an exile, and a loss of the Soul's wings. The natural love which the Soul feels proves that the
and by
its
THE ABSOLUTE
Good
is
139
paintings and myths make Psyche the bride of Cupid. Because the Soul is different from God, and yet springs from him, she loves him of necessity ; when she is yonder she has the heavenly For yonder love, when she is here below, the vulgar.
there
;
this is
why
is
vulgarised
Aphrodite. This is of the the in figured birthday of Aphrodite, and allegory Love who was born with her. 1 Hence it is natural for the Soul to love God and to desire union with Him, as
is
the daughter of a noble father feels a noble love. But 2 when, descending to generation, the Soul, deceived by
the false promises of a lover, exchanges its divine love for a mortal love, it is separated from its father and submits to indignities but afterwards it is ashamed of these disorders and purifies itself and returns to its father and
;
is
happy.
sider
Let him who has not had this experience conhow blessed a thing it is in earthly love to obtain that
which one most desires, although the objects of earthly loves are mortal and injurious and loves of shadows, which change and pass since these are not the things which we truly love, nor are they our good, nor what we seek. But yonder is the true object of our love, which it is possible to grasp and to live with and truly to possess, since no envelope of flesh separates us from it. He who has seen it knows what I say, that the Soul then has another life, when it comes to God and having come
;
possesses him, and knows, when in that state, that it is in the presence of the dispenser of the true life, and that it needs nothing further. On the contrary, it must put
and stand in God alone, which can only be when we have pruned away all else that surrounds us.
off all else,
We
as
much
must then hasten to depart hence, to detach ourselves as we can from the body to which we are un'
1 Greek mythology had no authoritative doctrine about the parentage of Eros. According to the version here referred to, he was begotten on the birthday of Aphrodite,' but Plato (Symposium, 178) makes him the eldest of the gods, of whose birth nothing is said.' * I.e. to the fleeting world of births and deaths.
'
140
happily bound, to endeavour to embrace God with all our being, and to leave no part of ourselves which is not in contact with him. Then we can see God and ourselves,
we see ourselves glorified, full of we see ourselves as pure, subtle, we become divine, or rather \ve know ethereal, light ourselves to be divine. Then indeed is the flame of life kindled, that flame which, when we sink back to earth,
as far as
is
permitted
;
Why then does not the Soul abide yonder ? Because has not yet wholly left its earthly abode. But the time will come when it will enjoy the vision without interruption, no longer troubled with the hindrances of the body. The part of the Soul which is troubled is not the part which sees God, but the other part, when the part which sees God is idle, though it ceases not from that
it
'
knowledge which comes of demonstrations, conjectures, and the dialectic. But in the vision of God that which sees is not reason (Xo'yo?), but something greater than
and
as
is
1 prior to reason, something presupposed by reason, He who the object of vision. then sees himself, when
will see himself as a simple being, will be united to himself as such, will feel himself become such. ought
he sees
We
not even to say that he will see, but he will be that which he sees, if indeed it is possible any longer to distinguish seer and seen, and not boldly to affirm that the two are one. In this state the seer does not see or distinguish or he becomes another, he ceases to imagine two things be himself and to belong to himself. He belongs to God and is one with Him, like two concentric circles they are one when they coincide, and two only when they are separated. It is only in this sense that the Soul is other than God. Therefore this vision is hard to describe. For how can one describe, as other than oneself, that which, when one saw it, seemed to be one with oneself ? This is no doubt why in the mysteries we are forbidden to reveal them to the uninitiated. That which is divine
;
'
eVi
r$ \byy.
am
THE ABSOLUTE
141
is ineffable, and cannot be shown to those who have not had the happiness to see it. Since in the vision there were not two things, but seer and seen were one, if a man could preserve the memory of what he was when he was mingled with the divine, he would have in himself an image of God. For he was then one with God, and
retained no difference, either in relation to himself or to others. Nothing stirred within him, neither anger nor
concupiscence nor even reason or spiritual perception or his own personality, if we may say so. Caught up in an ecstasy, tranquil and alone with God, he enjoyed an shut up in his proper essence he imperturbable calm declined not to cither side, he turned not even to himself he was in a state of perfect stability ; he had become stability itself. The Soul then occupies itself no
;
it is
Even as Beautiful, it passes the choir of the virtues. when a man who enters the sanctuary of a temple leaves
objects which he will see after he has seen what
behind him the statues in the temple, they are the first when he leaves the sanctuary is within, and entered there into communion, not with statues and images, but with the Deity itself. Perhaps we ought not to speak of vision (Oeajuia) ; it is rather another mode of seeing, an ecstasy
for
and
(Treptvdrjo-is)
what
is
to be seen in the
God in any other manner, will find nothing. These are but figures, by which the wise prophets indicate how we may see God. But the
sanctuary.
seeks to see
He who
wise priest, understanding the symbol, may enter the sanctuary and make the vision real. If he has not yet got so far, he at least conceives that what is within the sanctuary is something invisible to mortal eyes, that it is the Source and Principle of all he knows that it is by the first Principle that we see the first Principle, and unites himself with it and perceives like by like, leaving behind nothing that is Divine, so far as the Soul can reach.
;
142
And
mains
all things,
is
that which
will
is
before
all things.
never
when it falls, it will come pass to absolute not-being to evil, and so to not-being, but not to absolute notbeing. But if it moves in the opposite direction, it will arrive not at something else, but at itself, and so, being
alone but that which world of Being is in the Absolute. It ceases to be Being it is above Being, while in communion with the One. If then a man sees himself become one with the One, he has in himself a likeness of the One, and if he passes out of himself, as an image to its archetype, he has reached the end of his journey. And when he comes down from his vision, he can again
in
nothing
else, it is
only in
itself
is
in itself alone
and not
in the
is in him, and seeing himself fitly every part he can again mount upward through virtue to Spirit, and through wisdom to God. Such is the life of gods and of godlike and blessed men a liberation from all earthly bonds, a life that takes no
awaken the
in
virtue that
adorned
be enough to illustrate the character As a description of a direct psychical experience, it closely resembles the records of the Christian mystics, and indeed of all mystics, whatever their creed, date, or nationality. The mystical trance or ecstasy is a not very uncommon phenomenon, wherever men and women lead the contemplative life. Even when the possibility of literary dependence is
will
excluded,
the
witness
of
the
mystics
is
wonderfully
unanimous.
i~The psychology
of religious ecstasy has lately been studied with a thoroughness which has nearly exhausted the subject. I do not propose to discuss it here. The
religion
influence of the psychological school on the philosophy of seems to me to be on the whole mischievous.
THE ABSOLUTE
But
143
Psychology treats mental states as the data of a science. intuition changes its character completely when treated in this way. This is why a chilling and depressing atmosphere seems to surround the psychology of religion. Many persons are pleased to find that on purely scientific grounds the intuitions of faith and devotion are allowed a place among incontrovertible facts, and treated with sympathetic respect. They do not reflect that the whole method is external that it is a science not of validity but
;
of origins ; and that in limiting itself to the investigation of mystical vision as a state of consciousness, it excludes
all
consideration of the relation which the vision may bear to objective truth. There are some, no doubt, who regard this last question as either meaningless or unanswerable but such are not likely to trouble themselves
;
about the philosophy of Plotinus. Nor would an examination of pathological symptoms, such as fill the now popular books on religious experience/ be of any help towards understanding the passages which I have just quoted. The vision of Plotinus is unusual, but in no sense abnormal. To see God is the goal of the religious life, and the vision of the One is only the highest and deepest kind of prayer, which is the mystical act par excellence. There
'
is nothing strange in the mentality of Plotinus except his intense concentration on the Soul's supreme quest. Those who will live as he lived will see what he saw.
Mr. Cutten 1 rightly says that there are two forms of ecstasy. The one is characterised by wild excitement, loss of self-control, and temporary madness. It is a sort of
effects.
'
religious intoxication, indulged in largely for its delightful This usually originates in dancing and other
The other type is intense, but and calm is it quiet usually spontaneous in origin, or else comes through mental rather than physical causes.' The author adds, again very justly, that not only autophysical manifestations.
;
suggestion but crowd-contagion plays a large part in the production of religious excitement, while the calm
1
144
type of ecstasy is experienced in solitude. The latter type, to which, it is needless to say, Plotinus belongs, is also represented by many other scholarly contemplatives, such as the Frenchman, Maine de Biron, 1 who describes its manifestations from his own experience. It is also characteristic of the poets who have drawn spiritual sustenance from the manifestations of cosmic life in nature. The following reflections may help us to understand some of the chief features of Plotinian mysticism, and the points in which it differs from other branches of the great mystical tradition. Plotinus is not content to give us his own experience of the beatific vision, nor does he wish us to accept it on his authority. He prefers to appeal to the experience of He has followed, he says, the guidance of his readers. ' a faculty which all have, but few use ; 2 a faculty which, as we shall see, is not anything distinct from the normal operations of the mind, but arises from the concentration of these on the return of the Soul to its He assumes that his readers are made like Father.' himself, and that many of them have followed the He who has seen it knows what I mean,' same path. is his excuse for not attempting to describe the indescribable. But he does claim to have given us a real metaphysic of mysticism. He has put the vision of the One in its right place at the apex of a pyramid which ascends, as the dialectic guides us, from the many and discordant He explains to the One in whom is no variableness. cannot reach Absolute. the Thought clearly why thought must have a Thing and Thought and Thing can never This argument we have considered be wholly one. I here wish to emphasise that the truth which he claims
' '
'
C'est au moment ou le moi triomphe, ou Anthropologie, p. 550. la passion est vaincue, oil le devoir est accompli centre toutes les resistances affectives, enfin ou le sacrifice est consomme^ que, tout effort cessant, 1'ame est remplie d'un sentiment ineffable, ou le moi se trouve
1
'
Un calme pur succede aux tempetes.' I pretend to no extraordinary revelations So John Wesley said or gifts of the Holy Ghost, none but what every Christian may receive, and ought to expect and pray for.'
absorbe.
8
'
THE ABSOLUTE
for the
145
vision
of the
One
is
absolute, universal,
and
necessary truth. The end of the Soul's pilgrimage is the source from which it flowed. As Proclus was afterwards to teach
precise language, all life consists in a homestopping, a journey forth, and a return (novy, irpooSos,
in
more
journey were considered it was not willed, but necessary. If, however, we take the whole course together, as we should do, we may say that Creation was the first act in the drama of Redemption. For the Soul
ciri(rrpo<fnj)
.
If
the outward
in isolation,
we should have
to say that
only realises itself in the desire (efyeo-t?), the travailpangs (co&'y), which draw it back towards the source of
its
being.
The process of simplification (aVXoxn?) by which we approach the One seems at first sight to be a kind of selfas
denudation a figure which indeed Plotinus uses. Just we are forbidden to affirm anything positive about the One, because we cannot affirm anything without excluding its opposite, and nothing must be excluded from the Absolute, so the Soul must strip itself of all that does not belong to the spiritual world, and finally must, for the time at least, shut its eyes to the manifold riches of the spiritual world itself, in order to enter naked and alone into the Holy of Holies. This (via negative road negativa) is the well-trodden mystic way, and it is the
'
'
who
dislike mysticism.
method
in language familiar to
to the reality which we seek to win and to be. First the body is to be detached as not belonging to the true
nature of the Soul then the Soul which forms body then sense-perception. What remains is the image of When the Soul becomes Spirit by contemplating Spirit.
; ;
Spirit as its
own
1
still
'
remains unexplored.
Trai/ra).
To reach
1
'
this,
take
it
away
all
clear that
17-
u.
146
'
this
abstraction
will
mind and
of the quest.
on what are believed to be the essentials But the method is based on the conviction
All soulis shadow except the last.' experience half reveals and half conceals reality. So the ascent of the Soul involves a continual rejection of outward shows, and continual self-denial. Ideas are
'
but what is behind always given through something if it is given at all, the Ideas is given through nothing it is given in a manner which is too immediate to be
; ;
'
described.
The critics have treated the negative road as if it were a mere peeling the onion,' a progressive impoverishment
'
'
'
is left.
Royce,
who
is
it
not
for
unsympathetic
'
towards
mysticism,
condemns
ignoring the sum of the series, and craving only for the final term.' This is not true of Plotinian mysticism, and
not true of Catholic mysticism either a practical danger that the cloistered contemplative may live in dreams and lose touch with the external world. We must remember that for Plotinus reality consists in the rich and glorious life of Spirit, in which whatever we renounce in the world of sense is given back to us transmuted and ennobled. It is quite a mistake to suppose that the Neoplatonist desires to get rid of his Soul. He agrees with the author of the ' Cloud of Unknowing.* In all this sorrow he desireth not to unbe 2 for that were devil's madness and despite unto God. But him listeth right well to be ; and he intendeth full heartily thanking to God, for the worthiness and gift of his being, for all that he desire unceasingly to lack the witting and the feeling of his being.' This last clause does not mean that the ideal state is a sort of somnambulism ; we have seen, on the contrary, that Plotinus describes the highest experience as a sort of
theoretically
it is
;
though there
is
Chapter 44.
'
Some
German mystics
THE ABSOLUTE
awaking.
147
abstract conceptions.
living realisation has taken the place of But he does mean that the refer-
ence of every experience to a self-conscious psychic self is necessarily an impoverishment of that experience. The less of subjectivity that there is in our experience, the wider and truer it will be. Thus it is not so much the object as the perceiving subject that is constantly reproved and silenced in the negative way as practised by Plotinus. It is our image of the object which is not good enough to be true. He is no Gnostic, despising this beautiful world he wants to see it as it really is, and not through the distorting medium of his lower faculties. He knows that the Soul is perpetually constructing a it is synthesis out of what it has seen and apprehended
*
'
these premature syntheses which frequently have to be destroyed, or they will detain us in a world of shadows.
Denn
alles
Wenn Some
critics
1
have been content to find a patent contradiction in the philosophy of Plotinus, which they attribute to a conflict between his personal piety and his
'
In Plotinus' philosophy
God
is
and his world from him, whilst Plotinus' experiences and intuitions find God to be the very atmosphere and home of all souls.' To the abstractiveness of his method are traced his profoundly unsocial conception of man's relation to God, and of the moments when this relation is at its deepest alone with the Alone and the exclusion from the Soul's deepest ultimate life of all multiplicity and discursiveness of thought, and of all distinct acts and productiveness of the
'
'
'
will.'
will
be con-
As
1 e.g. Eucken, in his Lebensanschauungen Grosser Denker, and Baron Von Hiigel, who seems to be influenced by him. The quotations are from the latter writer's Eternal Life. See below, p. 205.
148
diction between his personal religion and his speculative thought, Plotinus is the last writer in whom we should
his metaphysics expect to find such an inconsistency were no intellectual pastime, as Hume's seem in part to have been, but an earnest attempt to think out his deepest convictions. Nor does the criticism seem to me to be in any way justified. The exile of God from the world is part of the extreme dualism which Caird supposes in Plotinus, but which, I venture to think, no careful student of the Enneads will find there. There are certainly two movements a systole and diastole, in which the life of the Soul consists. Spiritual progress is on one side an expansion, on the other an intensification or concentration. But it is not true that one is the core of Plotinus' philosophy, the other of his religion. One aspect of the Plotinian mysticism, which must be
;
'
'
'
'
is that there is no occultism in it. no mystical faculty,' but only the spiritual which all possess but few use/ There is consense tinuity of development from sense-perception up to the vision of the One. The whole lore of miraculous Divine favours, which fills the records of cloistered mystics, is 1 The psychology of these entirely absent from Plotinus. delusions is still rather obscure happily they do not concern us here. Suggestion has no doubt much to do with them sometimes auto-suggestion, sometimes the of a crowd. During some revivals, the patients contagion swoon in other cases they dance or jerk convulsively. There is, as Mr. Granger well says, a physical hypocrisy as well as a moral one. The best guides in the mystical life warn their disciples against these monkey-tricks of the soul,' as the Cloud of Unknowing calls them. Some turn their persons, says this wise and quaint writer,
strongly emphasised,
There
'
is
'
'
'
THE ABSOLUTE
nature
;
149
see inwards with
and
would
their bodily eyes, and hear inwards with their ears, and so forth of all their wits, smelling, tasting, and feeling inwards and then as fast the devil hath power for
. . .
to feign some false light or sounds, sweet smells in their noses, wonderful tastes in their mouths, and many quaint heats and burnings in their members.' Eckhart
says distinctly that ecstatic auditions are not the voice of God, who speaks but one word, in which are contained
'
all truths.'
It is
is
who
;
acts
and
speaks, and
acts.
under an
In ecstasy the soul feels a new vigour and as it has before itself no object which it can know, it makes an object of itself and answers itself, and creates what it desires, like the sparks which are seen after a blow on the eye. 1 St. John of the Cross bids us fly from such experiences without even examining whether they be good or evil. For inasmuch as they are exterior and in
'
is
God.
It is
through the Spirit than through the sense, wherein there is usually much danger and delusion because the bodily sense decides upon and judges spiritual things, thinking them to be what itself feels them to be,
himself
when
'
in reality
sensuality and
is
reason.' 2
same reason. When the mind contemplating the things of God, strange quasi-sensual delights or pains could be only a distraction, and to provoke or welcome them, and describe them afterwards with luscious recollection, would be folly. To suppose that divine knowledge could be so communicated
bodily showings
for the
engaged
in
would contradict
his epistemology completely. 3 This repudiation of occultism does not forbid the per1
2 3
Delacroix, Le Mysticism* en Allemagne, p. 212. Quoted by Herman, Meaning and Value of Mysticism, p. 53. Origen condemns irrational ecstasy even more strongly, imputing
it
to evil spirits.
See Denis,
La
150
ception of analogies in nature that vision of spiritual law in nature which inspires such poets as Wordsworth,
and gives some encouragement to magic. So Sir Thomas The severe schools shall never laugh me Browne says out of the philosophy of Hermes, that this visible world
'
:
is
invisible, wherein, as in
a portrait,
things are not truly but in equivocal shapes, and as they counterfeit some real substance in that invisible frame-
work.'
will
the subject of magic, some further reflections in the next chapter. It will also be noticed that there is not a trace in
On
be found
Plotinus of the
of dereliction.
dark night of the Soul,' the experience This tragic experience has received much
'
modern psychology. Many writers have regarded it as merely pathological, as a violent reaction from nervous overstrain. There is no doubt that the unnatural life led by the contemplative ascetic, cut off from almost every healthy relaxation, must often produce morbid conditions. Intense introspection is sure to cause
attention from
and some mystics, like Madame of melancholy Guyon, cannot be entirely acquitted of a sort of spiritual self-importance which makes them enjoy retailing their inner joys and miseries. Those who fancy, with Miss
fits
;
higher order of mystics, the 'great and strong spirits/ will probably experience, or think they have experienced, something like what they have read of. I think this writer exaggerates the emotional side of religion. But I agree with her that the dark night of the Soul is not to be disposed
'
'
morbid psychology. As a rule, one may rather distrust the ecstatic who has had no experience of it. As Delacroix says, the dark night condenses the whole vision of things into a negative intuition, as ecstasy
of as a
phenomenon
of
'
The Christian struggle for spiritual more intense than the Platonic, because the victory of evil is felt far more vividly. contrasted blackness of no Plotinus knows devil, and no active malignancy in nature of the things. There is no sense of horror in his
into a
positive.'
is
THE ABSOLUTE
philosophy from
first
151
of the
to last.
The temper
Neo-
platonic saint is to be serene and cheerful, confident that the ultimate truth of the world is on his side, and that only
earth-born clouds can come between him and the sun. It is a manly spirit, which craves for no divine caresses
'
'
and
fears
ness/ of the Johannine Christ, Let not your heart be troubled/ reflect the whole tone of Christ's teaching better than the more sombre outlook of many Christian saints. But
'
no enmity from the world-rulers of this darkThe Christian may be reminded that the words
'
of the Soul
feelings to
For the Jew, the call Grieve and Spinoza explicitly forbids remorse, as One might partaking in the cardinal fin of tristitia. perhaps expect gna wings of conscience and repentance to help to bring men on the right path, and might thereupon conclude (as everyone does conclude) that these affections are good things. Yet when we look at the matter closely, we shall find that not only are they not good, but on the contrary deleterious and evil passions. For it is manifest that we can always get along better by reason and love of truth than by worry of conscience and remorse. These are harmful and evil, inasmuch as they form a particular kind of sadness and the disadvantages of sadness I have already proved, and shown that we should strive to keep it from our life. Just so we should endeavour, since uneasiness of conscience and remorse are of this kind of complexion, to flee and shun these states of mind/ 1 Some of the Christian mystics are here in accord with Spinoza and Plotinus. It was one of the accusations When against Molinos that he discouraged contrition. thou fallest into a fault/ he says, do not trouble or afflict thyself for it. Faults are effects of our frail nature, stained by original sin. Would not he be a fool who during a tournament, if he had a fall, should lie weeping on the ground and afflict himself with discourses upon his
; '
'
'
Spinoza,
On
God,
ii.
10.
152
misadventure
calls
in
what William
the religion of healthy-mindedness will fight James against every attack of spiritual misery as if it were a disease. But I cannot disregard the testimony of some of the sanest and best mystics that it is often speedful
' '
for a
man
to
fall
I find,
all, something acaderoia and unreal in those whose visions and thoughts always affirm an optimism. John Pulstord says wisely "Satan can convert illumination into a snare but contrition is beyond his art.' We are meant to feel the strength of the forces that would pull us downward as well as of those which draw us upward ; I indeed we can hardly know one without the other.
after
'
strove
towards
thee,'
says
I
St.
Augustine,
taste death.
might by turbed and darkened vision of my mind was being healed from day to day by the keen salve of wholesome pains. I became more wretched, and thou nearer.' The ecstatic state, under whatever names it may be distinguished in its various manifestations, is for the
repulsed
;
thee that
it
and great Neoplatonist an exceedingly rare experience is noteworthy that we find no tendency to cheapen it in the later writers of his school. For the mystics of
it was by no means unwas it from being reserved for the holiest saints in their most exalted moods, that beginners in the ascetic life were warned not to be uplifted by such visitations, which were often granted as an encouragement to young aspirants. Some of the most famous
common
and so
far
sometimes lasting for many hours, though an hour is so often mentioned that it may be regarded as a normal duration of such states. This difference does not seem to be connected with Christianity, which in its pure form gives no encouragement to violent
half
religious emotion.
mystics, like
1
Some of the philosophical Christian Eckhart, though they lived in the golden
is
The
allusion
THE ABSOLUTE
153
age of monastic Christian mysticism, do not seem to have experienced these abnormal visitations. Others, like Bohme and Blake, certainly were visionaries. Bohme used to hypnotise himself by gazing intently on a bright object, a method which, with variations, has been adopted by many Oriental mystics. There is no trace
of this self-hypnotisation in Plotinus, though intense abstraction and concentration of thought may doubtless
result as protracted gazing upon some chosen object. But Plotinus is careful to insist that the vision must be waited for. When the Spirit perceives this Divine light, it knows not whence it comes, from' without or from within when it has ceased to shine, we believe at one moment that it comes from within and at another that it does not. But it is useless to ask whence
'
is no question of place here. It neither manifests us nor withdraws itself it either approaches itself or remains hidden. We must not then seek it, but wait quietly for its appearance, and prepare ourselves
it
comes
there
to contemplate it, as the eye watches for the sun rising The One is above the horizon, or out of the sea. 1 of and nowhere.' The note everywhere, personal experi. . .
ence cannot be missed in these words. The fine simile of the watcher in the early morning, his gaze fixed on the eastern sky, recalls the verse of Malachi Unto that fear name shall sun of the you my righteousness arise with healing in his wings.' But the question has not yet been fully answered, why states of trance are
'
:
much more common among 'the Christian mystics. believe that a good deal may be attributed to tradition and expectation. Just as young people in some Protestant
so
I
sudden conversion at the age of experience adolescence, while in other Christian churches this is almost unknown or regarded as a rare phenomenon, so
sects
'
'
visions and trances come often when they are looked for, and seldom when they are not expected. The whole practice and discipline of the cloister involved a greater
1
5- 5- 3.
154
strain
Attempts to induce
warnings against this practice are found in the best For instance, in the little fourteenth-century manual from which I have already quoted, we have a graphic account of the delusions which often assailed the aspirant after mystical experiences, delusions which in those times were naturally set down to the ghostly enemies of mankind. 1 The mystical state never occurs except as a sequel to intense mental concentration, which the majority of human beings are unable to practise except for a few minutes at a time. Our minds are continually assailed by a crowd of distracting images, which must be resolutely refused an entrance if we are to bring any difficult mental operation to a successful issue. The necessity of this concentration is insisted on by all the mystics, so that it is superfluous to give quotations. Most of them speak of producing an absolute calm in the soul, in order that God may speak to us without interruption. They often tell us that the will must be completely
spiritual guides of the Middle Ages.
passive, though the stern repression of the imagination which they practise is only possible by a very exhausting effort of the will. All external impressions must be the contemplative must be impervious to ignored In extreme sights and sounds while he is at work. cases a kind of catalepsy may be produced, from which
;
not easy to recover but this is not a danger to be apprehended by many. The mystical experience is not necessarily associated with meditation on the being and attributes of God. Any concentrated mental activity
it is
;
may,
it
seems, produce
it.
describes
what he has
'
felt
Philo,
The Cloud
of
Unknowing, Chap.
7.
Migrat, Abrah,
Drummond,
i,
p. 15.
THE ABSOLUTE
implanted in
;
155
being in an invisible manner showered upon me, and me from on high so that through the influence of divine inspiration I have become filled with
enthusiasm, and have known neither the place in which I was nor those who were present, nor myself, nor what I was saying, nor what I was writing, for then I have been conscious of a richness of interpretation, an enjoyment of light, a most keen-sighted vision, a most distinct view of the objects treated, such as would be given through the eyes from the clearest exhibition/ The philosophical problem which he was debating was almost
visualised before his mind's eye, as it is with all philosophical mystics. The Platonist does not contemplate a ballet of bloodless categories/ but a rich and beautiful world, in which the imagination clothes spiritual thoughts
'
Wordsworth 1
in a
in
them did he
;
live
they were his life. In such access of mind, in such high hours Of visitation from the living God, Thought was not in enjoyment it expired. No thanks he breathed he proffered no request Rapt into still communion that transcends
; ;
And by them
did he live
The imperfect offices of prayer and praise, His mind was a thanksgiving to the power That made him it was blessedness and love.
;
tells
La mia vista, venendo sincera, e piu e piu entrava par lo raggio dell' alta luce, che de se e vera.
Da
quinci innanzi il mio veder fu maggio che il parlar nostro ch' a tal vista cede,
e cede la
memoria a tanto
1
oltraggio.
i.
Excursion,
Book
156
mente non
riede
Cotal son
che quasi tutta cessa mia visione, ed ancor mi distilla nel cor lo dolce che nacque de essa
io,
Cosi la
e
mirava
quella luce cotal si diventa, che volgersi da lei per altro aspetto e impossibil che mai si consenta Pero che il Ben, ch' e del volere obbietto, tutto s'accoglie in lei, e fuor di quella e diffetevo cio che li' e perfetto. 1
us of a similar experience. Mozart 2 has left it on record that his symphonies came into his mind not phrase by phrase, but as a totum simul, accomtell
Some musicians
panied by a wonderful feeling of exaltation and happiWhen and how my ideas come I know not, nor can I force them. Those that please me I retain in my memory and am accustomed, as I have been told, to
'
ness.
to myself. ... All this fires my soul, and not disturbed my subject enlarges itself, becomes methodised and defined, and the whole, though
hum them
provided
am
be long, stands almost complete and finished in my mind, so that I can survey it like a fine picture or a beautiful statue, at a glance. Nor do I hear in my imaginait
1
ray
sight, becoming pure, entered deeper and deeper into the of that high light which in itself is true. Thenceforth vision
'
My
was greater than our language, which fails such a sight and memory fails before such transcendence. As he who sees in a dream, and after the dream the impress of the emotion remains, and the rest returns for almost all the vision fades, and there not to the mind, such am I Thus did my yet flows from my heart the sweetness born of it. mind, all in suspense, gaze fixedly, immovable and intent, and was ever kindled by its gazing. Before that light one becomes such, that one could never consent to turn from it to any other sight. FortheGood, which is the object of the will, is in it wholly gathered, and outside it that is defective which in it is perfect.' 1 Holmes' Life and Correspondence oj Mozart, p. 317. Quoted by Rufus Jones, Studies in Mystical Religion, p. xxii. It should be said that some other great musicians seem to have composed in a manner
;
my
different
from that
of
Mozart.
THE ABSOLUTE
157
tion the parts successively, but I hear them as it were all at once. What a delight this is I cannot express. All
this inventing, this producing, takes place in a pleasing lively dream. But the actual hearing of the whole together
perhaps the best gift I This passage is of my because great psychological interest, beauty of sound is essentially dependent on temporal succession. If all the bars of a symphony were played simultaneously, the result would be anything but beautiful. The totum simul of his compositions which floated before Mozart's consciousness and gave him such exquisite delight was the idea of the whole piece, which after being worked out in a succession of sounds, independent of each other as vibrations of the air, but unified by the Soul as expressing a continuous meaning, were visualised as a rich but This last intuition is not indissoluble idea by Spirit. simultaneous but timeless. There are few better illustrations of the psychological truth of the Platonic scheme. In the medieval mystics the darkness of the vision is more emphasised. They describe a state in which the no imagination longer illuminates even the most spiritual intuitions of the Soul. Angela of Foligno 1 says that at one time she had had clear and distinct visions of God. But afterwards I saw Him darkly, and this darkness was the greatest blessing that could be imagined. The soul delighteth unspeakably therein, yet it beholdeth nought which can be related by the tongue or imagined in the heart. It sees nothing, and yet sees all things, because it beholds the Good darkly, and the more darkly and secretly the Good is seen, the more certain is it, and excellent above all things. Even when the Soul sees the
is
And
this
is
have
for.'
'
'
'
divine power, wisdom, and will of God, which I have seen most marvellously at other times, it is all less than
this most certain Good because this is the whole, and those other things only part of the whole.' She goes on to say that though she has had the dark vision of
; ' '
>
See E. Underbill.
Mysticism,?. 418.
158
countless times/ yet on three occasions only she has been uplifted to the heights of the vision. It seems to me/ she adds, that I am fixed in the midst of it and that it draweth me to itself more than anything else which I ever beheld, or any blessing which I ever received, so that there is nothing which can be compared to it/ The rarity of the vision, as well as its character, makes
'
'
God
Angela's experience very like that of Plot inns. It is not necessary, for the purpose of this book, to collect recorded experiences of ecstatics and visionaries.
The
is
material \vhich
lately
was almost
is
much now
who wish to study the psychology of The common impression about Plotinus, mysticism. that ecstasy is an important part of his system, is erroneous it has been thrust into the foreground in the same way in which Western critics of Buddhism have exaggerated the importance of Nirvana in that religion. In both cases the doctrines have also been widely misunderstood. Nirvana does not mean annihilation after death, nor does the philosophy of Plotinus culminate convulsed state which is (as Pfleiderer supposes) in a the negation of reason and sanity. The vision of the One is the crowning satisfaction of that love and longing (fyea-is, Sehnsuchf) which, as we have makes the world go round for Plotinus. It is seen, the vovs epwv which sees the vision. But how can anyone love the Absolute ? It seems to me that the emotion which the mystics so describe is not a simple one. There is such a thing as a longing for deliverance from individual life itself, a craving for rest and peace in the bosom of the eternal and unchanging, even at the price of a cessation
available for those
;
'
'
'
'
of consciousness.
desires
is
annihilation
;
inconceivable
not annihilation that the mystic anything that truly exists but the breaking down of the barriers
It is
of
which constitute separate existence. Unchanging life in the timeless All this is what he desires, and this the vision promises him, But when this is the ground of his
THE ABSOLUTE
;
159
yearning for the Absolute, he is not content with a momentary glimpse of the super-existent he wishes to Leave have done with temporal existence altogether. is of his it was that in as me,' prayer, nothing of myself Crashaw in his invocation of St. Teresa. In this mood he is willing to accept what to many is the self-stultification of mysticism, that the self, in losing its environment, loses also its content, and grasps zero instead of the All distinct consciousness is the consciousness infinite. of a not -self, of externality and this is just what he This for the Absolute seems lose for love to ever. hopes It can to be anti-selfish emotion raised to a passion. or itself except by negations, by such hardly express
'
;
The symbols as darkness, emptiness, utter stillness. Godhead is the divine Dark, the infinite Void, ein ewige Stille. But the loving Spirit which has found its bliss and its home in the rich and beautiful world of the Platonic Ideas has no such longing for self -nought ing/ It desires only to see the eternal fount from which the
'
'
'
and full. The joy of the the joy of overleaping the last metaphysical barrier, that which prevents subject and object from being wholly one. He knows that beyond the subject -object relation there can be no concrete life or consciousness, and he does not dream of finding a
river of
life
permanent home above the spiritual world. But there is for him no joy comparable to the assurance that he is, in very deed and truth, all the glory that has been revealed to him that there is 'nothing between.' There is an unfathomable something in his own heart which claims this final consummation of communion as his own and he returns to the harmonious beauty and order of the spiritual world indescribably enriched by
;
There
is
vision of the
to be.
The imagination
a
at
of
formlessness
shoreless
160
ocean, a vast desert, a black night, and the mind which thinks that it contemplates the Absolute really visualises these symbols of the unlimited. But the idea of the One, the Godhead, the ultimate source of all that is good and
true
and
beautiful,
is
inspired love in many noble spirits. A Christian will press the question asked above
'
132)
Is this
intellectual love of
is it
God
'
man,
or
What would
Plotinus have said to the plain question, He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love
I believe that Platonism can answer this challenge better than Indian mysticism, though in practice nothing can be much more beautiful than the gentle and selfless benevolence of the Oriental saint. Love, for Plotinus, passes through a process of
seen
'
purification
and
and enlightenment, like our other affections In a sense it becomes depersonalised, more so than many of us would think desirable but when
faculties.
;
' '
a Christian teacher bids us to love the Christ in our brethren/ when he repeats the famous saying, When thou seest thy brother thou seest thy Lord/ he is saying very much what Platonism says in other w ords. We begin, St. Paul says, by knowing other men 'after the but we end, or flesh/ and loving them after the flesh should end, by knowing and loving them as immortal spirits, our fellow-citizens in that heavenly country where, as Plotinus says, the most perfect sympathy and transparent intimacy exist among blessed spirits. And the doctrine of the One as the supreme object of love really secures this that human spirits in their most exalted moods may share not only a common life and a common happiness, but a common hope and a common prayer. Nevertheless, we must admit that the whole character of the mysticism of Plotinus is affected by the fact that the ideal object of the quest is a state and not a person. At no point in the ascent is God conceived as a Person The God whom over against our own personality.
r
THE ABSOLUTE
well as
161
Plotinus mainly worships the Spirit is transcendent as immanent in the world of Soul, but purely im-
manent in his own world, Yonder. In that world He is no longer an object but an atmosphere. The ineffable Godhead above God is of course supra-personal. There is therefore, in the Plotinian mysticism, none of that deep personal loyalty, none of that intimate dialogue between soul and soul, none of that passion of love resembling
often too closely in its expression the earthly love of the sexes which are so prominent in later mystical litera-
Compare, as a favourable example of this type, the exquisite Revelations of Julian of Norwich, full of tender reverent affection for the heavenly Christ. We do not feel quite clear what is the object which excites the ardour There is an intense of the Soul or Spirit in Plotinus. desire to see and realise perfection to be quit of all the
ture.
;
contrarieties
to
more.
him and
These are the chief objects of his desire and for for many they are enough. They were enough
' ' '
What specially attracted for Spinoza, and for Goethe. me in Spinoza (Goethe writes) was the boundless
disinterestedness which shone forth from every sentence. " That marvellous saying, Whoso loves God must not desire God to love him in return," with all the premisses on which it rests and the consequences that flow from it,
permeated my whole thinking. To be disinterested in everything, and most of all in love and friendship, was rny highest desire, my maxim, my constant practice ; so " If I love that that bold saying of mine at a later date, " came directly from my thee, what is that to thee ?
heart.' 1
Disinterestedness is exactly what this type of philosophy, if it is erected into a rule of life, can give but there is another road us ; and a very noble gift it is
;
of ascent, by personal affection for man, and even (in many Christian saints) for God or Christ and those
;
whose temperament leads them by this path are 1 Goethe, quoted in Hume Brown's The Youth of Goethe, p. II. M
likely
210.
162
may even be true that this type of is religious philosophy likely to be specially attractive to those whom circumstances have cut off from domestic
happiness and the privilege of friendship, or who are naturally slow to love their kind. In all ages there are some who fancy themselves attracted by God, or by Nature, when they are really only repelled by man. But in dealing with the great mystics such cavils are not only unjust but impertinent. Their loneliness is the loneliness of the great mountain solitudes the air which we breathe at those heights is thin but pure and bracing ; and there is in each one of us a hidden man of the heart who can love and be loved super-individually. This is true of the love of the Christian saint for Christ. St. Paul says that even if we begin by knowing Christ after the As flesh/ that is a stage which must be left behind. ut Convey sio ad Dominum Spiritum.' Bengel says, fit In fact, the difference between Neoplatonic and Christian devotion may easily be exaggerated. The Christian cannot feel for the exalted Christ the same emotion which he would have felt for the Galilean Prophet his love is all of that is for a source divine the Being, worship lovable, and desire for spiritual communion with the living Power who has brought life and immortality to love of Plotinus is not very different. The light.' spiritual It is at any rate true to say that the Christian Platonists of Alexandria, the Cappadocian Fathers, and Greek theology generally, regarded the heavenly Christ as a Being with most of the attributes of the Neoplatonic
; '
'
'
New?.
AND ESTHETICS
says that
its
metaphysics ethical. platonism. The connexion of ethics with metaphysics became closer and closer throughout the history of Greek The first Greek philosophy was generalised thought. natural science ethical precept at this time was largely
;
it is the special glory of Chrisethics are metaphysical and its But this is equally true of Neo-
handed down in proverbs and aphorisms, as it still is in China. But for Socrates the aim of philosophy was
to discover
'
how
l
and after him this remained to the end advantage.' of antiquity the avowed object of metaphysical studies. Aristotle, like Spinoza, was entirely convinced that the
;
morally the noblest career that a man he says, the exercise of that which is in our nature, and concerned with the highest highest it gives the things (the being and laws of the universe)
search for truth
is
can choose.
It is,
purest enjoyment to those who practise it ; and it is, of all modes of life, the least dependent on external conditions.
2
Stoicism and Epicureanism were both, first and foremost, attitudes towards life ; they claimed to regulate
conduct in every particular. These two philosophers had the merit of teaching men how to live in this world later thought inclined to the contemplative and almost monastic ideal of the philosophic life, and made ethics a study rather of how to live out of society than in it. In
1
p. 42.
164
Plotinus
side,
ethical
morality that of Plato's dictum in the Laws, Human affairs are not worth taking very seriously ; the misfortune is that we have to take them seriously/ It was one of the chief objects of philosophy to teach men not to take them very seriously. It had become the province of the philosopher to administer the consolations of religion to those who were in affliction, or troubled about the health of their souls. In the second and third centuries the philosopher not only claimed to be a priest
tone
'
receive
too
little
is
'
and servant
his recognised position was of the gods j that of spiritual guide, father confessor, private chaplain, and preacher. For the educated layman, poetry and
'
philosophy were still the great ethical instructors. Plotinus has not written a book about ethics, like Aristotle. Even on friendship, which takes such a prominent place in classical morals, he has not much to say. He tells us that the political virtues, which precede the stage of purification in which the ascent is begun in earnest, must by all means be practised first, 2 but he touches upon them very lightly. They teach the value of order and measure, and take away false opinions. 3 His biographer tells us that he induced Rogatianus the senator, one of his disciples, to give up the active life of a high official, and betake himself to philosophic contemplation. It is the ideal of the cloister, already vicBut in torious over the Stoic ideal of civic virtue. Plotinus the world-renouncing tendency is not carried He himself lived, as we have to its extreme lengths. seen, a strenuous and active life, as a valued counsellor of emperors, a beloved teacher and spiritual guide, and a conscientious guardian and trustee. Even the later Neoplatonists who were contemporary with the craze
1
Aurelius,
3, 4.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
for eremitism
AND AESTHETICS
165
among
to higher flights. In the life of Proclus by Marinus, the ' biographer includes under the political virtues of his
hero, contempt for filthy lucre, generosity, public spirit, wise political counsel, friendship, industry, and all the cardinal virtues. Nevertheless, Plotinus never asks the
very important question which Plato (in the Republic) did ask, in a form which shows a very just apprehension of its gravity. How can the State handle philosophy so as not to be ruined ? It is the question which for
'
'
us takes the form, How can a State take the Sermon on the Mount for its guide without losing its independence and therewith the opportunity of having an organic
' '
life
at all
when
most
Purification (/cd#a/o<n?) is the first stage of the ascent, the have been mastered. In political virtues
' '
what he says about this stage, Plotinus has been 1 To purify the Soul by Augustine. signifies to detach it from the body and to elevate it to the spiritual world.' 2 The Soul is to strip off all its own lower nature, as well as to cleanse itself from external stains what remains when this is done will be the 3 Retire into thyself and examine thyimage of Spirit.'
of
closely
followed
'
'
'
If thou dost not yet find beauty there, do like the self. sculptor who chisels, planes, polishes, till he has adorned his statue with all the attributes of beauty. So do thou
is superfluous, straighten crooked, purify and enlighten what is dark, and do not cease working at thy statue, until virtue shines before thine eyes with its divine splendour, and
chisel
that which
its
holy
purity.'
is mainly a matter of constant selfand especially discipline of the thoughts. Plotinus gives no rules for the ascetic life, and no precepts
This
'
'
purification
discipline,
See especially
3- 6. 5.
De Musica,
6,
13-16.
i. 6. 9.
5. 3. 9.
166
which point to severe austerities. Outward action for him means so little, except as the necessary expression and accompaniment of inward states, that he could
' '
not, without great inconsistency, attach importance to such exercises. He would have us live so simply that our
bodily wants are no interruption to our mental and but beyond this he does not care to go. spiritual interests Platonism, the tendency of which is to make the intellect
;
passionate and the passions cold, has not much need of asceticism of the severer type. The ascetics of antiquity
were not the Platonists but the Cynics, whose object was to make themselves wholly independent of externals. Plotinus was, however, the inheritor of an old tradition about self-discipline (GWT/CJ/W) and it may be interesting
;
to describe briefly
what that
tradition was.
We need not hunt for traces, in civilised Greece, of the most rudimentary form of asceticism the abstinence from foods which are supposed to be tabu. This is bargerm.
barous superstition, though it may contain other ideas in These other ideas are, speaking generally, two
:
the consciousness of sin, calling for propitiatory expia' the corruptible body presseth tion, and the notion that down the soul.' As early as the sixth and seventh centuries B.C. Greece
had
its
fasting saints
and
seers,
'
and
abstinence from food before initiation into the mysteries was probably a very ancient custom. The Orphic rule was adopted by communities formed for living the
'
higher
life,
popular in Magna Graecia. The disciples of Orpheus were strict vegetarians, counting even eggs forbidden
some vegetables, especially beans, were also condemned and close contact with birth and death the mysterious 1 This was beginning and end of life was a defilement.
;
TT)v T'
ETHICS, RELIGION,
no mere survival
AND ESTHETICS
167
of tabu, nor was it primarily a way of mortifying the flesh. The Greeks, and the Romans too, were not great flesh-eaters beef was left to athletes in training. The main reason for abstaining from a meatdiet was the idea that it is a species of cannibalism. The unity of all life was an important part of the mystical tradition, which acknowledges no breaks in the great
;
chain of existence.
to Aristotle, 1 taught that to kill for food things that hava souls is forbidden by that universal law which pervades
A vegetarian
became the
rule
among
philosophers
who were
influ-
enced by Pythagoreanism, which was an Orphic revival. 3 Porphyry, for instance, was a rigid abstainer from meat.
from marriage. The cult of celibacy appeared in Chris4 tianity as soon as it touched the Hellenistic world its beginnings can be traced even in the New Testament. Galen and other Pagan writers show that the practice of lifelong continence by the Christians made a great imit was considered a proof pression on their neighbours of such self-control as could be expected only from philosophers. Plotinus was himself an ascetic in this as in other ways. But his attitude towards human love The is not the same as that of the Christian ascetics. cause of sexual love, he says, is the desire of the Soul
; ;
and
kinship
with the beautiful. There are secret sympathies in nature which draw us to what is like ourselves ; and just as nature owes its origin to the beautiful in the spiritual world, which makes the Soul desire to create after that
Rhet. a. 13. 2. The things from which they [the Rohde, Psyche, 2. 126, says : Orphists] kept themselves pure were those which represented in the symbolism of religion, rather than involved in actual practice, dependance upon the world of death and impermanence.' This is, I think, to underrate the moral reasons which made them vegetarians. 8 Complete vegetarianism, however, was a comparatively late counsel of perfection. Zockler, Askese, p. 105. ' The Essenes in Palestine also practised celibacy.
*
'
168
pattern, so the
the beautiful/ Thus there is something laudable in the impulse which leads to sexual desire. But although our love of spiritual beauty inspires the love which we feel for visible objects, these visible objects do not really
possess spiritual beauty. And so it is an error to suppose that the longing of the Soul can be satisfied by union
This error
is
the cause of
carnal desires, from which it is better for the philosopher to abstain. 1 True beauty should be sought in beautiful
and in beautiful thoughts. But earthly loves, according to all Platonists, may be the beginning of the ascent to the spiritual world. The lover has at any rate received his call to the philosophic life. This gentle idealism is preferable to the harsh dualism of flesh and Spirit, from which Christian asceticism has not always been free. There is no hint in Plotinus that earthly beauty is a snare of the devil, or that there is something contaminating to the saint in the mere presence of the other sex. We may suspect that when persons hold this
actions,
is, if
if
them
leave
alone, and,
they are women, that Cupid has left they are men, that Cupid will not
alone. The reason for chastity, in the Platonnot that we ought to be ashamed of the natural instincts, but that sensual indulgence impedes the ascent of the Soul from the material to the spiritual world, riveting the chains which bind it to Matter, and preventists, is
them
beauty.
from seeing and contemplating supersensuous That earthly love in its completest form the mutual love of husband and wife may be a sacrament of heavenly love, was a truth hidden from the eyes of 3 Catholic, Gnostic, and Neoplatonic ascetics alike.
ing
it
2
1
See
i. 2. 5,
'
natural
Plotinus with Porphyry's comments, A<f>opfj.al 34. uncontrolled desires, and these are not to be
' '
.
'
'
of lamblichus (De Mysteriis, 4. n) says that prayers the suppliant is impure in this sense. Benn rightly says that the story of Crates is the only romance in Greek philosophy. ' young lady of noble family, named Hipparchia,
'
A disciple
(aTrpoaipera)
if
'
ETHICS, RELIGION,
One object of by diminishing
:
AND ESTHETICS
to
'
169
asceticism
its
'
is
keep under
'
the body
Suso, for energy and activities. How can a man gain a perfect underexample, asks standing of the spiritual life, if he preserves his forces and natural vigour intact ? It would indeed be a miracle. 1 I have never seen such a case.' Plotinus would not have as a assented to this. Use your body (he says) musician uses his lyre when it is worn out, you can still And again, the good sing without accompaniment.' man will give to the body all that he sees to be useful and possible, though he himself remains a member of another order.' 2 Health, he says, makes us feel more fyee in -the
'
'
'
'
though hardly any bodily ills enjoyment of the good need seriously impede this. But he does say that some
;
experience of ill-health is better for the spiritual life than a very robust constitution and this is probably
;
There are some people who seem too rudely healthy to be spiritually minded. But deliberate injury
true.
to the bodily health is a very different thing. Many of the exercises practised by the mystics of the cloister
were admirably designed to produce nervous excitement, hypnotic trance, and exhaustion. These in their turn produced the which they mystical phenomena valued so highly, but which in truth consisted mainly of hallucinations, or of stupor induced by extreme mental and bodily fatigue. There is no trace of this in Plotinus. His attitude is exactly that of Shakespeare's
'
'
146111 sonnet
fell
desperately in love with him, refused several most eligible suitors, and threatened to kill herself unless she was given to him in marriage. Her parents in despair sent for Crates. Marriage, for a philosopher, was against the principles of his sect, and he at first joined them in
endeavouring to dissuade her. Finding his remonstrances unavailing, he at last flung at her feet the staff and wallet which constituted his whole worldly possessions, exclaiming, Here is the bridegroom, and that is the dower. Think of this matter well, for you cannot be my partner unless you follow the same calling with me.' Hipparchia contented, and henceforth, heedless of taunts, conformed her life in every respect to the Cynic pattern (Greek Philosophers, p. 331). 1 Sermons, transl. by Thiriot, 2. 358.
' '
i. 4.
16.
170
the centre of my sinful earth, these rebel powers array, pine within and suffer dearth,
Painting thy outward walls so courtly gay ? Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend ?
Shall worms, inheritors of this excess,
Then,
Eat up thy charge ? is this thy body's end ? soul, live thou upon thy servant's loss, And let that pine to aggravate thy store
:
Buy terms
Within be fed, without be rich no more So shalt thou feed on death, that feeds on men, And death once dead, there's no more dying then.
And yet we cannot wholly approve of Plotinus' attitude towards our humble companion, my brother the ass/ as St. Francis calls his body. The philosopher himself is reported to have said that he was ashamed of his body, as a reason for refusing to have his portrait painted. There is nothing in the Enneads, on this subject, so wholesome as the following beautiful passage from Krause.
'
Spirit and body are in equally original, equally living, equally divine ; they claim to be maintained in the
'
man
same purity and holiness, and to be equally loved and developed. The spirit of man wishes and requires of his body that it shall helpfully and lovingly co-operate with
him
in all his spiritual needs, that it shall enlarge his field of view, exercise his art, and unite him through speech
and kindly Nature does not disappoint is dear and precious to her, and she heaps love and good things upon it. But the body should be just as dear and precious to the spirit. Let the spirit esteem the body like itself, and honour it as an equally great and rich product of the power and love of God. Let it support, help, and delight the body in the organic process of its development to health, power, and beauty. Let it form it into the mirror of a beautiful and let it consecrate and hallow it for the free soul
with other
;
men
ETHICS, RELIGION,
and good.' * The conflict with
AND ESTHETICS
171
worthy
as a process of emancipation, a journey through darkness into light, than as a struggle with a hostile spiritual power.
Vice is still never absolute. 2 human, being mixed with something contrary to itself.' in the even This is akin to the mystical doctrine that worst man there remains a spark of the Divine, which has never consented to evil and can never consent to it. Even Tertullian, it is interesting to find, has the same doctrine. In a fine passage of the De Anima 3 he The corruption of nature is another nature, says its own god and father, the author of corruption. having And yet there remains the original good of the soul, which For is divine and akin to it and in the true sense natural. that which is from God is not so much extinguished as it obscured. It can be obscured, because it is not God cannot be extinguished, because it is from God. ... In the worst there is something good, and in the best there is something of the worst.' Plotinus says that the bad Soul the what man, deserting ought to contemplate, receives in exchange for his true self another Form/ a
Human
wickedness
'
is
'
'
'
'
Form is rather like a coating the real Hence all virtue is a self. concealing 4 The of the 'other doctrine cleansing* (/caflapcn?). the which bad man in Form,' gets consequence of his base desires, may be illustrated from Hylton's Scale of Now I shall tell thee how thou mayest enter Perfection.
spurious
of
self.
But
this false
mud
'
'
much
shalt
into thyself to see the ground of sin and destroy as thou canst. Draw in thy thoughts. And
soul,
it
as
what
thou find ? A dark and ill-favoured image of thine which hath neither light of knowledge nor of love for God. This is the image of sin, which feeling
own
1 Krause, The Ideal of Humanity (English translation by W. Hastie, D.D.), p. 31-2. This admirable philosopher has been far too much neglected both in England and in his own country. 8 Ho opposes the Gnostic doctrine of total depravity.'
'
Chap. 41.
i. 6. 5, 6.
172
St. Paul calleth a body of sin and death. It is like no bodily thing. It is no real thing, but darkness of conscience and a lack of the love of God and of light. Go as if thou wouldest beat down this dark image, and go 1 The characteristic maxim of through-stitch with it.' Never cease working at thy statue/ suggests Plotinus, a scheme of self-improvement more like that of Goethe
'
than the Christian quest of holiness. There is little he urges us to mention of repentance in our author make the best of a nature which is fundamentally good, though clogged with impediments of various kinds. The Neoplatonist does not make matters easy for himself but his world is one in which there are no negative values, no temperatures below zero. The last enemy is chaos and disintegration of the Soul, not its reintegration
:
And if the higher Soul is the man Like Spirit, the himself never sins. 2 This, however, is not higher Soul is ava^aprrirog allowed to paralyse the will to virtue ; for though the
in the service of evil.
himself, the
man
Soul itself is not within the time-process, in which evils occur, the process is within it, and concerns it. Plotinus 3 is valuable also when he says that most vice is caused
untrue valuations fyevSeis Sogcu) by false opinions and ignorances of all kinds. Modern philanthropy would be more beneficent if we steadily combated false opinions whenever we met them, instead of assuming
'
'
'
'
that good intentions cover all practical foolishness. Flight from the world/ as recommended by Neo1
platonism, had the double motive of liberating the Soul from the cares and pleasures of this life, and of making it invulnerable against troubles coming from outside.
The
latter motive is very prominent in all the later Greek philosophy. The flight mainly consists in renun'
'
philosophical principle which underlies this is, tvtpyeia OVK no activity, for better or worse, can change funda; mental nature. This, a Christian might say, is the reason why a lost soul must always be miserable it can never be at home in hell.
<TTIV
The
3. 6. 2.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
elation of those things
AND ESTHETICS
173
which the natural man regards as and from their nature, and from the fact which goods, that all other men covet them, are most liable to be taken away from us. They include also some painful emotions not of a self-regarding nature, such as extreme compassion, which may ruffle the composure of the sage against his will. Only weak eyes, in Seneca's opinion, The end of all philoswater at another's misfortunes.
'
'
again,
is
to teach us to despise
life.'
According to Lucian's Demonax, happiness belongs only man, and the free man is he who hopes nothing and fears nothing/ 2 The desire to be invulnerable is natural to most men, and it has been the avowed or una vowed motive of most practical philosophy. To the public eye, the Greek philosopher was a rather fortunate person who could do without a great many things which other people need and have to work for. Those philosophers who most disdainfully rejected pleasure as an end, made freedom from bodily and mental disturbance the test of proficiency and the reward of discipline. On this side, the influence of Stoicism is very strong in all the later Greek thought. Even suicide, the logical
corollary of this system (since there are some troubles to which the sage cannot be indifferent), is not wholly condemned by Plotinus, though he has the credit of dis3 The Stoics suading Porphyry from taking his own life.
were well aware that a man has no right to cut himself off from the sorrows of his kind he must try to relieve them. But he is to preserve an emotional detachment ; or perhaps he would say that he wishes to show the same
;
courage in bearing his neighbour's misfortunes as in bearing his own. We remember La Rochefoucauld and
Lucian, Demonax, 20. suicide for the school of Plato is Phaedo, p. 62, where Socrates says that a soldier must not desert his post. Plotinus argues that the suicide can hardly leave this life with a mind free and passionless if he had vanquished fear and passion he would, almost always, be content to live. But in i. 4'. 16 he says that the Soul is not prevented from leaving the body, and is always master to decide in regard to it.'
Letters, 3. 5.
3 1 2
'
174
smile. Plotinus certainly errs in not emphasising the necessity of deep and wide human sympathy, for the growth of the Soul. It follows really from his doctrine
of Soul,
which
is
in
no way
individualistic
but he
is
Being comfortable. The good man must enjoy an inner calm and happiness. Greek and Roman ethics always seem to us moderns a little hard. Greek civilisation was singuthe lot of the aged and the unfortunate was larly pitiless acknowledged to be cruel, but this knowledge raised
;
little
too anxious to
make
some obscure connexion with a flowering-time of the arts. Roman hardness was of a different kind, more like the
hardness of the militarist clique in Germany the Stoical philosophy seemed to have been made for Romans. The contrast between the Christian ideal of emancipation from self by perfect sympathy, and the Stoical ideal of
;
emancipation
significant.
by
It is
perfect inner detachment, is very perhaps for this reason that the later
little
;
Platonism could do so
to regenerate society.
The
his
It is fair, however, to add that Plotinus repudiates the suggestion that the good man ought to desire injustice and poverty to exist, as giving a field for his virtues. He
by some
of his neigh-
practical results of extreme moral idealism are in the attitude of Plotinus towards national mis-
are a little surprised to find so pious a man fortunes. refusing to pity the victims of aggression who have Those who by trusted in heaven to protect them. evil-doing have become irrational animals and wild beasts
'
We
drag the ordinary sort with them and do them violence. The victims are better men than their oppressors, but are overcome by their inferiors in so far as they are themselves deficient for they are not themselves good, and have not
;
6. 8. 5.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND AESTHETICS
. . .
175
prepared themselves for suffering. armed, but it is the armed who rule, and
Some
befits
are un-
it
not
God
himself to fight for the unwarlike. The law says that those shall come safely out of war who fight bravely, not The wicked rule through lack of those who pray.
.
.
1 In the next courage in the ruled ; and this is just.' like a section he offers something very challenge to Christian ethics, and I think he has the Christians in his mind That the wicked should throughout this discussion. at the sacrifice of thembe others to their saviours expect selves is not a lawful prayer to make nor is it to be ex'
:
pected that divine Beings should lay aside their own lives and rule the details of such men's lives, nor that good men,
life that is other and better than human should devote themselves to the ruling of dominion, wicked men.' The philosopher, it seems, will not be much perturbed if his country is successfully attacked by a powerful enemy. If the citizens are enslaved, that does not matter to the Soul if they are killed, death is a If people must take of the mask. actor's only changing
who
are living a
these things seriously, they ought to learn to fight better ; God helps those who help themselves. This cool acceptance of monstrous acts of tyranny and injustice does not
commend
itself to
it
seem to accord
'
came down
to give
into the higher stage of Enlightenment. are often told that Greek philosophy, in and after Aristotle, spoke of the
'
We
ethical
'
'
of the
intellectual
virtues in connection with the lower stage, and virtues in connection with the higher.
'
These words in their English dress have caused a great ' deal of misunderstanding. The ethical virtues are not the constituents of all moral excellence ; they are those
'
3- 2. 8.
176
virtues which we begin to practise mainly on authority, and which at last become matters of habit (?009). And virtues are not those which require the intellectual
' '
exceptional brain-power if there are any such virtues they are for the most part the same as the ethical virtues, only now they are understood and willed with conscious
;
practical moralist ; but these are not seen in their relation to universal laws until the
by the
by entering upon
or contemplation
especially
it
Its object of
study
now what
itself
is
above
man
l
;
more
occupies
Now
here
a parting of the ways. Plotinus, like his great predecessors, honestly and heartily believed He that the philosophic life is morally the highest.
we do indeed come to
thought so, not because it happened to be his own trade he made it his own trade because he thought it the highest. The life of active philanthropy, without reference to anything beyond the promotion of human comfort and the diminution of suffering, would have seemed to him to need further justification, as indeed it does. What is it that we desire most for our fellow-men, and for
;
ourselves and why ? Altruistic Epicureanism would not have appealed to him much more than egoistic and the not infrequent modern phenomenon of the religious
;
;
or social worker who, though personally unselfish and self-denying, is a hedonist in his schemes for improving
society,
confusion.
would have seemed to him to indicate mental If happiness is identified with comfort and if with pleasure, he does not even think it desirable
;
higher states of the mind, we may trust to being happy as soon as we are inside the enchanted garden of the The good life is an end in itself. If spiritual world. any man seeks anything else in the good life, it is not the good life that he is seeking nor will he fmd it. But
t
p.
398-401.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND ESTHETICS
177
this is not the Stoical pursuit of virtue for its own sake the rather harsh and bullying ethics of Kantians ancient and modern. Experience has shown that as soon as Stoicism ceases to be buttressed by pride an unamiable
kind of pride, generally its ethical sanctions lose their cogency. There are too many unresolved contradictions in Stoicism its moral centre is in personal dignity, the
;
consciousness of which
is
it is altogether desirable. For ' the Platonist, the only true motive is the desire to become like to God/ an approximation which, it is needless to say, can take place only in the region of will, love, and
knowledge.
it
This,
which
is
the realisation of
its
true nature,
own reward
from
proceed, as if automatically, all good actions. But the best life is impossible without the wisdom which is from
'
above
'
and
this
discipline
of the intellect
good
is
than of the will. If the ultimate to be something rather than to do something, the
life,
no
philosophic
and we
'
can understand what Blake meant when he said, The fool shall not enter into heaven, be he never so holy/
names
The
really pursuing the Good is that the desired for any reason outside itself.
Souls or nowhere. 2
If
we
Good as an
Good,
this
;
There is nothing wrong in we must set before us relative and partial goods while we are ourselves imperfect. Thus the good of Matter is form, the good of the body is the Soul, the good
of the Soul of Spirit
is is virtue, and above virtue Spirit, the good the One, the first nature.' In Matter, form in the body, Soul produces produces order and beauty
'
;
.3. i.
3- 4- 6.
6. 7. 25.
II,
'178
life
in the Soul, Spirit produces wisdom, virtue, and ; ' happiness ; and in Spirit the first light produces a Divine light which transforms it, makes it see the Godhead, and share the ineffable felicity of the First Principle. ' 1 Although Plotinus puts the life of Spirit above virtue/ he is far from any Nietzschian idea of exalting his sage beyond good and evil/ He insists that it is by virtue that we resemble God, and that without genuine virtue God is but a name. 2 He urges, against the Gnostics, that it is useless to bid men look towards God/ without 3 He does not deny the telling them how they are to do it value of the Peripatetic conception of the end as good ' to accomplish living (evfa>/a), nor of the Stoic advice one's own proper work/ nor even of the Epicurean good condition There is truth in all these (evTrdOeia).*
' ' '
.
'
'
'
'
The higher life, Spirit, and happiness, are identia cal good not extraneous to ourselves, but one which we already possess potentially. We are the activity of the spiritual principle/ 5
ideals.
'
We
a sense a preparation for contemplation (0&*pia). The tendency of modern thought in the West is to view this conception of human life with impatience, and to insist
that on the contrary all contemplation is useless unless it is a preparation for action. The two ideals are not so far apart as they appear or rather we should say that
;
a deeper consideration of the problem of conduct tends to bring them together. We must as usual begin with an attempt to understand the exact meaning, not of contemplation and action/ but of Oewpla and Trpafa.
' '
'
Qecopla in the Ionic philosophy meant curiosity ; a traveller like Hecataeus or Herodotus might be said to
visit
'
'
foreign lands Oewpia? eveica. In the mysteries the to a dramatic or sacramental spectacle
I. 2.
3 ^
2. 9. 15, 2. 9. 15.
&VV
apery* a\rj6ivf)s
* I.
4. i.
I.
4. 9.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND AESTHETICS
179
is said to have been the first to give it a new meaning, as the contemplation, not of the sacrament, but of the He underlying truths which sacraments symbolise.
found
aid to this kind of contemplation ; unlike Plato, who 1 Plato in a wellspeaks with contempt of star-gazing.
describes the philosopher as the spectator In Plotinus the true and per' fect contemplation, the living contemplation/ is the
of all
known passage
interplay of Spirit
is
and the
3 spiritual world.
But
this
no
idle
is
self -enjoyment.
The quietness
;
(fiwxla)
;
of
acts
it activity unimpeded activity being what it contemplates. 4 Contemplation is activity If the which transcends the action which it directs.
Spirit
its
is
'
it
creates,
must be contemplation. Action itself must be different from the Ao'yo? which directs it the Ao'yo? which is associated with action (trpagis) and oversees it, cannot
;
itself
be action.' 6
Creation
is
contemplation
for
it
is
the consummation (a7roTeXeo-/xa) of contemplation, which remains contemplation and does nothing else, but creates
by virtue of being contemplation All things that exist are a by-play of contemplation (irapepyov Oewptas) 6 because, though action is the necessary result of contemplation, contemplation does not exist for the sake of action, but for its
.
own
or
sake.
its
Action
the latter if it results from some This seems to me quite sound. activity. Thoughtless and objectless action indicates a weakness of the Soul, which ought to control all our external life. Spinoza would say that contemplation is action inspired by reason, while all other action is passive/ reaction to external stimuli. The only proper action is purposive
object
beyond
itself,
spiritual
'
'
'
1
8
3
5
Theaetetus, 173.
3,
rj
7rofy<ns Oeupla.
iffrlv.
3- 8. 8.
i8o
action, in which fortitude, high-mindedness and nobility But for Plotinus, contemplation is a are displayed. 1 rather less intellectual process than for Spinoza. It is
thoughts, in converting visions into tasks, floating ideas into acts of will. When the thing to be done has quite clearly taken possession of our minds, it will be done, he tells us, with a sort of unconsciousness.
That
this self-possession
which he
calls
contemplation
It requires the use of a faculty which all indeed possess, but which few use. Even so Spinoza concludes his Ethics with a
is difficult
passage which, except for difference of style, might have The wise man is been written by Plotinus himself. but at all conscious of in being spirit, perturbed scarcely
'
himself and of God, and of things, by a certain eternal necessity, never ceases to be, but always possesses true
If the way which I have acquiescence of his spirit. result seems exceedingly as to out this leading pointed
Needs must seldom found. How would it be possible, if salvation were ready to our hand, and could without great labour be found, that it should be by almost all men neglected ? But all things excellent are
hard,
it
it
may
nevertheless be discovered.
it is
be hard, since
so
as difficult as they are rare.' Now this confession of be to should pause to those who give enough difficulty
1
2
Spinoza, Ethics,
3. i. 59.
'
Bosanquet, Gifford Lectures, Vol. i. 34 8. So Mill says, Speculative philosophy, which to the superficial appears a thing so remote from the business of life and the outward interests of men, is in reality the thing on earth which most influences them, and in the long run overbears every other influence save those which it must itself obey/
ETHICS, RELIGION,
'
AND ESTHETICS
181
think that the praise of contemplation is a denial of Kingsley's advice to do noble things, not dream them,
all
is
'
Traumen
denken ist schwer.' The clear disciplined thinking which Plotinus called dialectic is not merely an organon of abstract speculation. It gives us reality at the same time as the idea of it.' And the outgoing movement which produces good actions is the natural and necessary activity of contemplation. This doctrine has Pure never been better stated than by Ruysbroek. 1
ist leicht,
' '
love frees a
man from
know
this in ourselves,
himself and his acts. If we would we must yield to the Divine, the
.
. .
Hence comes sanctuary of ourselves. and urgency towards active righteousness and virtue, for Love cannot be idle. The Spirit of God, moving within the powers of the man, urges them outwards in just and wise activity. Christ was the greatest contemplative that ever lived, yet He was ever at the service of men, and never did His ineffable and perpetual contemplation diminish His activity, or His exterior activity.' Those only need quarrel with the doctrine of contemplation who do not allow Neoplatonic that clear thinking should precede right action. 2 The Soul when joined to the body is inclined to evil as well as good. 3 The choice must be made. But are
innermost
the impulse
. .
.
we
free agents
;
We
have an impression
it ?
that
but
how do we come by
We
feel
of action
1
is
certain liberty, just when our freedom threatened by fate or by violence. Finding
Quoted by Herman,
Ce sont les mystiques qui sont pratiques et ce sont les politiques qui ne le sont pas. C'est nous qui somrnes pratiques, qui faisont quelque chose, et c'est eux qui ue le sont pas, qui ne font rien. C'est nous qui amassons et c'est eux qui C'est nous qui batissons, c'est nous qui fondons, et c'est eux pillent. qui demolissent. C'est nous qui nourissons et c'est eux qui parasitent. C'est nous qui faisons les ceuvres et les homines, les peuples et les races. Et c'est eux qui ruinent.' 8 irttpvKC yap tir <fyx0w, I. 2. 4.
:
meme
C?TI itf
wlv
to T\rrx.tou, 6. 8. I.
182
with a sort of surprise that in such cases we are forced to act against our real will, we realise the general possibility of resisting external pressure and asserting our freedom. What we call our freedom, then, is simply the power of obeying our true nature. But what is our true
nature ? Man is a complex being. Free-will certainly does not belong to our desires, or to our passions, or to these things are too often sensation, or to imagination our masters. We are not completely free agents so long as our desires are prompted by finite needs. 1 And the union of the Soul with the body makes us dependent on the general order of the world, over which we have no control. But though we are complex, we are also, as 2 It is the chief characteristic persons, each of us a whole. of psychical and spiritual life, that the whole is present in each part. We are therefore not merely cogs in a we are the machine itself, and the mind great machine which directs it. But this is only fully true of the personthe man of ality which has realised its own inner nature ordinary experience shares in Being and is a kind of 3 The imperBeing, but is not master of his own Being.'
; ;
'
fect
man is pulled and pushed by forces which are external to himself, just because he is himself still external to his true Being. If we could see the course of events
as they really are, we should find that the chain of causation is inviolable, but that we ourselves are causa'
movement
ciple.
is
tive principles.' What is free in us is that spontaneous of the Spirit which has no external cause ; 5 it is the will of the higher Soul to return to its own Prin-
The element
of
freedom
in
this underlying motive, the spiritual activity of the Soul. When the Soul becomes Spirit, its will is free ; the
will,
good
1
a
in
attaining
its
desire,
becomes
spiritual
3 *
o.\jrri
an important saying.
irpos TO, K0,\d oiKeiq. tpuffei Kal
dpXQ-i Sf
Ka.1 &v6p<t)TToi.
Ktvovvrai.
yovv
2. ai)reoi/<rios, 3. * 6. 8. 1-6.
lo.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
perception,
AND ESTHETICS
183
sembles
1 This reSpirit is free in its own right. Spinoza's definition of freedom: 'We call that
and
free which exists in virtue of the necessities of our nature, and which is determined by ourselves alone/ Plotinus distinguishes invariable sequence from causation, and points out that rigid determination excludes
2 If 'one Soul,' opervery idea of causation. all ating through things, determines every detail, as leaf of a every plant is implicit in its root, this determinism (TO o-^oSpov rfj? a^ay/o/?) exaggerated destroys the very idea of causation and necessary sequence, for 'all will then be one.' We shall then be no longer ourselves, nor will any action be ours we shall be mere automata, with no will or reasoning faculty. But we must maintain our individuality (Sec ettaa-rov e/ca<rroi> 3 and we must not throw the responsibility for e/cu), our errors upon the All.' In another place 4 he says that otherwise there would providence is not everything be no room for human wisdom, skill, and righteousness indeed there would be nothing for providence to provide for. The world does not consist only of mechanical
the
'
'
'
'
'
sequences
it is
Each
in;
dividual soul
'
'
little
first
is
'
cause
(irpMrovpyog airia)
As for the wicked, their misdeeds proceed necessarily from their character. Our character is our destiny but our character is also our choice ; we must remember that we have lived other lives before our present existence. 6 7 that It is not correct to say, with Mr. Whittaker, Plotinus is without the least hesitation a determinist.' He is quite convinced that mechanical necessity cannot
; '
life,
*
and
in these higher
/3oi/\r?<rtj
i)
v6i}<rts,
6. 8. 6.
3. i.
4 and
7.
.
3. I. 4. 3. 2. 9.
ij
The Neoplatonists,
p. 77.
154
spheres he denies that necessity and free-will are incomVirtue is not so much free as identical with patible.
freedom
Soul.
it
is
holding
men
and
clears
of divine
up the
difficulty about the original choice of a character which Temptation, he says, inevitably produces evil actions. is a gradual perversion of a living being which has the 1 power of self-determined movement (Kivtjcris avregova-ios). The inability to lead the divine and happy life is a moral
2
inability.
The
all
that
If
it
takes
He-says in effect
we knew
all,
we might
to the perfection of the whole. 4 The conception of Chance (ri>x*i) has only a small place in this philosophy. Anaximenes had shrewdly remarked
that chance
is
only our
in the Tenth Book of and Art as the three causes of events but he leaves no room for the operations of chance, except perhaps in the chaos which has not yet received Forms. In Aristotle 6 chance and spontaneity are merely defects (a-reprja-eis) but he also says that events which have an efficient though not a final cause may be said to be due to chance. This gives the word a legitimate use. A maidservant empties
;
;
name for the incalculable. 5 Plato the Laws names Nature, Chance,
that walking in the street not chance, since he is on his way home. But it may be called chance that he happened to be passing at the moment when the slops descended. In any other sense the word should perhaps be excluded from philosophy, which has no room either for uncaused events or for the However, the pragconception of a whimsical fate.
is
;
that
is
1
8 6 '
3-2.4,
ib.
rb
TTjs
3. 2. 10, avrol a 3. 2. 5 ; 3. 3. 5.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
matisls
1
AND ESTHETICS
this
185
discredited
deity.
The dispute about free-will is usually a futile quarrel between those who attribute freedom to a man apart from his character, and those who attribute freedom to character apart from the man. Necessity is merely the
nature of things and what we call mechanism is itself a form of the struggle for life. The laws of mechanism 2 are, as Lotze says, only the will of the universal Soul/ and it is not surprising that nature, so guided, should have the appearance of an unbroken chain. It is not necessary to hold, with Renouvier, that phenomena are discontinuous, but we do deny that one phenomenon causes another. What we call free will seems to depend on the fact of consciousness, and the presence of an ideal. In other words, he who asserts free will asserts the reality
;
'
'
'
of final causes.
The general character of the Neoplatonic ethics will be clear from what has been said. The fundamental
for all Greek philosophy and especially for Platonism, is not between egoism and altruism, but between a false and a true standard of values. The Soul, whether from its own choice and love of adventure, or by the will of the higher powers, has exchanged the peace of
contrast,
eternity for the unrest of time, and is or should be engaged on the return journey to our heavenly home. Our 3 we must strive to beginnings must be our ends realise the best part of our nature, that which in the spiritual world we already are.' The great moral danger is that we should forget ourselves and God. When the
'
'
'
'
Soul has once tasted the pleasures of self-will, it indulges opportunities of independence, and is carried so far away from its Principle that it forgets whence it came. Such Souls are like children brought up in a foreign
its
country,
who
forget
who they
are
their
1 Professor Pringle Pattison has some good remarks on this. Idea of God, p. 185-6. * 8 Microcosmus, Vol. I, p. 396 (English Tr.). 3. 9. 2.
The
186
parents. They have learnt to honour everything rather than themselves, to lavish their reverence and affection
upon external things, and to break, as far as they can, the links that bound them to the Divine. Believing themselves to be lower than the things of the world, they
regard themselves as mean and transitory beings, and the thought of the nature and power of the Deity is driven out of their minds.' 1 This self -contempt, which is the cause why so many are content to lead unworthy
from our fellows, whom no more we than respect respect ourselves. A kind of moral atomism becomes our philosophy. We lose all sense of human solidarity, and become like faces turned away from each other, though they are attached to one head. If one of us could turn round, he would see at once God, himself, and the world. And he would soon find that the separate self is a figment there is no The between and the world. himself dividing-line external world is that part of the higher self of which he has not yet been able to take possession. All Souls
and
we
'
'
'
each of them
it
is
characterised
by the
chiefly uses ; some unite themselves to the spiritual world, others to the discursive reason, others to desire. Souls, while they contemplate diverse
objects, are
once
are rungs to climb by. 3 The end is unification ness is unification and unification is goodness. 4
;
Sym-
pathy is thus based on the recognition of an actual fact, our membership one of another. Philosophy reveals this
relationship, just as science reveals our physical kinships and affinities. But this membership is in truth not of the
Neophysical or psychical but of the spiritual order. theocentric. tonic thus remains pla throughout morality
Souls are members of a choir which sing in time and tune so long as they look at their conductor, but go
1
*
5. 1. 1.
4- 3- 8.
5. 3- 9-
ETHICS, RELIGION,
wrong when
their attention
is
AND ESTHETICS
187
Philanthropy, therefore, is but its necessary consequence. It is natural to love our neighbours as ourselves, when once we have understood that in God our neighbours are ourselves. The higher reason (TO Xoyiicov) part of the self, including our is not divided among individuals sympathy, then, is the natural result of a real identity. 2
'
'
The highest stage hardly belongs to ethics it is dealt with in the preceding chapter. But the noble doctrine that there is progress even in heaven 3 must be again quoted in this connexion. Plotinus is as emphatic as the New Testament that we must put on the new man 4 though this is otherwise expressed by saying that we Love becomes more and more see ourselves as Spirit.' important as we ascend further. Love is an activity of the Soul desiring the Good.' 5 Plotinus follows Plato There are in using mythical language about Love. different Loves daemonic Spirits belonging to different grades in the hierarchy of existence. The Universal soul has a Love which is its eye, and is born of the desire which it has for the One. 6 There is a still higher Love which is wholly detached from material things. Love is not a relation between externals, but between Spirit
:
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
and
Spirit.
It is
in experience. Human Love is the sacrament of the union of Souls Yonder. It is immortal almost immortality itself. We need not be surprised that the Neoplatonists use e/oco? where the Christians used aydirtj. For Plato and all his followers
these opposites,
known
the love of physical beauty is a legitimate first stage in the ascent to the love of the divine Ideas. Plotinus says that three classes of men have their feet on the ladder
quoted above, p. 137. See the whole chapter, 4. 9 Ei iracrat al \l/vxo.l pia. I. 3. I, 2, KaKci padiffTeov TTJV &vu iropetav. 4 Cf. Plato, Phaedo, 64, on the 5- 3- 4 [5] Trai'TeXwj &\\ov ycvfodai. mystic death.
2
:
6. 9. 8.,
3- 5- 4-
3- 5- 3
188
The
'
the philosopher, the friend of the Muses, and the lover. 1 intellect, aesthetic sensibility, and love are the three
'
anagogic faculties. He knows that they are apt to flow over into each other.
It
to a calm cheerfulness of temper. The good man is always serene, calm, and satisfied ; if he is really a good man, none of the things which are called evils can
move
Stoics.
him.'
of the
The defects of Plotinian ethics are in part common to the school, and in part common to the age. The following passage, true in the main, is marred by its last sentence. 3 Men complain of poverty and of the unequal
'
distribution of wealth, in ignorance that the wise man does not desire equality in such things, nor thinks that
the rich has any advantage over the poor, or the prince over the subject. He leaves these opinions to the vulgar, and knows that there are two sorts of life, that of virtuous
people,
who can
which
rise to
;
and that
double
of
;
itself
for
sometimes they
to
only machines, destined to minister to the first needs of virtuous men.' Plotinus here uses the haughty tone of an intellectual aristocrat, and assumes without hesitation that the thinker has a right not only to his leisure, but to be supported by the labour of those who cannot share his virtues. But we must remember that a Neoplatonic saint would live so as to be a very light burden on the community, and that it is well worth while for a State to encourage a few persons to devote themselves to such a life as Plotinus lived. The only
1
i. 3. i, 0t\6<ro0oj, ftovfftKos,
tywrtKos dva/creot.
important statement in
frl/yyeia,
4. 3. 8,
But compare also the that there are three upward paths
intellectual,
yvu<ru,
and
fy>eis
practical,
3
and
affective
activity.
?
I. 4. 12.
2. 9. 9.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
error
(if
AND ESTHETICS
189
it is
made)
is
in supposing that
humble occupa-
tions are a bar to the highest life. The notion that the dignity of work is determined by the subjects with which
concerned, and not by the manner in which it is executed, is a mischievous error which Greek thought never outgrew, 1 and which still survives in the learned
it
is
not a
effects of it were far-reaching, and had do with the decay of Greek culture. Early Christianity was, in principle at least, free from this fault, but it was, on the whole, blind to the joy of productive activity, which Plotinus recognises in his doctrine
professions.
little
The
to
and
the
till
Reformation.
There
is
beautiful passage of Lotze which is entirely in accordance with the principles of Neoplatonism, and which Plotinus
might have uttered if he had lived in a happier period than the third century. As in the great fabric of the
'
universe the creative Spirit imposed upon itself unchangeby which it moves the world of phenomena, fullness of the highest good throughout the diffusing
able laws
innumerable forms and events, and distilling it again from them into the bliss of consciousness and enjoyment
so
laws, develop given existence into a knowledge of its value, and the value of his ideals into a series of external forms proceed-
and the ing from himself. To this labour we are called most prominent intellects in all ages have devoted themselves to the perfecting of the outward relations of life, the subjugation of nature, the advancement of the useful
;
arts, the
improvement
of social institutions,
though they
knew that the true bliss of existence lies in those quiet moments of solitary communion with God when all human daily toil, all culture and civilisation, the gravity
1 Mr. Zimmern, in his brilliant and delightful book, The Greek Commonwealth, indignantly denies that the craftsman was not respected in free Greece. But surely the Athenian 'scholar and gentleman spoke of the fidvavvoi very much as our grandparents spoke of
'
190
Neo-
platonic saint.
platives we pity for the world, often fill their hearts. Take as an example the short record of Margaret Kempe, an obscure
If she saw a man had precursor of Julian of Norwich. a wound, or a beast or if a man beat a child before her,
'
In the most typical Christian contemfind that sorrow for the sins of others, and
or smote a horse or another beast with a whip, she thought she saw our Lord beaten or wounded. If she saw any
creature being punished or sharply chastised, she would weep for her own sin and compassion of that creature.'
So Thomas Traherne exclaims Christ, I see thy crown of thorns in every eye, thy bleeding, naked, wounded body in every soul thy death liveth in every memory thy crucified Person is embalmed in every affection thy pierced feet are bathed in everyone's and it is my privilege to enter with thee into tears
:
'
The ideas of corporate penitence and every soul.' atoning sympathy are not to be found in Plotinus. He does not seem to realise that apathy,' which implies an external attitude towards sin, sorrow, and failure, closes one of the chief lines of communication by which the Soul may pass out of its isolation and identify itself with a
'
larger life. A modern writer would add that it is a fatal bar to understanding and solving any social or moral problem. The call to seek and save that which was lost, the moral knight-errantry which rides abroad redressing human wrongs,' the settled purpose to confront the world that is to say, human society as it organises itself apart from God, a network of co-operative guilt with limited liability, with another association of active fellow-workers with God this call is but faintly heard by philosophers of this type, and they leave such
' '
' ' '
work
1 I
to others.
Lotze, Microcosmus,
Book
III.
Chap.
5.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND AESTHETICS
191
The dependence of Souls on each other for the achievement of their perfection is a truth which Christianity In every individual taught and Neoplatonism neglected
'
.
spirit/ says Krause, particular faculties predominate for the glorification of the whole, and all other faculties are then found in diminishing strength and capacity as they are removed from those which are the ruling elements
'
can only on all attain perfection through sides with the spiritual world. What it cannot bring forth by its own activity it receives spontaneously from others, who communicate it out of the fullness of their own being. This ever new stimulus and nourishment
in
its
individuality.
The
individual
spirit
of the proper life of the spirit, and the potential universality of all spiritual formation, thus lie in the social
intercourse
of
spirits
promises to
St.
make men
an
them independent.
Paul
is
The
ditions, but not in the same degree in relation to his We need each other ; and therefore we fellow-men. can never be quite so invulnerable as ancient philosophy hoped to make us. Human solidarity is a guarantee of pure freedom in the eternal world in the world of soulmaking it is a bond of union, but still a bond. Therefore we must both give and take, without grudging and without pride we must find our complement in others, and in our turn must help to bear their burdens. Even Buddhism learned this truth better than Neoplatonism. Buddha himself said that he would not enter Nirvana till he could bring all others with him. The sense of our with fellows to make it intolerorganic unity ought able for us to reach the One alone. Perhaps it is even
; ;
impossible to do so. But we must not end this section with words of censure. Plotinus himself was lovable and beloved, and he could
not have used his great gifts to better advantage for The uader-valuation of human sin and posterity.
192
suffering
which comes from an intense preoccupation with is not a common defect, and it is a defect which is not far from heroic virtue. It is only in
the eternal world a lower type of mystics that it is dangerous in that class of aspirants to heavenly wisdom who make the tragic mistake of imagining that they are what they only dream about, and who in consequence miss that creative activity in the outer world without which the Soul cannot gain
its
freedom or perform
its
task.
Religion
The philosophy of Plotinus is a religious philosophy throughout, because for him reality is the truly existing realisation of the ideal. There is no separation between
the speculative and ethical sides of his system. If it is true that all practice leads up to contemplation, it is equally true that contemplation is itself the highest kind of action, and necessarily expresses itself in moral conduct.
in
But
for
him the
is very loosely connected with the myths and cultus of the popular faith. Plotinus himself felt no need of these aids to piety. He even surprised
his disciples
by
and
almost shocked them by the answer he gave to one who It is for the gods,' he questioned him on the subject. to come to me, not for me to go to them.' Like said, most mystics, he saw no reason for esteeming one day above another,' and one place above another. And it was part of his faith that the Soul must prepare itself for a divine visitation, but not demand it or try to force it. The words, I will hearken what the Lord God shall say
' '
'
me/ express his attitude in devotion. In this neglect of the externals of religion he differed from his greatest successor, Proclus, who was initiated into nearly 1 and spent much of his time in devoall the mysteries,
concerning
1
Julian (Orat.
advises
same
of Pythagoras,
and
ETHICS, RELIGION,
tional exercises
cal tradition.
;
AND ESTHETICS
193
but he was in agreement with the mystiIn the Hermetic writings, the whole duty declared to be to know God and injure no
'
the only religious practice (QprjarKcla) which is not to be a bad man.' 1 As for
'
the myths, the Neoplatonic doctrine is thought out wholly on the line of the philosophical tradition ; the myths are completely plastic in the hands of the allegorising meta-
His treatment of the gods is rather like treatment of the Christian Trinity. 3 The older Hegel's philosophers sometimes looked upon the popular religion as a rival or an obstacle Plotinus twists it about in the
physician.
;
allegorical present-
ment
His real gods were not Zeus, Athene, and Apollo, but the One, Spirit, and the Soul of the World. These are often said to be the Neoplatonic Trinity and though the suggested parallel with Christian
;
of his system. 4
theology
is
is
misleading,
it is
much
5 We have then to conceive mystics. Of Spirit he says, of one nature Spirit, all that truly exists, and Truth.
a great God. Yes, this nature is God a second (The triad in this sentence is equivalent to vov$ And elsewhere 6 he gives us in an vorjra i/otyo-i?.) ascending scale the best men, good daemons, the gods who dwell on earth and who contemplate the spiritual
If so, it is
God.'
'
and for the last passage here See the quotations in Zeller, p. 252 quoted compare the almost identical precept in the Epistle of James i. 27. Porphyry has the fine saying that the best sacrifice to the gods is a pure spirit and a passionless soul.' 8 Whittaker, The Neoplatonists, p. 100. 8 e.g. Apollo is unity in difference.' Schopenhauer goes further If I wished to try to resolve the deepest mystery of than Hegel. Christianity, that of the Trinity, in the fundamental concepts of my philosophy, I might say that the Holy Spirit is the resolute negation of will the man in whom this is manifested is the Son. He is identical with the will which affirms life and hence produces the phenomenon of the visible world, that it is say the Father' (The World as Witt and
1
; '
'
'
Idea, Vol.
*
6
3).
Cf. 3. 5. 8,
5- 5- 3II,
4. 3.
14
5. 1.7
'
5. 8. 12. 2. 9. 9.
194
world, and above all the ruler of the whole universe, the all-blessed Soul ; thence we should sing the praise of the
all
i.e.
Now.
Nevertheless Plotinus leaves room for the gods of the popular worship. Like Aristotle, he holds that the universe contains beings more divine than man daemons,' ' and gods who are daemons of a superior order. But
' '
theory about the compenetration of all to fuse his substances gods into one God, spiritual who none the less 'remains multiple.' The following passage is instructive Suppose that the world, remainall it is and not confounded, is conin its what ing parts ceived of in our thought as a whole, as far as possible.
he
calls in his
'
'
'
Imagine a transparent sphere placed outside the spectator, in which one can see all that it contains, first the sun and the other stars, then the sea, the land, and
.
.
When you thus represent in thought a transparent sphere containing all things that are in movement or repose, or sometimes one and sometimes the other, keep the form of the sphere, but suppress the ideas of mass and extension, and banish all notions derived from Matter. Then invoke the God who made the world
all living creatures.
which you have formed an image, and implore him to Let him come bringing his own world with him, with all gods that are in it, he being one and all, and each of them being all, coming together into one and being distinguished in their powers, but all one in their single or rather the one [God] is all [the gods]. great power For he suffers no diminution by the birth of all the gods
of
descend.
who
are in him.
and
if
each
is
distinct
local separation, nor any sensible form. This [the sphere of the Divine] is universal power, extending to infinity, and infinite in its powers and so great is God that his parts are also
.
. .
infinite.'
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND AESTHETICS
195
mythological in its earlier stages. Education must begin with what is untrue in form, though it may represent the
truth as nearly as possible, under inadequate symbols. 1 He lays down certain standards (TVTTOI fleoAoy/a?)
whereby we may distinguish true myths from false. God is good and the cause only of good He is true and True myths ascribe incapable of change or deceit.
; '
'
'
'
these qualities to God ; false myths contradict them. So Plato does not disapprove of the medicinal lie/
'
which has been used to justify all religious obscurantism. But he would banish all who try to misrepresent the character of God and the moral law in the interest of a
priestly caste or a corporation.
Aristotle,
with
who entirely rejects the ideas of communion God and of anything like a covenant between
that
'
the rest of the tradition [about the gods] has been added later in mythical form with a view to the persuasion of the multitude, and to its legal
He attributes no scientific expediency/ or philosophical value to mythology. Nevertheless he is anxious to show that popular theology and the worship of the sun and stars have some value and justification.
and
utilitarian
Hence perhaps
which
far
is it is
his curious theory of concentric circles, puzzling to his readers, who cannot be sure how meant to be taken literally. Plotinus and Dante
for
him here
and
in
<>
Origen finds it possible to pour scorn on the philosophers who, though they boast of their knowledge of God and Divine things obtained from
philosophy, yet run after images and temples and famous whereas the Christian knows that the whole mysteries universe is God's temple, and can pray as well in one place as another, shutting the eyes of sense and raising
;
Plato, Republic, p. 376 sq. Aristotle, Metaphysics, 10740. tions of God and Man, p. 225.
*
3
Cf.
Webb, Problems
in the Rela-
p. 35.
196
Passing in thought upwards the eyes of the soul. he offers the his heavens, prayers to God.' It is beyond nor that neither Plotinus would have seen Origen plain but in nonsense dictum that Herrmann's anything
'mysticism is Catholic (as opposed to Protestant) piety.' lamblichus and Proclus might have admitted a partial
truth in
'
it.
The gods
is all.'
1
one
of the spiritual world are all one, or rather second class of divine beings are the sun
'
and
This world is the third god.' 3 The earth is conscious and can hear our prayers, though not as we hear sounds 4 and the same is true of the stars. 5 But all their motions are determined by 'natural necessity,' not by thought. 6 The influence which, in his opinion, the heavenly bodies have on human affairs is not the result of caprice or predilection, nor can it be deflected by any sorceries it is part of the chain of sympathies which runs all nature. through Prophecy is thus rationalised as. 7 The scientific prevision, based on the study of analogy. so then receives no widely practised, vulgar astrology, The stars may indicate countenance from Plotinus. 8 But he is they cannot cause them. coming events even more indignant with the Gnostics (and no doubt also with the orthodox Christians), for denying the divinity of the sun and stars, which seem to him far higher in the scale than human beings. The daemons, or lower order of Divine beings, are confined to those spheres of existence which are below the spiritual world. If the ideal Daemon (6 avroSaijuitav) 9 is in the spiritual world, we had better call him a god. The nature of the universe is a mixture, and if we
stars.
;
'
5. 8. 9.
So Damascius
6col
Sci/repoi
3-
5-
6.
K(ivovs
/ecu
roi)y
vorjrovs
bodies at this time see Cumont, Oriental Religions and Roman Paganism, Gilbert Murray, Hibbert Journal, Oct. ,1910; Dill, Roman p. 162 sq.
;
tfrprrjutvoi. txtlvuv.
Society, p.
3
7
585 sq.
4
3. 5. 16. 3.
4.
*
4. 20.
4. 4. 30.
3. 5. 6.
referred to
by Berkeley, Sim,
3- 5- 6.
252.
3- I- 5-
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND ESTHETICS
197
separate from it the separable soul, what is left is not great. If we include the separable soul, the nature of the universe is a god if we omit this, it is, as Plato says,
;
a great daemon, and its affections are daemonic/ 1 The daemons then are powers proceeding from the Soul as a dweller on the earth their power is confined to the 2 below the moon.' region They are everlasting (ai'Sioi), and can behold the spiritual world above them but they have bodies of spiritual Matter/ and can clothe themselves in fiery or airy integuments they can feel and remember, and hear petitions. 3 If this rather crude spiritism appears unworthy of Plotinus, we have to remember that he inherited a long tradition on the subject, which he could hardly cast aside. The belief in daemons carries us back to the primitive animism which preceded the Olympian mythology. Almost all the philosophers dealt tenderly with this
;
'
'
faith.
belief
The
representing the Souls of the dead. The air is full of them they are often visible ; and they send dreams and
;
They
flit
are a kind
we
live,
and
about
like
ghosts
'
when we
are dead.
each man's character is is determined by our inner qualities, and not by any external power. There are bad daemons as well as good ; these are the disembodied Souls of wicked men. Socrates, as is well known, believed that he heard a warning voice from time to time, restraining him from doing what he was about to do, and this was called the daemon of
fate
'
When
2.
3. 9, /te/i(y/t/i'?; >/ ToPcfc TOU TCHTO? ai'roP x u ft ^ ffl t r ^> "^onritv ou fttya..
Ka.1
$(Vtj,
irdBr/
A.CU
ff T<J ri}v
v
tf/vxty TT/V
#f<is jut.v
rd
rd
is
5ai/j.6via.
Cf.
Plato,
2
3.
*
'
a god.'
Marcus Aurelius,
5wKci>.
o Zevj
See
Psyche, Vol.
2,
5. 27, 6 Sa/ywwv, 5v eVaano irpojT<irr)i> /cat the excellent discussion of the subject in Rohde, pp. 316-318.
98
Socrates.
Plato, speaking mythically, makes the daemons the sons of gods by nymphs or some other mothers. 1 Every man has a daemon who attends him during life
and after death, watching over his charge like a shepherd. The daemon is the intermediary between gods and men he carries our prayers to the gods, and transmits to us the wishes of Heaven. Love is a great daemon.' 2 In the Timaeus, however, he seems to identify the daemon in each man with his higher Soul. The Stoics firmly believed in daemons, who in our life-time share our good and evil fortune, and after our death float about the lower air. Each man's Soul may be called the daemon born with him. Plutarch says that the Souls of good men, when set free from rebirth and at rest from the body,' may become daemons. 3 Under the Empire, there was a fusion between the Greek daemon and the Roman genius,' which also hovered on the borderland of divinity. Tibullus writes
; '
'
' '
'
'
At
tu, Natalis
Adnue
(= Genius), quoniam deus omnia quid ref ert clamne palamne roget
sentis,
'
Quodque
caput.'
'
So Apuleius says that the genius is is deus qui est animus suus cuique, quamquam sit immortalis, tamen quodair
But the Romans paid an honour institution, such as a or a even legion, permanent tax. I do not think that Greek ever placed in charge of an institudaemon was the On the other tion. hand, the belief in evil daemons grew
also to the
'
gignitur.' genius of
'
Apol. 27.
Plato, Ph&do, 107
Tibullus, 4.
5. 20.
;
Polit.
Horace, Ep.
Apuleius,
p. 19.
2. 2. 183.
De Deo
Socr. 15.
Ideas of Deity,
ETHICS, RELIGION,
'
AND ESTHETICS
199
Plutarch tries to explain moral temptation in this way. A typical utterance, from this point of view, is that which was attributed to Charondas in the spurious " If a man is tempted by an evil proems of his Laws :
he should pray in the temples that the evil spirit be averted." 1 There is nothing of this kind in may far less inclined to moral dualism than Plotinus, who is Plutarch. The whole belief in intermediate beings is of the current religion of the time, and has no inner part 2 the connexion with philosophy which we are considering. The kindred subject of magic and sorcery is dealt with in a curious manner by Plotinus. The spiritual man is above all such dangers, for his conversation is in heaven, where no evil influences can penetrate. He who contemplates the eternal verities is one with the object of his and no one can be bewitched by himcontemplation 3 self. The higher soul is also exempt. It is only the irrational soul, which, by allowing itself to be entangled among the temptations of covetousness, self-indulgence,
spirit,
;
ambition, or fear, becomes liable to injuries from magical arts. Magic can influence our external activities ; for
example, it can cause diseases, and even death. This power belongs to the law of sympathies which runs 4 through nature ; the daemons have power within their own sphere, which extends to the irrational part of nature. Porphyry, however, tells us that when a certain Olympius, from Alexandria, tried to bewitch Plotinus,
' '
upon
his
own
pate,
and
after suffer!
In the ing excruciating pains he was obliged to desist same section of his biography Porphyry says that an Egyptian priest, wishing to give proof of his powers during a visit to Rome, begged Plotinus to come and see him evoke the daemon of Plotinus himself. Instead of the daemon there appeared a god, which caused the
The Higher Aspects of Greek Religion, p. 116. Porphyry, however, believes in evil spirits, and he is followed by the later Neoplatonists. See an excellent note by Bouillet, Vol. 2,
Farnell,
2
P- 5334 4. 4. 41-43.
4- 4- 43-
200
enchanter to congratulate Plotinus on having a being of the higher rank to watch over him. 1 It is not likely that the philosopher was himself the authority for this story, any more than that lamblichus encouraged the belief that he floated in the air when he said his prayers. It was a superstitious and unscientific age and Neoplatonism was not well protected on this side. Indeed, by admitting the reality of witchcraft, it helped to elevate superstition into a dogma. 2 Prayer, in the wider sense of any elevation of the mind towards God/ was of course the very life of religion for the Neoplatonists. 3 But the efficacy of petitionary was a prayer problem for them, both because of their belief in the regularity of natural law, and because it was not easy for them to admit that the higher principle can be affected in any way by influences from beneath. Plotinus would have us approach the higher spiritual powers by contemplation and meditation, without it is the lower spirits that are proffering any requests amenable to petitions, this kind of prayer being in fact a branch of sympathetic magic. All the attractions and repulsions that pervade nature are for him a kind of the true magic is the magic (yorjrela or /mye/a) 4 Love, friendship and strife that exist in the great All.' with all its far-reaching influence in the world, is the first wizard and enchanter. Only contemplation is above
;
' ; '
enchantments (ayoriTevTos) Magic in this sense is only an empirical knowledge of the subtle laws of attraction in nature prayer works no miracles, but only sets in motion obscure natural forces. But Plotinus attaches
.
that seem to
1
2
small value to this kind of praying. The only prayers him worthy of the name are the unspoken
Cf. 3. 4. 6, dalftwi* rovTif} [ry
ffirovSatip'] 6e6s.
Porphyry did not really encourage theurgy, and Augustine thought he was a little ashamed of his theosophical friends. Cf Chaignet (Vol. 5, p. 62), who argues that theurgy is no integral part of NeoProclus, however, was credited with miracles. platonisra.
.
The word
Porphyry,
'
Ad Marcell. 24, -q ^7ri(rrpo(f>^ irpbs rbv Qebv fjiivr) ffwrypla. salvation became as familiar to Neoplatonists as to
'
Christians.
4.
4.
40.
ETHICS, RELIGION,
'
'
AND ESTHETICS
201
yearnings of the Soul for a closer walk with God. Of prayer of quiet he speaks finely in 5. I. 6. The desire which all creatures feel to rise towards the source of their being is itself prayer so that Proclus can say, all things pray, except the in a striking sentence, that
this
; '
The Oriental mystic Kabir expresses Waving its row of lamps the universe in sings worship day and night. There the sound of the unseen bells is heard there the Lord of all sitteth on his throne.' It is plain that Plotinus would have entirely
Supreme
(the One).'
'
He who rises agreed with George Meredith's words from his knees a better man, his prayer has been granted.' The whole object of prayer is to become one with the Being to whom prayer is addressed, and so to win the Even here below a wise life is the most blessed life. and beautiful thing. And yet here we see truly grand For it gives but dimly ; yonder the vision is clear. to the seer the faculty of seeing, and the power for the higher life, the power by living more intensely to see better and to become what he sees.' 1 So the whole of religion is summed up in the vision of God. It is the experimental verification of the act of faith in which religion begins, by virtue of the consciousness inherent in the finite-infinite being, so far as his full nature affirms itself, that he is one with something which cannot be shaken or destroyed, and the value of which is the source and standard of values.' 2 This is the substance of the Neoplatonist's creed. What Mr. Bosanquet calls the finite-infinite nature of the finite spirit is a truth revealed to our consciousness with increasing clearness
'
:
'
'
we advance morally and intellectually. Plotinus repeatedly appeals to the religious experience of his readers 3 he knows that he cannot carry us with him further than we have the power to see for ourselves. For
as
;
1
t
6. 6.
1 8,
KO.LTOL d./.u'5pus
ei's
SVVO.IMV
* 3
Kdi tirravQa ^pSia^tos fon/rd ec[j.vbv KO.I TO Ka\bv /car' d\-fj$iav diSiixri y&p T<$ bpuvri tipaffiv opdrai ^/cet 5^ Ka8apu>s oparai. rb ,ua\XoJ> ftjv /cat fj.d\\ov furovuy fwvra opav /cat yevtffdat
202
it is
as the greater Self that we come to know God, not as a separate anthropomorphic Being over against ourselves. Our struggle to reach Him is at the same time a
We lose our Soul in order struggle for self -liber at ion. to find it again in God. There is no barrier between the
Divine natures. The human Soul has only to strip itself of those outer integuments which are no
-
human and
part of
of the
'
its
true nature, in order to expand freely by means organic filaments which unite it with all spiritual
'
being.
This expansion
'
is
at the
'
same time an
intensi-
fying of life, an awakening from the dream of sensuous existence. Our environment, which we make while it
the time. Our perception becomes air we breathe becomes the the spiritual of time. of not The problem of atmosphere eternity, us a way that it is for in such changed immortality ceases to be a vague and chimerical hope and becomes an experience sentimus et experimur nos aeternos esse,
us,
makes
changes
all
;
intuition
as Spinoza says. The question of the survival in time of the empirical ego loses its interest, since the empirical
ego is no longer the centre, much less the circumference, of our thoughts. The Soul that never dies is not some-
thing that belongs to us, but something to which we belong. We shall belong to it after we are dead, as we belonged to it before we were born. Its history is our
super-historical existence is our immorof this great Soul to which we belong tality. has two aspects contemplation and creation. Its gaze is turned steadily upon the eternal archetypes of all that
history,
and The
its
life
is
in the universe.
It
adores
God under
to man.
these three attributes, by which He is known The inner religious life consists of continual
turn away our eyes lest behold and they vanity/ resolutely try to realise the of the unseen world which encompasses us. The glories other activity of the Soul, creation of good, true, and beautiful things and actions in the world of space and time, follows so naturally and necessarily from a right
acts of recollection,
when we
'
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND /ESTHETICS
203
direction of the thought and will and affections, that it is not worth while to bring forward other motives for
leading an active and useful life. The true contemplative cannot be selfish or indolent. He makes the world better, both consciously and unconsciously, by the very fact that his conversation is in heaven. It is other-worldliness that alone can transform the world. If any man is disposed to take Plotinus as his guide, not only in the search for truth, but in the life of devotion, he will naturally ask to what Being his prayers should be addressed, and his acts of worship offered. We have seen that the sphere of the Divine (TO, 6eia) includes not only the One, but Spirit and the Universal Soul. In spite of the unity which forbids any notion of separate existence in the eternal world, there are distinctions between the
three Divine Hypostases which
make
have already suggested that when our thoughts are turned towards anything that we hope for in space and time, we shall most naturally address ourselves to the Universal Soul, which upholds the course of this world and directs it, and seems to be itself engaged in the great conflict between good and evil. When we are praying for spiritual progress and a
inevitable.
I
mate and
clearer knowledge of God, or when we are longing for the bliss of heaven and the rest that remaineth for the people of God, it is to the Great Spirit, the King, as Plotinus calls him, that we shall turn. Lastly, if ever we
are rapt into ecstasy, and pass a few minutes in the mystical trance, we shall hope that we are holding communion with the One the Godhead who dwelleth in the
'
be
to
No stress need light that no man can approach unto.' laid, for purposes of devotion, on the Neoplatonic
doctrine of the three Divine hypostases. But it seems me that we do in fact envisage God under these three
aspects in our prayers and meditations, and that without much violence we might even classify theologians and
religious thinkers
under these three heads. Some would have us worship the Soul of humanity, or the Soul of the
204
world realm
three,
;
Lord
of the
eternal
and
spiritual
It is
one of the
room for all and shows how we may pass from one into
comparison between Neoplatonism and Chrisnecessary for an understanding of the former,
brief
is
tianity
though
tian apologetics.
not written as a contribution to Chrissummarise the opinions of Rudolf Eucken, in his valuable book entitled LebensanThat which unites Plotinus schauungen Grosser Denker. with Hellenism, must separate him from Christianity. In criticising the Christian Gnostics, he blames them first for overvaluing humanity. For him mankind is a mere part of the world, the whole of which is penetrated by the Divine power. He blames them for despising and despiritualising the world, which contains spiritual He beings far higher than the common run of men.
this
is
book
I will first
'
blames them for unpractical activity. Those who are too proud to fight must acquiesce in the victory of the bad cause. Whether these criticisms apply to Christendom as well as to the Gnostics, we need not here discuss
;
in
any
humanity with the All, the soul-life and even the deification of natural forces,
the expectation of happiness from active conduct, the high estimation of thought and knowledge as the Divine spark in man. Plotinus is really further removed from Christianity than these statements express, but he is also more akin to it than the collision between the two In both we find an uncompromising allows to appear. inwardness and a drawing of all life towards God, and in both rather by a renunciation of the world than by co-
But Plotinus finds this inwardness it. an impersonal spirituality, Christianity in a development of the personal life. In the former all salvation comes from the power of thought, in the latter from Such a fundamental difference sincerity of heart.
operation with
in
ETHICS, RELIGION,
of
AND ESTHETICS
205
implies a different answer to the most important problems life. In Plotinus we find an abandonment of the first
world, a fading of time in the light of eternity, a repose in view of the Whole. In Christianity we find an entrance
of the eternal into time, a world-historical movement, a power working against the irrationality of the actual. of man before the a in the latter, endlessness of the All transposition of man and humanity into the central point' of the All. In
In the former
we have a disappearance
;
the former, an isolation of the thinker on the heights of in the latter a close welding contemplation of the world
;
together of individuals in
sorrow.'
full
community
of
life
and
ends by finding a contradiction in Neoplatonism between the doctrine of inwardness and the fundamental impersonality of the world of which man is a part. Baron Von Hiigel also finds a radical inconsistency between Plotinus the metaphysician and Plotinus the saint, a criticism which has often been made in the case I have already quoted (p. 147) the words of Spinoza.
in
He
which the Baron brings the charge that in Plotinus' philosophy God is exiled from his world and his world from him/ while at the same time he attaches special
'
value to his constant, vivid sense of the spaceless, of God's distinct reality and timeless character of God
;
'
and yet of his immense nearness of the real contact between the real God and the real soul, and of the precedence and excess of this contact before and
otherness,
;
beyond
all theories concerning this, the actual ultimate cause of the soul's life and healing. Indeed, reality of all kinds here rightly appears as ever exceeding our intuition of it, and our intuitions as ever exceeding our discursive
1 reasonings and analyses.' There is much in these estimates that deserves respect-
ful attention.
is
very illuminating.
1
But
in
my
judgment
Baron Von
Von
206
(such as
regard the method of abstraction of Vacherot), the as the characteristic instrument of onion peeling Plotinian dialectic. As I have insisted more than once
'
'
who
in this book,
we cannot understand
Plotinus unless
we
realise that the spiritual world, with its fullness of rich content, is for him the real world, and the ultimate home
of the Soul.
This
is
and I can see no contradiction between the philosophy and the religion of Neoplatonism. Nor does it seem to me that these two sides of the Plotinian teaching have shown any tendency to fall apart in his The whole system is still coherent, as he disciples.
of the dialectic,
left it,
it is
contradictions.
The criticism of Augustine remains, in my opinion, the most profound that has proceeded from any Christian thinker. We have to remember that Augustine was converted to Platonism before he was converted to Chrishe meant Plotinus that by 'the Platonists tianity and his school and that he became a Christian because
'
he found something in Christianity which he did not find in Plotinus. What that was, he tells us very clearly. In the books of the Platonists, which I read in a Latin translation, I found, not indeed in so many words, but " In in substance and fortified by many arguments, that the beginning was the Logos, and the Logos was with
'
God, and the Logos was God and the same was in the and that all things were made by beginning with God him without was him, .and nothing made that was made
;
was the light of men and the light shineth in darkness and the darkness comprehended it not." Further, that the soul of man, though it
in
him was
life,
and the
life
bears witness to the light, is not itself that light, but God, the Logos of God, is the true light that lighteth " he every man that comet h into the world. And that
was
in the world,
the world
and the world was made by him, and " knew him not." But that he came unto his
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND /ESTHETICS
;
207
as
but as
many
received him, to them gave he power to become sons " of God, even to them that believe on his name this
could not find there. Also I found there that God the Logos was born not of flesh, nor of blood, nor of the will of a husband, nor of the will of the flesh, but of God. 1
I
flesh and dwelt among could discover in these books, though expressed in other and varying phrases, that " the Son was in the form of the Father, and thought it not robbery to be equal with God," because by nature " he was the same substance. But that he emptied himself, taking upon him the form of a servant, being
But that
"
made
I
made
as a
in the likeness of
men
man he humbled
;
himself
death, even the death of the Cross ; wherefore also God exalted him, etc. this those books do not contain. For that before all times and above all times, thy only-be-
gotten Son abideth unchangeable and coeternal with thee, and that of his fullness all souls receive, that they may be blessed, and that by participation in the eternal wisdom
they are renewed, that they may be wise, that is there. But that in due time he died for the ungodly, that thou sparedst not thine only Son but deliveredst him up for us all, this is not there.' 2
The
verted,
tion
Platonism of Plotinus with the doctrine of the Incarnaadded to it. It matters not for our present purpose that his sympathies were afterwards progressively alienated from the ancient culture, so that even the Confessions does not accurately represent the state of mind in which he first accepted Christianity. 3 What
Augustine clearly read, in John i. 13, 6$ {yew-tidy for of I agree with Loisy that this reading has better attestation than the plural, which is accepted in our texts.
Augustine, Confessions, 7. 10. This is proved conclusively by the short treatises which he wrote in the years immediately after his conversion.
3 2 1
208
we have
the Logos made flesh, that I found not there/ was the decisive consideration which
that
'
made him a
Christian.
From
tion follows, as he saw, the love of God for the world, the pity and care of God for the weak and erring, the
supreme
self-sacrifice of
God
to seek
was
are here concerned with the Incarnation, not as an isolated historical event, but as the revelation
lost.
;
We
of the highest law of the spiritual world that God not only draws all life towards himself, as a magnet attracts moves the world as the object of its iron, and not only
'
in Aristotle's famous words, but voluntarily comes down to redeem it. If this is true, there is an end of the theory that the Soul would have done better not to have entered the body for the same moral and which caused the supreme manifestaspiritual necessity tion of the Divine in the flesh, must also send Souls into the world to do their part in ransoming the creation from the bondage of corruption. This doctrine, so far from being in contradiction with the philosophy which is the It subject of this book, seems to me to complete it. an the of motive for descent the Soul,' gives adequate it exalts Love as which obviously perplexed Plotinus the highest and most characteristic Divine principle, the motive of creation and of redemption alike it enables
love,'
' '
;
'
'
purification wrought by suffering, and entirely forbids that moral isolation which has seemed to us a weak point in Plotinian
ethics.
But there is one act of surrender which this demands from us, and this few or no Greek The Christian is philosophers were willing to make.
doctrine
fellows, as
neither
He needs his independent nor invulnerable. him and must be to fill need he content they
'
;
is
Body's Greek thinkers, with all their contempt for pleasure and pain, shrank in the last resort from grasping the nettle
of suffering firmly.
his
sake.'
Nor
is
there
any
religion or philos-
ETHICS, RELIGION,
ophy, except Christianity, sting of the world's evil.
AND AESTHETICS
209
A concluding paragraph may be desirable on the attempts made by Christian Platonists to equate the doctrine of the Trinity with the three Divine hypostases
was a
I have already said that the attempt of Neoplatonism. failure ; but it was very natural that it should
;
be made just as in later times the Hegelians attempted the same thing, with no better success. Hegelianism would seem logically to place the Holy Spirit above the
Logoswith the universal Soul, cannot maintain that the three Persons are coequal. Numenius may have influenced Christian thought
;
Platonism,
if it
identifies the
Spirit
His three Gods, as Proclus says, are the Father, the (or instrument in creation) and the World. According to Eusebius, he boasted that he had gone back to the fountain-head in reviving this doctrine of three Gods.' The fountain-head is not so much the Timaeus, in which the Demiurge forms the World-Soul according to the pattern of the Ideas, as the Second Epistle of Plato,
Creator
'
Plotinus also uses as an authority. But in Numenius the Second and Third Gods (he does not call them Persons, vTroo-Tacreis) are not quite distinct the Second and Third Gods are one.' 1 It is interesting to find Origen 2 saying that the Stoics call the World as a whole the First God, the Platonists the Second, and some of them the Third.' This hesitation illustrates the great
which
'
'
vagueness of Christian speculative thought about the Holy Spirit, down to the fourth century. Clement also refers to the Second Epistle of Plato, and tries to explain the Trinity Platonically. 3 Justin Martyr had done the same before him. 4 Theodoret 6 says explicitly, Plotinus
'
Euseb., Praep. Ev. n. 18, i and 24. Origen, Contra Celsum, 5. 7. Clement, Strom. 4. 25 5. 14 7. 7. Justin, Apol. i. 60. Theodoret, 4. 750.
; ;
II,
210
of Plato, say that he has spoken of three transcendent principles. The immortal principles are the One, Spirit (1/01/9), and the
the One, or the Good, the the the Son or the Logos Platonic Soul our divines call the Holy Spirit.' Many other examples might be cited from patristic literature, Plotinus certainly calls his three Divine principles
universal Soul.
;
We
we
call
Father
Spirit,
call
but he never thinks of calling them the Cappadocian Fathers, Basil and the two Gregorys, are determined to maintain the unity of the Godhead against prevalent tendencies to tritheism. This they uphold by making the Father the one fountain
hypostases
1
;
'
'
persons.
And
of
X">p>i<ri?),
Godhead, and by their doctrine of co-inherence (jrepiwhich forbids any sharp distinction of attributes
in the Trinity. They thus try to escape the subordinationism of Origen, which naturally results from a close following of Platonic methods of thought. Nevertheless, the metaphor of emanation is used to express the relation
Third Person to the First. It is perhaps difficult a religious philosopher to distinguish between the of the Son and the of the begetting procession Christian Platonists like Eckhart consistently Spirit. teach that the Son is continually and eternally begotten by the Father, a doctrine which takes the relation between the First and Second Person finally out of the region of
of the
for
' '
'
'
'
'
anthropomorphic symbolism, and seeks to explain Plotinus would have explained it.
^Esthetics
it
as
this enquiry we have been hampered by nomenclature. ^Esthetics is not a good name for the philosophy of TO Ka\6v, the beautiful, noble, and honourable. AXo-Owis is, as we have seen, Plotinus'
Throughout
difficulties of
'
'
tine,
Ita ut plerique nostri qui haec Graecotractant eloquio dicere consueverint nla.v ot<ria.v T/>ets vawrditmy, quod est, Latine unam essentiam, tres substantias.'
t
De Tnmtate, 5.9:
identical.
Cf.
Augus-
ETHICS, RELIGION,
name
for
AND /ESTHETICS
211
sensuous perception. But the beautiful, in this philosophy, can only be known by the highest faculty, The word which apprehends supra-sensuous reality. modern in has also associations aesthete undignified
'
'
We must therefore remember, all through this TO KO\OV includes all that is worthy of love that section, and admiration, and that beautiful objects, as perceived
English.
by our
senses,
It is attribute which belongs to the spiritual order. to thus understood, from impossible separate aesthetics,
ethics
and religion. Even in the dialectic, love is the of the intellect, and opens to it the last door of guide
which love alone has the key.
of the Beautiful is expounded formally one chapter of the Enneads (i. 6), an admirably clear statement which we shall do well to follow. The Beautiful affects chiefly the sense of sight but In a higher region, also, in music, the sense of hearing.
in
;
The doctrine
actions, sciences,
'
beautiful.
Some
beauti-
ful things
share in
beauty
The and in harmonious colour. 1 If would reside only in the whole, not in the parts, and simple colours, like gold, would not be beautiful, nor would single notes, however sweet, be beautiful. Still less can this canon be applied to intellectual, moral, and spiritual beauty. There may be inner harmony and proportion in bad things, though they conflict with the harmony of the whole. And since measure and proportion are quantitative ideas, they are inapplicbeautiful in themselves.
consists in proportion, this were true, beauty
able to spiritual realities. 2 Beauty is a property in things which the Soul recognises as akin to its own essence,
own
1 a
is that which it feels to be alien and Beautiful things remind the Soul of its spiritual nature they do so because they partici;
virtues
'
political
212
pate
in
which comes from the such form constitutes the absolutely ugly is that which is entirely ugliness The form devoid of Divine meaning (Oeios Ao'yo?). co-ordinates and combines the parts which are to make a unity, and this unity is beautiful, as are also its parts.
spiritual world.
;
The absence
'
of
'
by sharing in the creative power which comes to them from the gods. When we pass from visible and audible beauty to the beauty which the Soul perceives without the help of the senses, we must remember that we can only perceive what is akin to ourselves there is such a thing as soulbeautiful
(Kotvwvta \6yov)
They become
blindness.
make
Incorporeal things are beautiful when they us love them. But what constitutes their beauty ?
Negatively, it is the absence of impure admixture. An ugly character is soiled by base passions it is like a body caked with mud in order to restore its natural grace it must be scraped and cleansed. This is why it has been said 1 that all the virtues are a purification. The purified soul becomes a form, a meaning, wholly spiritual and incorporeal. The true beauty of the Soul is to be made like to God. The good and the beautiful are the same, and the ugly and the bad are the same. The Soul becomes beautiful through Spirit other things, such as actions and studies, are beautiful through Soul which gives them form. The Soul too gives to bodies all the beauty which
;
; ;
mount
to the
Good towards
which every Soul aspires. If anyone has seen it, he knows what I say he knows how beautiful it is. We must approach its presence stripped of all earthly en;
cumbrances, as the initiated enter the sanctuary naked. With what love we must yearn to see the source of all He who has not yet existence, of all life and thought seen it desires it as the Good he who has seen it admires it as the Beautiful. He is struck at once with amazement and pleasure he is seized with a painless stupefaction,
!
ETHICS, RELIGION,
AND ESTHETICS
213
and
lovable.
;
Souls
it is
This is the great end, the supreme aim, of the want of this vision that makes men undesires to see the vision
happy.
He who
must shut
his
eyes to terrestrial things, not allowing himself to run after corporeal beauties, lest he share the fate of Narcissus, and immerse his soul in deep and muddy pools, abhorred
of Spirit. And yet we may train ourselves by contemplating noble things here on earth, especially noble deeds, always pressing on to higher things, and remembering
above all that as the eye could not behold the sun unless were sunlike itself, so the Soul can only see beauty by becoming beautiful itself.' There are a few other passages which throw light on
it
the
doctrine
of
the
Beautiful.
The
relation of
the
Beautiful to the Absolute, the Good, is discussed in 6. 7. 32, a passage which has been already considered in
the chapter on the Absolute. 1 I have there shown that Beauty is really given the same dignity as Truth and Goodness in this system. In another place, 2 Reality The eternal (TO ai'Siov) (ova- la) is identified with Beauty. is said to be akin to the Beautiful.' 3 Plotinus makes a distinct advance in aesthetic theory
'
in refusing to make symmetry the essence of the Beautiful. This had been one of the errors of Greek art -criticism. Plotinus does not anticipate the profound saying of
'
Bacon,
There
is
strangeness in the proportion ; but he insists that beauty is essentially the direct expression of reason, or meaning,
in sense,
the
by aesthetic semblance. The forms of beauty are mode in which the creative activity of the universal
itself
2
on Matter.
9.
Like
all
other
p.
124
5-
s.
3- 5- 1.
214
So Krause says,
is
'
of
what
of itself as
individual according to the Idea, beauty arises by a beneficent necessity' (p. 72). The ques-
tion
not
symmetrical has been dismissed. The soul recognises in certain forms a meaning which it understands and loves the sensuous forms have a natural affinity to certain ideas. Plotinus believed that beautiful forms in this world have a real resemblance to their prototypes in the spiritual world. Earth is a good copy of heaven
; ;
earthly beauty, we must remember, is the creation of But the beauty which Soul, not a property of matter. we find in objects is not put into them by the individual
the work of Soul, but not of the The individual Soul it. can only appreciate what is akin to itself but it is not the perceiving mind of the individual which gives to form upon it. inert matter a meaning by impressing
observer.
All
beauty
is
'
'
That would be to make the individual Soul the creator of the world, which Plotinus says we must not do. And yet the individual Soul is never wholly separated from and we must further remember that the universal Soul no perception, not even the perception of external objects, is mere apprehension. Something is always done or made The Soul, in contemplating in the act of perception.
;
Beauty,
of its
is
The
new who
higher principle. First Chapter of the Sixth Ennead contains some ideas which are not in Plato and Aristotle. Those
own
identify Beauty with symmetry regard the whole the parts can be beautiful only in only as beautiful But Beauty cannot result from relation to the whole.
;
if the whole is beautia collection of unbcautiful things also must be beautiful. In the Eighth the ful, parts Fifth he of the that Ennead everything is says Chapter
;
'
beautiful
in
its
own
true Being.'
ETHICS, RELIGION,
'
AND ESTHETICS
215
develops the curious notion of the supreme holiness and Much beauty of light. Everything shines yonder.' more important is the argument by which Plotinus finds room for Art in the realm of the beautiful. The artist realises the beautiful in proportion as his work is real. The true artist does not copy nature. Here he agrees
who in an epoch-making passage says that great works of art are produced not by imitation (the Aristotelian AU/X^CH?), but by imagination (<f>avTa<rta) ,
with Philostratus,
'
what it has seen, imagination what it has not seen/ The true artist fixes his eyes on the archetypal Logoi, and tries to draw inspiration from the spiritual power which created the forms of bodily beauty. Art, therefore, is a mode of contemplation, which creates because it must. This is a real advance upon Plato and Aristotle.
Plotinus does not, like Schopenhauer, arrange the arts in an ascending scale sculpture, painting, poetry, music music being the highest because it works with the most ethereal medium but this is genuine Platonism. There are said to be some musicians who prefer reading the score to hearing it played. If such men exist, they are
; ;
ultra-Platonists.
means by which we apprehend the can no longer adore images, and art no Perhaps this longer satisfies our religious instincts. is as not so universal change Hegel thought but Plotinus would have seen nothing unexpected in it. By emphasising the beauty of noble actions, Plotinus agrees with Kant and Lotze that beauty consists, partly at least, in harmony with a purpose. Lotze even suggests that it arises in the conflict between what is and what ought but this is not Platonic. It is unquestionable to be that our age does not naturally express itself in beautiful
Divine
?
We
forms.
The
self-consciousness
1
of
modern architecture
i.
216
spoil our
creations
But
it
never come when we shall again create beautiful things without knowing why they are beautiful. The ugliness of our civilisation can hardly be set down to the fact that we have advanced beyond the artistic mode of self-expression. Plotinus is not very happy in his treatment of ugliness. it is Ugliness is not, as he supposes, absence of form false form. The ugliest thing in nature, a human face distorted by vile passions, revolts us because the evil principle seems there to have set its mark on what was meant to bear the image of God. Ugliness is dirt in the wrong place.' This is in effect what Plotinus says when he tells us that all virtue is purification but he never admits that there can be defilement of the flesh and spirit/ though all real ugliness consists not in the incrus-
'
'
tation of incorporeal purity by something alien to itself, but in indications that the Soul itself has been stained
There is nothing repulsive in the sight marble statue half-covered with mud, or in a fine yet this is the picture blackened with dirt and smoke type of ugliness which Plotinus gives us in his theory of evil. While we sympathise with his determination to make no compromise with metaphysical dualism, we cannot help feeling that his optimistic view of the world
of a
;
and perverted.
causes
him
'
deep truth in this philosophy of the Beautiful. We cannot see real beauty while we are wrapped up in our petty personal interests. These are the muddy vesture of decay, of which we must rid ourArt is the wide world's memory of things, and selves.
is
But there
beauty
is
itself
is
known
sensuously, as Hegel says. ^Esthetic pleasure the pleasure of recognition and consequent liberation. The soul sees the reflection of its own best self and forthwith enters into a larger life. This is effected by
;
in truth
ETHICS, RELIGION,
recognising
AND ESTHETICS
217
some
of its
of the pleasure which we find in poetry and painting arises from brilliant translations of an idea from one language to another, showing links between diverse
Very much
orders of being, symbols of the unseen which are no arbitrary types, or evidences of the fundamental truth about creation, that the universal Soul made the world
in the likeness of its
all is
own
principle, Spirit.
Ultimately
Among
on
Hartmann are all indebted who regards the unity of the and the Good as the absolute ground
of all Being. Shaftesbury, at the end of the seventeenth century, was a kindred spirit. He finds that there are three orders or degrees of beauty first, the dead forms,
'
which have no forming power, no action, or intelligence. Next, the forms which form that is, which have intelli;
gence, action,
and operation.
beauty which forms not only such as we call mere forms, but even the forms which form. For we ourselves are notable architects in Matter, and can show lifeless
bodies brought into form, and fashioned by our own hands but that which fashions even minds themselves
;
the beauties fashioned by those consequently the principle, source, and fountain of all beauty. Therefore whatever beauty our of forms, or whatever is in second order appears derived or produced from thence, all this is eminently, principally, and originally in this last order of supreme
contains in
itself
all
minds, and
is
which
is
of
human
Thus
last
order/ 1
not easy to find much similarity to Plotinus in the aesthetic theory of Croce, which is just now attracting much attention. He holds that beauty does not belong
It is
1
3, Sect. 2.
218
not a psychic fact, it belongs to man's Esthetic activity is activity, spiritual energy. as opposed to the and concrete intuition, imaginative and It logical general conception. belongs to the Will, and its manifestations are Soul-states passion, sentito things
it is
to
These are found in every art and ment, personality. Art is expression. determine its lyrical character/ Croce insists rightly that we cannot appreciate a work of art without, in a sense, reproducing the work of the
artist in ourselves.
'
LECTURE XXII
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
it is
me
entirely out of date, or vitiated by fundamental errors. Such books are not uncommon ; but they seldom really
elucidate the thought of the author who is so criticised, and the tone of superiority which they assume is unbecoming. great writer has a message for other times
own
it is
by no means incumbent on his modern expositor to observe the same proportions, or the same emphasis, as his author nor need he be afraid of using modern terms and trains of thought to develop speculations which his
;
author handles only as a pioneer. I know, for example, that the doctrine of reality as a kingdom of values, on which I have laid stress, is not explicit in Plotinus ; and
that on the other side the Platonic and Aristotelian
categories occupy much more space in the Enneads than in book about them. But I have tried throughout
my
to deal with Neoplatonism as a living and not as a dead philosophy, and to consider what value it has for us in the
twentieth century. My own convictions are, of course, derived from many other sources besides the later Greek philosophy, and I may have sometimes read them into my author. But I still think that his real contribution
219
220
to the never-ending debate about ultimate truth and reality is more likely to be brought out by the method
than by the criticism of those content to classify the Enneads among other specimens of extinct philosophies, and to place
of respectful discipleship
on
said in
my
might find
in Plotinus
The greater part of my book was present distress. written long before the war, and the materials were put together without any direct reference to contemporary
was indeed a pleasure to me to escape and controversies into a purer air. When I began my task, our civilisation was plethoric, congested, dyspeptic. The complacent and sometimes blatant selfconfidence of the Victorian Age had given place to wideThe great accumulaspread and growing discontent. tions of a hundred prosperous years seemed to be only Universal covetousness had outapples of Sodom. the possessors of stripped the means of gratifying it
problems.
It
from
politics
discredited.
The
thinly veiled materialism of nineteenth century science was tottering under blows dealt from every side, with the
though very unsatisfactory philand left nothing in its osophy place but a sentimental irrationaiism and scepticism, powerless against the inroads of superstition and the waves of popular emotion. The Government of the country had fallen into a state of the most pitiable imbecility, cowering before every turbulent faction, and
of
life
had
ness.
attempting to buy off every threat of organised lawlessIn the midst of great outward prosperity, the symptoms of national disintegration had never been so
Certain
idols
menacing.
of
the
market-place
com;
manded the
and the
journalist
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
none.
I
221
now
lay
her house and murdering her children is bleeding to death from self-inflicted wounds, her wealth and credit destroyed, her hopes of reasonable and orderly progress shattered. The parallel between the decay of our social order, the beginning of which I think we are now witnessing, and the economic ruin of the Roman empire in the third, fourth, and fifth centuries seems now even closer than when I wrote my introductory lecture. 1 In particular, the fate of the curiales, the middle class, in
the
Roman empire
is
That unfortunate bourgeoisie was saddled with nearly the whole weight of a continually increasing taxation. At 2 last, as Sir Samuel Dill tells us, 'the curial's personal freedom was curtailed on every side. If he travelled if he absented abroad, that was an injury to his city himself for five years, his property was confiscated. He could not dispose of his property, which the State re;
garded as security for the discharge of his financial obligations. The curial in one law is denied the asylum of the Church, along with insolvent debtors and fugitive slaves. When he is recalled from some refuge to which he has escaped, his worst punishment is to be replaced
in
his
original rank.
The money wrung from the taxpayers went partly for wars and the army, partly to a host of officials, and partly
in
doles to
the rabble of
less galling
tyranny hardly
may
1 Those who think this forecast too unfavourable may be briefly reminded (i) that we have mortgaged our economic future beyond the possibility of redemption (2) that fraudulent bankruptcy is no remedy where the social organism rests on credit (3) that the conditions which made recovery possible after 1815 cheap labour, thrifty administraare conspicuously absent. tion, and freedom from foreign competition 1 Roman Society in the Last Century of the Western Empire, p. 214. 3 The parallel was drawn out, before the war, by Mr. Flinders Petrie, in his little book called Janus in Modern Life,
;
222
to which most of us here belong. It will therefore be our wisdom to see what philosophy can do for us in
helping us to bear the inevitable. If we consider, in the light of Platonism, the causes which, at a week's notice, turned Europe into a cooperative suicide club,
we
some
super-individual psychical force, and it is tempting to think of the old hypothesis of an evil World-Soul. On this plausible theory, the race-spirit is an irreclaimable
savage dressed in the costume of civilisation, who has remained morally and intellectually l on the level of the Stone Age. His acquisitions have been purely external his nature has not been changed. Civilised man, we may remind ourselves, when at peace usually devotes that part of his time which is at his own disposal to playing at those occupations which are the serious business of the his sports mock savage. His games are mock battles his sacred music (a cynic might say) recalls hunting the howls by which the savage tries to attract the attention of his god. But from time to time he grows tired of shams, and craves for the real thing, hot and strong. So Driesch in his Gifford lectures says that mankind is /always advancing, but man always remains the same.' v A biologist might remind us that since there is no natural selection in favour of morally superior types, there is no
; ; ;
'
reason to expect any real progress in the human species. Now it is quite true that the thought -habits of a hundred thousand years are not likely to have been very
much
^
modified by a few centuries of civilisation, interrupted as they have been by the almost unmitigated barbarism of the Dark Ages between Justinian and the
twelfth century. But all pessimistic estimates of human nature based on survivals of savage instincts are con-
demned by
1 It is well established that the brain-capacity of the Neanderthal race, in spite of their ape-like appearance, was as great as that of modern Europeans, while the Cro-Magnon skulls are considerably above the average of any existing ract.
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
'
'
223
that
as Aristotle, that the nature of everything is the best it can grow into and that the best of human
;
nature
is
divine.
We
of moral savagery in civilised humanity arc neither normal nor habitual nor the result of a bad will. They no longer appear without stimulation they are not
;
On the consciously willed ; they are now a disease. other hand, the noble qualities of heroism and selfsacrifice,
in the course of this tragedy, are consciously willed they are essential parts of our human character as it is.
Our complex nature, no doubt, contains elements which pre-human ancestors the transformations of the embryo before birth, which seem to recapitulate the
link us to
;
whole course of biological evolution, are a proof of that but does it not also contain anticipations of a higher state than we have yet reached, but which we have a right to claim as human because we find it manifested in
;
human beings ? The ascent .of the soul to God, which is made by thousands in the short span of a single life, may
be an earnest of what humanity shall one day achieve. Nor is it quite correct to deny all progress within the historical period. There are, after all, horrors described in the Old Testament, in Greek history, in Roman history, in medieval history, which only the Bolsheviks have rivalled, and which indicate a degree of depravity which we may perhaps hope that civilised humanity has outgrown. And if there has been perceptible progress in the last two thousand years, the improvement may be considerable in the next ten thousand, a small fraction, probably, of the whole life of the species. The Soul of the race is no demon, but a child with great possibilities. 1 It is capable of what it has already achieved in the noblest human lives, and the character which it has
accepted as the perfect realisation of the the character of Christ.
1
human
is
ideal is
progress.
have said in the course of these lectures that there But there is no law which forbids progress.
no law of
224
this
should also greatly misapprehend the causes of tragedy if we sought them merely in atavistic incomstincts. Hobbes enumerates the causes of war as
'
We
petition,
distrust,
and
glory.
We
should supplement
these with the help of Plato's diagnosis, that a warlike atmosphere indicates disease within the State. In this
case a military monarchy, with an admirable scientific organisation for peace as well as war, found itself threatits rulers
ened by intestine troubles. A successful war seemed to to be the only prophylactic against a democratic We know revolution, and to be the less of two evils.
what Plato thought of the rule of the stinged drones,' the and we may perhaps understand him demagogues and the Germans better ten years hence. Our opponents would probably have preferred to keep the advantages of military organisation, without another great war. But
;
'
there
is
A man may
build
;
himself a throne of bayonets, but he cannot sit on it and he cannot avow that the bayonets are meant to keep
his
own subjects quiet. So the instrument has to be used an occasion for war has to be found and the nation has to be sedulously indoctrinated with fanatical patriotism, and hatred or contempt for the alien. Fear and distrust are also artificially stimulated and this is easily done. As Bentham said very truly about his own The dread of being duped by other countrymen nations the notion that foreign heads are more able, though at the same time foreign hearts are less honest A than our own, has always been one of our prevailing weaknesses.' Patriotism, once kindled into a flame, has In our the tremendous power of all spiritual ideas. time it connects itself with the idea of nationality, producing not only great self-devotion, but inordinate pride,
; ;
'
The present corps pushed to insanity. all the bitterness and has struggle blundering cruelty of wars no our faith, religious opponents think, need be of enemies their the with god. The true moral is that kept Videas are terrible things they are stronger than private
and
esprit de
;
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
interest, stronger
225
than reason, stronger than pity, stronger than conscience. In the future we shall see a great conflict between the idea of nationalism and that of internationalism, which divides men differently, by classes, or We shall hear again such religions, or types of culture. tirades as this of Lamartine
:
'
Nations
Mot pompeux pour dire barbarie s'arrdte t'il ou s'arretent vos pas ? Dechirez ces drapeaux, une autre voix vous crie L'egoisme et la haine ont seuls une patrie ;
!
L'amour
La
But we
shall
internationalism,
There is no ground for pessimism about the future of the race, if we take very long views ; and there is every reason to hope that as individuals we are not debarred
'
life.
Living one's
own
life
in truth is
shall
But we
need
all that religion and philosophy can do for us in the troublous time which certainly awaits us. The Stoic and
will again come into their own. In ancient times a considerable austerity of life was expected from the philosopher, and one of the chief
Pythagorean disciplines
attractions of philosophy
indifferent to
was that
it
made
its
votary
desire.
For
of the things which other us, too, to get rid of the superfluous will
most
men
be the only
road to freedom.
beautiful, well-ordered
should be a Greek austerity, life, not like the squalor (more Cynic than Neoplatonic) of the Emperor Julian and the Christian monks. The cult of the simple life is difficult only when it is left to a few eccentrics. When it is professed and followed by a whole class, it is
it
But
&
and healthy
easy.
It should be based, as it was in antiquity, on a separation of real from factitious wants. As soon as we cease to be afraid of fashion (of <S6d, as the Greeks said),
226
acceptance, by the richer classes in this country, of the loss of all the luxuries and comforts to which they are accustomed, is a good omen for the future. It does not
detract from the nobility of their conduct to say that they have found these sacrifices easier to bear than they
expected. Our motive must not be the selfish one of making ourselves invulnerable. We have a precious ^tradition to preserve at all costs the deposit of truth committed to the Hebrews, the Greeks, and the Romans, which is now threatened by a collapse of
authority which may end in barbarism. What the Church ^did in the Dark Ages, the combined forces of ChrisWe need a class tianity and humanism must do now. withdrawn from the competitive life. The struggle for existence, when individual, sharpens a man's faculties
and develops
tends to
his intelligence
individual coman inchoate towards petition only stage group-comthe right to combine is the logical developpetition ment of laisser faire ; the strike, and war, are its fruits. Unrestricted competition, it appears, must end in civil and international war. Group-competition sinks from inanition in the absence of external danger, and the
is
;
make a man a mere cog in narrows him to a poorer life. And yet
group organised for competition decays rapidly when this stimulus is withdrawn on the other hand, when
;
acute and effective, the competitors each or the victor becomes parasitic on other, .destroy 'the vanquished and at last disappears. Hence the only final integration is a spiritual one, for spiritual move-
the competition
is
ments are non-competitive, and on this plane only is there community of interests. Moral progress is only possible by the resistance of individuals to herd-instincts, and the resistance itself is a movement of the race-spirit there are no really independent thinkers. It is a struggle Our for self -adaptation to a changing environment. task is very much the same as that which was laid on Plotinus and his successors in their day. They also had
real
;
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
;
227
a precious tradition to preserve and, as happens so often in human life, they won their victory through apparent defeat. They resisted Christianity, and were beaten but the Church carried off so much of their
;
its own hive that Porphyry himself would have been half satisfied if he had seen the event. For us, the whole heritage of the past is at stake together we cannot preserve Platonism without Christianity, nor Christianity without Platonism, nor civilisation without
honey to
both.
it
Neoplatonism differs from popular Christianity in that offers us a religion the truth of which is not contingent/ on any particular events, whether past or future. It floats free of nearly all the religious difficulties which have troubled the minds of believers since the age of science began. It is dependent on no miracles, on no unique revelation through any historical person, on no narratives about the beginning of the world, on no
' '
prophecies of
its
end.
No
scientific
or historical dis-
covery can refute it, and it requires no apologetic except the testimony of spiritual experience. There is a Christian philosophy of which the same might be said. There are Christians who believe in the divinity of Christ because they have known Him as an indwelling Divine Spirit ; who believe that He rose because they have felt that He has risen who believe that He will judge the world because He is already the judge of their own lives. Such
;
independence of particular historical events, some of which are supported by insufficient evidence, gives great strength and confidence to the believer. But it does not satisfy those who crave for miracle as a bridge between the eternal and temporal worlds, and who are not happy unless they can intercalate acts of God into what seems
' '
to
them the
is
life,
soulless
mechanism
of nature.
Christianity,
however,
spiritual
an independent
and
it
its
world when
discerned,
it
and when
stands on
its
own
foundations,
228
without
those extraneous supports which begin by strengthening a religion and end by strangling it. In most other respects the two systems are closely
Neoplatonism, like Christianity, gives us a clear definite standard of values, absolute and eternal. What this standard is has, I hope, been sufficiently shown
allied.
and
in these lectures. It may be objected that Plotinus gives us only principles and outlines, without imparting much help in concrete problems, such as the choice of a profession, the use of money, and the political
by quotations
duties of a citizen.
The same
criticism
has been, brought against the ethics of the New Testament. But the man who studies Plotinus as a moral guide will not often be at a loss except in problems which it is not the province of religion or philosophy to solve.
The
vitally important thing is that we should believe in Goodness, Truth, and Beauty as Divine and absolute principles, the source and goal of the whole cosmic process, and not as imaginings of the human mind, or
which have no existence. 1 Closely connected with this faith in absolute values is that conception of eternal life which has been discussed,
ideal values,
perhaps at disproportionate length, in these lectures. I that some of my hearers and readers will probably think that I have been too ready to separate immortality from the quality of duration, and to sink individuality
know
the
and spirit. As regards our that agree accepted methods of moral valuation assume that duration has a meaning and value
first,
We prefer what we call the higher we find that they are the most durbecause goods partly and the idea of teleology is inseparable from that able of value. Persistence, as I have said, seems to be the time-form of eternity, and progress the time-expression of the Divine goodness. With regard to our individuality,
for the life of spirit.
;
Mr. Clutton Brock's new book (1918), Studies in Christianity, is He shows that for a Christian 'absolute
'
same
thing.
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
229
Plotinus would not object to the statement that spirit is individual in each of us, because it is potentially all in each of us. To deny the individuality of spirit would be
to believe in votjrd without i/ou? and we are often warned Great that the against supposing Spirit, or the Universal The is individual Soul, split up among spirits or souls. is souls of but not spirit fragmentary spirit -life, offspring
; '
'
In ethics, the sense of living in worlds half -realised. is awful of our the guilt guardian personal identity, but the sense of forgiveness is the blessed assT^ance that we
The
are sharers in a higher personality than the self that sins. great difficulty, how to account for individuation, is
lessened
when we think
tially all-embracing.
We are limited,
we
we
are half-baked
souls. The perfect man would not be less perfect because he lived in a particular century and country. A broad mind is not cramped by a narrow sphere. We should not be wiser if we lived in a dozen scattered bodies. It seems
to
me
able/
souls
'
when Bradley finds finite centres inexplicand when he is driven to say that the plurality of
that
'
'
is
appearance and their existence is not genuine/ by his theory that the absolute
divides itself into centres/ which is surely impossible. 1 all individuals are (as it were) shaken up a in together bag, the absolute, thus neutralising each other's defects, seems very crude. Plotinus, I venture to
think, navigates successfully the narrow channel between these rocks and the opposite error of pluralism. The soul
needs real otherness ; else there could be no love, and no worship but it needs also real identity, and for the same
;
reason.
Neoplatonism respects
of
science,
human
.reason.
Its
idealism
throughout. The supremacy of the reason is a favourite theme of the Cambridge Platonists of the seventeenth
1 cf. Pringle-Pattison, The Idea of God, p. 287, who comments on the similar treatment of the problem by Lotze and Bosanquet.
230
century,
'
Sir, I
'
to Tuckney,
Reason
for spiritual is most rational/ And again, the Divine governor of man's life it is the
;
l The difference between this reververy voice of God/ ence for man's intellectual endowments, which always
true Platonism, and the sentimental, emotionalism of popular is superstitious mysticism much more than a difference of temperament. It is because he is in rebellion against nature and its laws, or because he is too ignorant or indolent to think, that the
characterises
'
'
emotionalist
flies
Very
difficult is the
Wisdom and
Thou
And And
Spirit of the Universe Soul, that art the eternity of thought givest to forms and images a breath not in vain, everlasting motion
!
or starlight, thus from my first dawn Of childhood didst thou intertwine for me The passions that build up our human soul, Not with the mean and vulgar works of man,
By day
But with high objects, with enduring things, With life and nature, purifying thus The elements of feeling and of thought, And sanctifying by such discipline Both pain and fear/
as the
modus
Neoplatonism
asserts con-
sistently that the world as seen by the spiritual man is a very different world from that which is seen by the carnal
man. Spiritual things are spiritually discerned and the whole world, to him who can see it as it is, is irradiated by Spirit. A sober trust in religious experience, when
;
that experience has been earned, is an essential factor in Platonic faith. Our vision is clarified by the conquest of
fleshly lusts, by steady concentration of the thoughts, will, and affections on things that are good and true and
lovely
by
disinterestedness,
1
which thinks
of
no reward,
See
my
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
and by that progressive
unification of our nature
'
231
which
It is
everywhere
the whole mind/ says Lotze, at once thinking, feeling, and passing moral judgments, which out of the full completeness of its nature produces in us these unspoken first
Julian of Norwich says the same thing in ' Our faith cometh of the simpler and nobler words natural love of the soul, and of the clear light of our
principles.'
:
reason, and of the steadfast mind which in our first making.' * There are three
we have
of
God
avenues to the
knowledge
of
God and
of the
purposive action, reasoning thought, and loving affection, a threefold cord which is not quickly broken. To quote Wordsworth again
:
'
And even
We live by admiration,
may be
summed up
Blessed are the pure in God/ for see shall heart, For, in the words of they Smith, the Cambridge Platonist, Such as men themselves are, such will God appear to them to be/ If we see things as they are, we shall live as we ought
in the beatitude,
'
'
see things as they are. This is not a vicious circle, but the interplay of contemplation and action, of Oewpla and irpa*?, in which wisdom consists. Action is the ritual of contemplation, as the
if
and
we
live as
we
ought,
we shah
The conduct of life rests on an act of as an experiment, and ends as an which faith, begins Platonism affirms, no doubt, a very deep experience. it claims that the venture of faith is more than optimism but has anyone who has tried it left on record justified
dialectic is its creed.
; ;
that the experiment has failed ? Nevertheless, it is the extreme optimism of the NeoAre there not platonic creed which gives us pause.
certain
stubborn facts in
1
life,
facts
See
my
232
to account
'
Would a
good and wise man see the world we live in as it it is very good ? is and pronounce that Would he not, in proportion to the clearness of his vision of what the world ought to be, be filled with grief, pity, and indignation at what it is ? The brave man may conquer his own but ought fears, and make light of his own misfortunes
;
he, like the Stoic sage, to practise benevolence without pity, acquiescence in inevitable evil without revolt, and
to love the Lord without hating the thing that is evil ? Plato recognised that we cannot get rid of moral evil without pain. But how slight is the emphasis, and how
The Cross he grasps the law of vicarious suffering foolishness to the Greeks/ as St. Paul says. And yet the place which Plotinus gives to Love should have
little
'
!
is
carried
him
all
the way.
'
If
Godhead
;
is
love/ it follows from the for we can principles of this philosophy that God is love only see what we are. But if God is love, He must despirit
in
'
clare His almighty power most chiefly in showing mercy He must reveal Himself most fully in the and pity of love, that is, self-sacrifice. If this activity supreme is admitted, it follows that the most inalienable and distinctive attribute of Divinity is no longer deathlessness, or unlimited power or freedom from inner perit is sympathy, and willingness to suffer for turbation others. If this is the character of the Deity, it must be our ideal, for, as Plotinus says, our aim is not to be without sin, but to be what God is/ Suffering must be either accepted or shirked by every man in a world where 'truth's for ever on the scaffold, wrong for ever on the throne/ 1 We have seen that other religions besides Christianity but the worshipped a suffering and even a dying God from I a docshrunk such have fear, would, Neoplatonist trine with horror, or dismissed it with contempt. It would have seemed to undo all the work of deliverance which his philosophy had built up for him, and to plunge him
'
;
'
Lowell.
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
233
back into the slough of despond, the morass of pleasures and pains. How can a perfectly good man, much more a God, feel pain and grief ? Is he unable to control these emotions, or is he dissatisfied with the inevitable operations of nature, which the sage accepts as preordained ? Can a Divine creator be dissatisfied with his own work, and submit to martyrdom in order to undo the evil which his own laws have indirectly caused ?
And
yet until
we accept the
remains undrawn.
elsewhere,
1
'
of individualism, is Divine, the sting of the world's evil ' Vicarious suffering,' I have said
which on the individualist theory seems so monstrous and unjust as to throw a shadow on the character of God, is easy to understand if we give up our individualism. It is a necessity. For the sinner cannot suffer for his own healing, precisely because he is a sinner. The trouble which he brings on himself cannot heal his wounds. Redemption must be vicarious it must be
;
wrought by the suffering of the just for the unjust.' Irenaeus says that Christ, for His immense love towards
'
us,
is.'
was made what we are, that He might make us what He Plotinus, as we have seen, insists that no man may deliver his brother, and there is, of course, a sense in
;
this is true but it seems to me that he fails to apply his doctrine of the unity and solidarity of soul-life exactly where it might be most fruitful. Love and suffering cut the deepest channels in our souls, and reveal the most precious of God's secrets. Even in national life we can see that the characteristic utterances
which
of ages of prosperity the Augustan Ages of historyare less penetrating and of less universal significance than
those which have been wrung from nations in agony. The uses of chastisement have been often celebrated. Plaio in the Gorgias argues that it is a misfortune to escape punishment, when we have deserved it Augustine says, Nulla poena, quanta poena ! But the journey
;
'
'
'
234
which brings
sad one.
'
Heriod,
easy,
though
it
be hard.'
The philosophy which holds that we are independent and impervious monads, solida pollentia simplicitate makes it so utterly impossible to find justice in the world, that some of our pluralist s have fallen back on the old
theory of a limited, struggling God,
who
tc
overcome insuperable obstacles. This dualism corresponds to the attitude of the pure moralist, who is occupied in combating evil without trying to account for it but it is intolerable both for philosophy and for religion Platonism and Christianity prefer to reject individualism No injustice is done in the real world, because the individual who is the subject of claims is an abstraction, and
the real
sins
self,
the soul,
and sorrows
good
anity, the
man
is willing
to
'
fill
in the afflictions of Christ for his Body's And the sacrifice is effectual ; the sake, the Church.'
redemption is won. Evil, which can never be overcome by evil, can be overcome by good. The Christian doctrine that if one soul has triumphed completely in this combat, all share in the victory, is quite intelligible or
Neoplatonic principles, in spite of the sentence in th( at the doctrine in c It is not intelligible to a moderr hostile manner. 1 individualist, nor can it be defended by changing it, a Western theology has often done, into a forensic trans-
action.
not
V Humanity needs martyrs. Plotinus says that it doe< much matter if the good are killed by the bad, for the only means that the actors change their masks o: is man does not die. But this a kind really good
11
;
lines of
Sophocles
-yelp ol/mat
O. C. 498.
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
235
docetism. It cheapens the sacrifice, which only the heroic victim has the right to do. Our dying soldiers may say
and
feel,
'
Nil igitur
mors
est
'
but we must not say it for them. The evils wrought by sin in the world are not imaginary. We are only justified
in
may work
out.
The
disease
is
the selfishness,
stupidity, and moral ugliness which obstruct the manifestation in the world of the Divine attributes of goodness,
suffering
The evils are recognised as evil. fact of suffering is not an evil but a good, since it is the chief means of progress, of which it implies the possibility.
There were
many
before the
;
some, but
they are fewer. The soldier and the soldier's family learnt the lesson without difficulty those who
;
own wages
or profits
yet to learn it. The jealous determination not to put into the common stock a pennyworth more than we are
it
life
more
than any economic inequalities. Human happiness depends on the ratio between the human costs of living and the return which we get for them and human costs are very different from work and wages. They are determined by our standard of values. Who are the happiest people, so far as we can judge ? I should say, the real Christians, whose affections are set on things above whose citizenship is in are heaven whose thoughts occupied with things that
;
and of good report who believe that all work things together for good to those who love God
are pure, noble,
1
;
;
is
Plotinus himself says that the indifference of the soldier to death a proof that the Soul knows itself to be indestructible. This,
I think, is true.
236
it is
Next to
whose
interest,
And
devoted to some great super-persona such as science, art, literature, or philosophy thirdly, those who, without any clear vision, follo\
lives are
'
duty as the
strive to
'
live
stern daughter of the voice of God/ an< ever in their great Taskmaster's eye.
And who are the most unhappy ? The selfish, especiall; the envious, the grasping, and the fearful. These ar the men whose work, whether well paid or ill, costs then
and no social readjustments can satisfy them because such desires are, as Plato says, insatiable an< incapable of being gratified. Envy especially is a passio]
;
most
to which
who worship
tion
is
is attached. Unhappy also are the; the various idols of the market-place, th fetishes of herd-morality. In proportion as their devc
no pleasure
sincere, they must feel the bitterness of disap ment where it is insincere, they become, Plotinu point would say, like the parrots and monkeys whom the;
;
imitate.
Neglect of these truths has thrown our whole view c out of perspective, and it is more distorted now tha: in times which it is fashionable to despise. The Purita]
life
idea was that productive work is the best service of Goc the task for which we were sent into the world, to prepar ourselves for the rest of eternity. By attributing
sacramental virtue to secular labour they made a rea for this is what we miss in Platonisr advance and Catholicism. But Puritanism was incapable of in and in practice led to a vas telligent self-criticism accumulation of money and commodities without an; wisdom in using them. Protestant civilisation has i consequence been ugly and tasteless, and all classes alik have been weighed down by the supposed necessity c
ethical
;
Ii satisfying wants which in reality had no existence. of a standard rational of defect good, merely quantita any tive valuation took its place. The success of a nation wa
measured by
its statistics of
thi
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
success of a
237
man by
'
the
number
he was
'
'
worth.'
Our
litanies
word expansion stirred in us a luscious sense of pride. But though the Puritan ethics were unintelligent, they
were not entirely out of touch with the laws of nature, like some of the fetishes which we now delight to honour. There has never been a time when the ruinous error that we can revoke the laws of nature by ignoring them has been more prevalent than in modern social politics. 1 is not the handmaid Science/ it has been wisely said, but the purgatory of religion and of politics. A bad philosophy leaves us in such a cruel world that we dare not look the facts in the face. This is the origin of sentiment alism, ultimately the most merciless of all moods. The dethronement of these modern idols is one of the greatest services which a sound philosophy can render
' ' '
to humanity.
But how
the
shall
we bring our
of
criticism of
life
to bear on
chaotic
mass
prejudice,
sentiment alism,
and
cupidity which goes by the name of public opinion ? Plotinus will tell us that if we want to help others, we
must testify that which we have more than the Platonist to make
'
seen.
No
one needs
his
life
a true
poem/
and moral experience supply the materials for spiritual intuition and creation. The civic virtues/ as we have seen, must be practised, but as a kind of symbol or sacrament of the eternal order. The
for in his philosophy
'
moral
effort
philosopher, Plato thinks, will not willingly take part in the his own politics of his city, but will live as a citizen of
'
country, of which a type is laid up in heaven/ Opinions may differ as to how far Plato's good man can mix in
politics at the present
time
how he may help to build a city is of God on earth, he likely to miss his way to the heavenly
thinks often and earnestly
city.
It would be a worthy and fruitful task to try to work out some of the problems of human society in the
1
By
Roll of
Honour
238
light of Christian Platonism. The difficulty of finding a decent form of civil government has hitherto baffled
human
still is
fails
ingenuity. This unsolved problem has been and the deepest tragedy of history. Nation after nation to answer the riddle of the Sphinx, and is hurled
or torn in pieces.
down
military lecture
;
Monarchies have
The strength and weakness of been summarised in this and we must add the probability that the
fool or a knave.
monarch may be a
Readers of the
Republic will know where to look for a true character of Democracy. Theocracy, which in theory should be the best of all governments, is in practice one of the
worst, since, except in brief periods of spiritual exaltation, the priesthood has no physical force behind it, and
must rely on superstition and bigotry, which accordingly have to be stimulated by keeping the nation in ignorance and intellectual servitude. The problem of the reformer is complicated by the fact that we must accept the heavy
burdens of the past. The wisest man can only achieve an application of the living past to the living present. Plotinus, as we have seen, expresses no preference for one form of government over another. His remedy for
all social evils is
bering that we make our own world, by the reaction of our Soul upon its environment, and of the environment upon our Soul. Many of our discontents are externalised soul-aches. By brooding over them we hurt our Souls
and immerse them in Matter. A restoration of internal and external peace is possible only when we rise to the
' '
vision of the real, the spiritual world. When we consider the achievements of any nation which even for fifty years has grasped a fringe of the mantle of God, we shall not think that Christ, or Plato, is bidding us to lose
substance for shadow. The Soul of the race mocks at the triumphs of Sennacherib and Attila. They, and have victims their remembered because are Cleon, only Human to to worth while them it hold up infamy. thought
CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
societies
239
arehappyin proportion as they have their treasure goods which are not lessened by being shared. As Proclus says, Goods that are indivisible are those which many may possess at once, and no one is worse off in respect of them because another has them. Divisible goods are those in which one man's gain is another man's loss/ 1 This is after all the truth which the philosopher and the minister of religion must preach incessantly for
in that class of
'
numquam nimis dicitur quod numquam satis discitur. Neither those who bow before the Crucified nor those who venerate the hero of the Phaedo can have any dealings with the men who wish to make the Christian Church the
jackal of any dominant political party. Such movements are always with us. They fill chapters in the history of
ecclesiasticism,
upward path, as other schemes which the Platonic and by mystic, have gained wide acceptance ? The essence of Neotraced
platonic mysticism is the belief that the Soul, which lives here in self-contradiction, must break in succession every
form in which it tends to crystallise. This is where it most from Catholicism, as generally taught. Catholicism promises peace as the immediate result of submission and obedience, and even Catholics of Newman's calibre have recorded that their spiritual journeys were of course over, and their mental histories at an
differs
' '
3 But end, when they came to rest in the Catholic fold. for the mystic there is no halting-place, no rest from the
striving to see what he cannot yet see, and to become what as yet he is not. To stop short anywhere is to leave the
quest unfinished. Cases of arrested development are the The world arrests most of us rule, not the exception.
1
have
truth
Proclus, in Alcib., p. 439. I do not, of course, mean that the Catholic apprehended before his probation is over.
'
'
counts himself to
for
not put before him as an abiding motive. I do not think that he has, qua Catholic, much sympathy with Clement, who held that if the saint were offered the choice between the possession of truth and the search for it, he would without hesitation choose the latter.
is
240
now
'
arrested
'
by
the
which (says Tarde) is, like the hypnotic of dream/ So a supra-social philosophy a form only
;
often called unsocial Plotinus, like other mystics, has incurred this censure. To the Platonist, all earthly forms of association are at best adumbrations of a true society ;
he cannot give himself entirely to any of them. He must expect to outgrow many early enthusiasms before the end of his course, For this life is a schola animarum,' as said and we are learners to the end. The future Origen but through the darkness the light is hidden from us and we know that of heaven burns steadily before us ideas, of amid the eternal Truth, Goodness, and yonder/ final is and our home. our birth-place Beauty,
'
'
'
Si n6tre vie est moins qu'une journ6e En 1'eternel si 1'an qui fait le tour
;
Chasse nos jours sans espoir de retour Si perissable est toute chose n6e Que songes-tu, mon ame emprisonnee ? Pourquoi te plait 1'obscur de notre jour, Si, pour voler en un plus clair sejour, Tu as au dos 1'aile bien empennee ?
;
;
La La La
est le bien
le
que tout
esprit desire,
!
repos ou tout le monde aspire, est 1'amour, la le plaisir encore La, 6 mon ame, au plus haut ciel guidee Tu y pourras reconnaitre 1'idee De la beaute qu'en ce monde j 'adore.'
ADDENDA
VOL.
I
Page 76. Proclus quotes with approval the saying of lamblichus, that the whole theoretical philosophy of Plato is to be found in the Timaeus and Parmenides.
Page 86. The word metempsychosis, though it does not accurately describe the Neoplatonic doctrine of rebirth, is not, as is sometimes asserted, a modern coinage. It occurs first (I think) in Proclus, in his commentary on
Plato's Republic (Vol. II, p. 340, Kroll's edition).
Page 145. In one isolated passage (in Timaeum, 147) Proclus throws out an interesting suggestion to account for some of the ugliness and evil of the world. He says
the laughter of the gods gives substance to the contents of the world.' It is the myth of Ares and Aphrodite
surprised
that
'
by Hephaestus which
I
him
but
may
be wrong
in not admitting a sense of humour in the Creator. The absence of this sense is accounted a defect in a human
and there are some animals, such as the and the skunk, which surely can only have been made for a joke. We may have the same suspicion about some members of our own species.
character
;
If this is so, the laughing philosophers may be nearer the truth than their always solemn rivals, and we may allow ourselves to smile at some misadventures which worry the
pure moralist.
of the
Page 152. Can we divide the imperfections of our view world into two classes (i) those which proceed from error, failure, ignorance in ourselves, (2) those
II.
241
242
we
idea
We
traversing the course, and while so employed we are subject to psychic, not noetic conditions. Thus we must accept time, space, and evil as realities for us, though we know that they are not so for Spirit. The fact that
for us Soul
life
is
tethered, as
it
Our individual souls are teleological units, each working out some creative thought. We are that creative self-conscious I is much less thought objectified. (The than this.) This limitation then must be accepted as we look to a more glorious necessary in this life our task is when done. liberty
'
'
'
'
it is Page 174. Teleology really needs no proof almost a necessity of thought, an universal postulate. It is the time-form of value, and without valuation there can be no thinking. We should ask ourselves why All's well that ends well is an accepted proverb, and All's well that begins well an absurdity. Why do we say,
;
'
' ' '
Respice finem,' and Call no man happy before he dies ? It is not because time acquires more value as it goes on it is because every process has a meaning, and the whole
' '
is stultified
by
final failure.
Page 177. On continuity or evolution. Damascius, one of the later disciples of Plotinus, has an exceedingly
interesting passage on this subject (De Principiis 112), in which he says that all movement is discontinuous, and
' '
progresses
of evolution
by
leaps
of the
an anticipation
modifications
;
(Kara aX/xara). This sounds like modern doctrine (De Vries, &c.)
but it has a metaphysical importance, as even the slightest real change breaks So It continuity. disposes of mechanical causation. Leibnitz says, Le principe de continuite est chez moi it is psychic or spiritual. Materialism, if consistent with
asserting that
'
'
ADDENDA
itself, is
243
atomism
ism) that
is
'
disconnexion.
all
the essence of it (including all monadSo Mr. Bertrand Russell has said
pantheistic,
all
monism must be
Atomism, no
less
monadism
atheistic.'
object of Plotinus' polemic. It is inconsistent not only with any spiritual philosophy, but with any doctrine of evolution. Darwinism, properly understood, does not it is a doctrine it spiritualises nature naturalise man are obviously Finalism of final causes. and Origins the same road viewed from the two ends. Nineteenthcentury naturalism was a revolt against the ignava ratio of supernaturalism. But Neo-vitalism is in danger of reor perhaps it shows that we introducing the dualism have not yet explained the dualism in experience, out of
;
'
'
'
'
which it grows. Driesch, for example, sets life and mechanism against each other, and speaks of temporary suspensions/ which are too much like miracles. Tyndall, in his famous address (1874) was accused of materialistic atheism because he found in Matter the promise and potency of all life/ But this is objectionable only if we
'
'
lives
Krause,
like
Plotinus,
the
;
and lower is immediate and direct between beings on the same plane it is mediate and infellowship of higher
direct.
We know
I
Page 228.
thinkers appear to have given a more exalted place to Proclus, on Plato's Republic (p. 107), says <t>avra<ria. that some of the ancients identify ^avraa-i^ with vow, while others distinguish them, but say that there is no
'
a<f>dvTacrTo$
i/oyw/
confess
that
this
'
statement
'
surprises me,
'
and
some
'
were.
Proclus says that there is a double vov?, one that which we are the other that which we put on/ The latter
; '
is
the imaginative
i/ofe/
before which
'
the daemons
who
244
preside over nature place myths and ritual and religious symbols of all kinds, in which the imaginative vov$ finds delight. The myths are not true in the literal sense, but
they keep the Soul in contact with truth. So the imaginais a veritable revealer of Divine things. He adds the very remarkable complaint that when the ancient mysteries and myths were believed in, all the space round the earth was full of all kinds of good, which the gods give to men, whereas now, without them, all is lifeless and cut off from the light of heaven.' Proclus craved for something like the Catholicism which we know. Epaississez-moi la religion/ said Madame de Sevigne, dans la crainte qu'elle s'evapore.' Elsewhere Proclus says that imagination is vov$ TIS TraOtjTiKos, hindered in its
tion
'
'
'
internal activity
by the
fall
into Matter.
Page 234. The passage on Soga, at the end of Book 5 of Plato's Republic, is often ridiculed, but it is one of the Opinion has as its subject-matter keys of Platonism.
' '
neither full reality nor the completely unreal, but a field Degrees of reality are partly real and partly unreal.
if
we
'
Dr. L. P. Jacks, in his brilliant as Philosopher,' says very Universe The essay called truly that we seem unable even to think except in terms of proprietorship. It is very different in the East. For us, riches are not so much the cause of our forgetting God, as the form under which we try to remember Him. God is the proprietor of the world. So too a man has Who is the owner a Soul, an experience, a personality. He is behind the scenes, not to be of these job-lots ? found. Why again does a man talk of my religion,' my philosophy,' but never of my science ? The possessive case is an obsession with Western thinkers. \L Page 253. The harmony achieved by the Will is for ever finite and incomplete. Will is the principle of
Page 245.
My Soul.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
ADDENDA
VOL. II
245
Professor Taylor has suggested to me that understanding would be the best equivalent for vo^a-is* Coleridge, as is well known, chose the word to render
Page
38.
'
'
but
it
might be
Page
87.
The
reference
is
to a fanciful derivation
KO'/OO?
and
*/o?.
Page 103. Mr. Bosanquet's words, that reliance on the future has become a disease, may be illustrated by a passage in Carlyle's Past and Present (Book 3, chapter Us s'en appelaient a A la posterite ? Ah, .' 14).
'
'
'
'
'
'
They appealed
all
!
to the
C'etait different/
religion
'
Page 105. Dialectic is the logic of always leads us beyond our premisses.
which
And compare
The idea that Bradley, Logic, Book 3, Part i, chap. 2. this is a sort of experiment with conceptions in vacuo is a caricature. The opposition between the real, in
. .
.
that fragmentary character in which the mind possesses it, and the true reality felt within the mind, is the moving cause of the unrest which sets up the dialectic process.
till the mind, therein implicit, which answers its unconscious idea and here, having become in its own entirety a datum to itself, it rests in the activity which is self-conscious in its object/
.
The
process goes on
finds a product
absolute experience correPage 113. Bradley 's to Plotinus' aOpoa e7ri/3o\ri' sponds closely Page 128, note. For Timaeus read Second Epistle.
is not in a state of Spirit in love emotion. Proclus o ju.ev 6eio<f e/ow? evepyeia passive says, Mentis amor intellectuals ea-nv, just as Spinoza says,
'
'
Page 145.
The
'
'
'
ergaJDeum
is
actio est/
Page 169,
is
ascetic
The
who
246
Page 191. It appears sometimes as if Plotinus were oblivious of those social organisms which come between
Proclus cannot be charged with this defect. In his treatise De Decem Dubitationibus, which only survives in a medieval Latin Omnis civitas et omne genus unum translation, he says est maiori modo quam hominum unus animal quodque et et immortalius sanctius.' quisque,
'
:
Page 197.
of
' }
The
an order
angels,' superior to the daemons, who operate on the plane of vov$ as the daemons on that of ^i/xv. The angels are specially commissioned to liberate the Soul from
Matter.
'
Proclus even argues that Plato knew of the them is not derived from barbarous See references in (i.e. Christian) sources.
the index to Kroll's edition of Proclus on the Republic. There are several passages in Proclus where TrvevfjLara and seem to be identical.
Page 213.
it
The Sublime
is
suggests to us contending forces held in check by mighty power. This impression is often conveyed by inorganic
of
by an element
TO
Page 215. The later Neoplatonists rebelled against Proclus says Plato's disparagement of art and poetry. that Plato is himself as true a poet as Homer, and that
he would certainly have been turned out of his own
Republic.
Page 226. I agree with the concluding words of Dr. A. J. Hubbard's thoughtful book, The Fate of Empires. That which is temporal is never an end in itself, but becomes only the means of expressing the cosmocentric
'
purpose of our lives. Thus a true and stable civilisation can never be more than a by-product of religion. It is to be attained by those alone by whom it is not sought and we see that in the long run the world belongs to the
:
ADDENDA
unworldly empire is nothing
;
247
is
that in the
;
whom
of
awe the most astonishing of the Beatitudes Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth/ Dr. Hubbard's main thesis is the view which is also taken by Mr. Whittaker (The Neoplatonists, p. 269), that in human history the choice has been between Egyptian or Byzantine
'
on the one hand, and movement through upheavals and submergences on the other/
[or
Chinese]
fixity
convinced that Christianity as a religious philosophy is a development from the later Platonism, which contains Aristotelian and Stoical elements. Calvinism is simply baptised Stoicism, and accordingly it has a place, though not very securely, Mr. E. V. Arnold, in his able book within Christianity. Roman Stoicism, emphasises (I think rather too much) the
Page 236.
Stoical element, especially in St. Paul. But it is difficult to separate Latin Stoicism and Latin Platonism. The adoption of the Stoical -rrvev/ma for vov$ by the Christians
is
certainly
significant.
affinities
scientists
has
to Stoicism
Persian dualism,
to
modern
me
to resist
any attempt
about Christianity if we recogbased on a definite view of the world, which is not universally accepted, but which forms the basis not only of a religion but of the greatest of all philosophies. We should then be able to discriminate between the vital part of Christianity and the superstructure which belongs to the history of ecclesiasticism rather than of religion. The all-important modification of Platonism which we owe to Christ Himself has, I hope, been emphasised
would
nised that
INDEX
Absolute (rb &/, rd irpurov, rb ayad6i>) The Path of Dialectic, 104-162. 105-107 ; the Absolute as the One, as beyond existence, 107-109 109-116 ; as infinite, 116-118 ; as First and Final Cause, 118-122; the Path of Beauty, 122-125 ; the Path of Perfection, 125-142 ; the Vision of the One, 142-164
;
trine of,
210-218
6v),
46,
from category, 75
ovffla,
58-60; 60
distin;
as
Bengel, 162
'Beyond
existence,' 109-116
Activity (Mfytm)t in Aristotle, 10; in the spiritual world, 59, 65 ; in the Absolute, 113 ./Eneas of Gaza, 34
Blake, 152
Bohme, 152
Bolzano, 54 Bosanquet, B., 30, 85, 107, 114, 176, 1 80, 229 Bouillet, 39, 45, 64, 89, 122
Bradley, F. H., 39, 40, 65, 70, 74, 79, 104, 114, 229 Brooke, Rupert, 87 Browne, Sir T., 150 Browning, R., 21, 71 Bruno, G., 31 Buddha, 191 Buddhism, 29, 117, 191 Burnet, Prof., 4, 108, 126
Esthetics, 210-218
Acvum, 99-101
Aliotta, Idealistic Reaction Science, 61, 62, 64, 113
against
Amelius, 42
Ammonius
Saccas, 37
Anaxagoras, 128 Angela of Foligno, 157 Angelus Silesius, 1 14 Aphrodite in Plotinus, 149
Apuleius, 198
Aristotle,
on immortality,
10,
II
tion, 165
Art, Plotinus on, 213-216. Arts and Sciences in the spiritual world, 89 Asceticism, 165 sq. Athenagoras, 16
Augustine, 34, 90
on
on the Godhead,
233
in;
B
Bacon, 116; on beauty, 213 Barbour, G. P., 69 Basil, 210
137, 138 Chrysippus, Cleanthes, Clement, on immortality, 14 ; 37 ; on the Godhead, 1 1 1 ; on the Trinity,
n n
209
249
250
Cloud of Unknowing, The, 146, 154 Glutton Brock, 80, 228 Colour and Light, 131
Concentration, 154
171
as
the
Faber, 72 Faith (Trforts), in Proclus, 76 Farnell, Higher Aspects of Greek Religion, 199 Fechner, 77 Ficino, 45 Forms (ei8rj), 44, 45, see Ideas
Fourier, 32 Francis of Assisi, 170 Free Will, 181-185
Daemons, 196-199 Damascius, 196 Dante, 155, 195 Dark Night of the Soul,' 150-152 David, A., Le Modemisme Boudd'
histe, 29,
117
Davidson, The Stoic Creed, 1 1 Delacroix, 72, 84, 112, 150 Demiurge, 128 * DC Mundo* 94 Denis, on Origen, 19, 127, 149 Determinism, 181-185 Dialectic, 105-107 Dicrearchus, 6
Dill, Sir S., 13, 196, 221
Laertius, 3, 105 Diogenes ' Dionysius the Areopagite,' 2, 112 Driesch, 222 Drummond, J., on Philo, 14, 154
Goodness, Truth, Beauty, supreme values, 74 Granger, F., 148 Green, T. H., 69 Grote, 52
as
the
Guyon, 150
H
Eckhart, 72, 84, 107, 112, 114, 149, 152, 210
Ecstasy, 2, 134-162 Eleatics, 52 Empedocles, 5, 21, 30, 167 Epicurean ethics, 163 Erigena, John Scotus, 107, 112
Eschatology, see Immortality Essenes, 167 Essentia in Augustine, 1 1 1 Eternity (al&v), 92-103; relation to
perpetuity, 92 ; to reality (ofola), 93 ; as God manifesting his own nature, 94 ; relation to the Absoto future existence lute, 94, 95 ;
in time,
Herbart, 49 Herman, Mrs., Meaning of Mysticism, 181, 190 Hermetic writings, 193 Herodotus, 2 Herrmann, 196 Hesiod, 234
and Value
Hobbes, 224
Homer,
2,
133
7,
in
100-102,
Hume, 148
INDEX
Hume
Brown,
Prof., 161
251
t
Logoi in Stoicism, 18
Logos, 37, 91 Lotze, 34, 49, 80, 185, 189, 215, 231 Love (fyws), in Proclus, 76 ; in Plotinus, 139, 187, 188 ; as a daemon, 198; in Christian theology,
lamblichtis, 33, in, 148, 168, 192 Ibsen, 32 Idealism, modern, not in Plotinus,
232-234
42
Ideas, in Plato, 9, 10, 49-57 ; in Plotinus, 44, 56, 57 Immortality, 1-36. prerogative of the gods, i ; in Dionysiac religion,
Lutoslawski, 65
M
Macdonald, G., 72 MacTaggart, on reincarnation,
Maeterlinck, 32 Magic and Sorcery, 199, 200
10
n,
12
19-24, 92-103
25, 26 26, 27
;
as
Maimonides, 39 Maine de Biron, 144 Malebranche, 119 Manicheans, 31 Marcus Aurelius, II, 164, 197 Marinus, Life of Proclus, 165
Maximus
J
Mentalism, 51 Messianism, 15 Metempsychosis, see Rebirth Mill, J. S., 1 80 Molinos, 151 Monad, the, in Pythagoreans, 108 Moore, Origin and Nattire of Life t 56
Movement
(K^O-IS), in Aristotle, 10
K
Kant, 26,49,64, 69, 177, 215
64
N
Lamartine, 225
Lanier, Sidney, 102
La Rochefoucauld,
Lavater, 31 Leibnitz, 30
173
Narasu, 30 National misfortunes, indifference in Plotinus, 174, 175 Natorp, 52 Natural Laws, 78 Necessity, 121, 196 Nemesius, 34, 37 Nettleship, R. L., 125 Nicholas of Cusa, 127
Nietzsche, 178] Nirvana, 117, 191
to,
Lindsay, on Bergson, 85
Numenius, 2092
,-
Punishments,
Progress, 68 'Psychical research,'
--j
*j
,
96
52
(/cdfa/wir),
Ovid, 12
JT
Purification
i6c-i77
*
7o
51
Panaetius, Parrnenides,
n
3,
Penn,
C, 181 W.,86
^
30, 67
r2
R
^avaisson, 58
Read, Carveth,
Permanence, 64-74
Perpetuity (didtbrr,,), Q2 Personal idealism, 9,,56 5 Petrie, Flinders, 221 Philanthropy, 176, 187
ii
Reasoning (Xoyt^s), 88
Religion
in
Plotinus, 192-218
immortality,
14
on
Activity, 64-74
Phjbstratu^o^imagination
Pjndar,
3, 5,
in ar
Resurrection of the body, 15-18 ' 2I Retribution after death, 32, Richter, 41, 49, 58
HMO, 09
Spirit,
Rickaby,
Genera!
on
life
107 on beyond existence,' on beauty, 123; on th e Good, 26 on human affairs, 164 ; on state morality ,65; on suicide? 173 on mythology, 195 ; on dinow, 198; on war, 224, -on democracy,'
Pliny the Younger, 12 Plutarch, on immortality,
'Political
virtues,' 164 33, 42>
^r ^
Metaphysics,
6r,
hi
''
^ ^' ^ no
63 i8 Rogatianus, 164 Rohde, 3, 167, 197 Ross, on Aristotle, 48 Rossetti, Christina, 96 Rothe, 101, 117, I27 Royce, 146
Russell, Bertrand, 92 Ruysbroek, 73, 181
Philos Phi^l
Studies,
13,
14
S
Sabatier, Paul, 70
Porphyry,
rt^W
i6c
ame and
61-64
PnnglePattison, Prof., '185,220 on rebirth, 34; on Soul 55; on the attributes of 7o ; on categories of
the
eneca, 12
haftesbury, 217
INDEX
Shakespeare, 91, 169 Sidgwick, H., 51 Simplicius, 52
Thales, 3 Theodoret, 209 Theophilus, 16 Tibullus, 198
253
Smith, 231
Socrates, doemon of, 197 Sophocles, 234 Sorcery, 199, 200 Sotion, 12 Soul, immortality of, see Immortality;
Soul and Spirit, 91 Spencer, Herbert, 115, 116 Spinoza, 3, 27, 56, 69, 151, 161, 163, 180 reasons for choosing Spirit (vovs)
:
Time and Eternity, 101, 102 Traherne, T., 190 Transmigration, see Rebirth Trendelenberg, 49 Trinity, Christian and Neoplatonic, 193, 209, 210 Truth (dXiJfleta), 41, 75, 76, 93 Turner, A. C., 237
U
Ugly, the, 124, 216 Unconscious, the, 113 Underbill, Miss, 73, 157
this word, 37, 38 Spirit and its world the real world, 39 unity of vovs, 1/6770-1$ and vorjrd, 40-49 ; relation to the Ideas, 48-57 categories of the spiritual world, 5774 ; the spiritual world as a kingdom of values, 74-81 ; the Great Spirit and individual Spirits, 8286 life of blessed Spirits, 86-92 eternity and Spirit, 92-103
; ; ; ; ;
Values,
of,
24-31
Spirit
= TTi/eO/xa
in Christian theology,
38, 91
Stallbaum, 49 Stobaeus, 184 Stoics, on immortality, II, 12 ; on end of the world, 18 ; ethics of, 163 Substratum (viroKe'iptvov), 93 Sufis, 92 Suicide, 173 Sun-worship, 196 Suso, 169
W
Wallace, Psychology of Aristotle^ 49 Wallace, Prof., 195 Ward, Prof. J., 119 Warde Fowler, Roman Ideas of Deity t 198 Webb, C. C. J., 190, 195 Wesley, J., 144 Whichcote, B., 230 Whittaker, T., 21, 183, 193 Will in the Absolute, 113, 114 Wisdom (<ro<ta), 76, 80
199
Tagore, 225 Tarde, 240 Taylor, Prof. A. E., 52-56 Taylor, Thomas, 45 Tennyson, 36 Tension, 88 TerL'Uian, 15, 16, 171
Zeno, 52
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