"Good" is related to Act, and "One" is related to Potential. — Metaphysician Undercover
How did you get interested in Neoplatonism? — frank
I like Stirner's ideas about self-empowerment or actualization and his wariness of ideology. — praxis
And everything, yes? — praxis
I do value those "old-school" views. — ssu
Perhaps the problems of the Roman Empire can be thought with alternative history: What would have it taken for the Roman Empire to survive, perhaps until this day?
Could we have avoided the De-globalization of the Middle Ages, but just continued from Antiquity to Renaissance? The love affair Renaissance had with Antiquity seems that this could have happened. Could entrepreneurialism have been restored, perhaps creating proto-capitalism? Or for the Roman Empire to survive, would it had needed a technological edge with the Romans replacing their ballistas with culverins and cannons? The East Romans had their nafta throwers that were potent against ships, so they did innovate a bit. Would the Romans have needed some innovation in ship building and then go on to conquer the World ruling the waves of not just the Mediterranean? At least they would have the drive and the correct attitude to do that, when thinking about the martial culture of Rome. — ssu
If that's what's being explored I'm interested. — Hippyhead
If you divide something, let’s say a piece of clay, into two pieces then you will no longer have One piece of clay, you’ll have two pieces of clay. — praxis
Rather, Gus seemed to be saying that The One is other and inaccessible. — praxis
What’s there to argue, the One cannot have an other. How is it at all reasonable to claim otherwise? — praxis
No idea what this means either. — Hippyhead
If everyone everywhere understands Plotinus in his own words, then translations would be unnecessary, agreed. In such a case, you might as well post Plotinus's writing in full, and leave it at that, no need for discussion. — Hippyhead
Praxis does fall victim to a bit of lazy snarkiness sometimes, and I know, having invented that myself. :-)
But here I think he's just being concise. I'm appreciating the lack of clutter and use of everyday language. — Hippyhead
This is one of the most startling statistics in history ever: the population of the city of Rome: — ssu
I think the problem was that for rapid economic growth Rome needed to conquer new territories, plunder them and when Rome could not expand anymore, when it had no loot to bring back to Rome and new slaves to us, the whole huge standing army needed to defend the borders became a huge burden. Soldiers manning a wall in the middle of nowhere are an expense. — ssu
Indeed, so how can there be an Other as Gus seems to claim there is? — praxis
Ok thanks. So the first challenge we face in understanding Plotinus is that few if any of us likely have any idea what that means. — Hippyhead
My translation would be, anything expressed in language will immediately fall victim to the divisive nature of thought, which by it's very nature can not express whatever lies beyond division. — Hippyhead
I would assert that it is the divisive nature of thought which conceptually divides reality in to mental categories like "divine" vs."non-divine". — Hippyhead
Not at all. I claimed that it's not some other thing and you appeared to suggest that it is some other thing, that it’s Other, and One is not the Other. — praxis
Ok Gus, would you like to further explain Plotino's view on Praxis's claim above? I hope this is a relevant quote, perhaps you'd like to expand on it?
There is a supreme, totally transcendent "One", containing no division, multiplicity, or distinction; beyond all categories of being and non-being. His "One" cannot be any existing thing, nor is it merely the sum of all things, but "is prior to all existents".
— Plotino — Hippyhead
I agree that in agreeing with Praxis I'm just offering my own view of such things and not an interpretation of Plotino's view. My own view is that the observable physical reality around us is a single unified phenomena, and it's the divisive nature of thought which conceptually divides reality in to things, parts, being and non-being etc. That is, the divisions we perceive are a property of the tool (thought) being used to make the observation, and not a property of that being observed.
How might you compare this theory to that of Plotino? — Hippyhead
I'm still trying to come to terms with you being so dogmatic. — JerseyFlight
Have to comment here. The biggest change from the Roman Empire and Antiquity is the collapse of the "globalization" of agriculture, which made large cities and advanced societies impossible. If Rome had been fed from Northern Africa, Constantinople had been from the Nile delta. Once these places were lost large cities as Rome and Constantinople simply couldn't be fed by the local regions and the city populations withered away. Might have some impact on Roman culture and the rise of feudalism. — ssu
No worries. I did not take that personally, just so you know. Rather, I just wanted to be clear about my intentions here.
Cheers! — creativesoul
Understood. I've no where near enough knowledge of Plotinus to be of much help here. Just seemed like Spinoza successfully accomplished(contrary to his own aims) what Plotinus seems to have set out to do. So, I wondered if you agreed to that, trusting that you are familiar with Plotinus. Hence, my initial reply. If I had more time, I would spend some researching Plotinus, for the notion of monism interests me, despite not being able to agree with it.
:wink:
My own position demands a plurality of things. Beyond or 'beneath' that, I've no reason to believe that it is even possible for us to know much at all more about the origens of the universe. So, I stop when I've reached the limits... — creativesoul
Yes, this goes along with point 3 in my theory. However, I think this gets less tenuous as you went more North and East in away from the big Roman cities. In that case, I would gather it is more a case of 1, 2, and 4. Would you maybe agree there? — schopenhauer1
Is there something else I have not mentioned that could be a factor in the de-tribalization into that of a more hierarchical feudalism? — schopenhauer1
Perhaps economics have to do with it as well. The agricultural practice of the three-crop rotation system spread from southern Europe to North, replacing the more pastoral into an agrarian, land-based one. — schopenhauer1
Reminds me of Spinoza's Ethics, aside from the fact the Spinoza aimed at God as the source of all creation(I think) and Plotinus seemed to want to avoid all that. Seems also that Spinoza's results are in line with Plotinus' aims. — creativesoul
Many of the claims in your article are rather wild, disjointed, unsubstantiated and I was curious about what was behind them or inspired them. — praxis
It’s not like it’s some other reality or metaphysical dimension that we don’t have access to. — praxis
Nor would I agree that's it's essential that we understand what Plotinus meant. He's another writer on the forum. He's said some things which have sparked interesting discussion. All that's good. To me, the bottom line is, how useful is that discussion to participants? — Hippyhead
This way the One was complete but the Good remained a metaphysical puzzler — magritte
For what it’s worth, I couldn’t make heads or tails of the OP until I read the wiki page on Stirner. — praxis
Hadrian's war against the Jews killed hundreds of thousands. Ceasar's conquest of Gaul led to an estimated 1 ml deaths. But Charlie is the bad guy because he killed 4500 Saxon warriors? — Olivier5
Many of these barbarian kings were already Romanized to a degree, eg Theodoric. His Roman subjects loved his rule. — Olivier5
So as a path to an answer, I would say we can start somewhere in the reign of Charlemagne and the beginning of the "Holy Roman Empire" as to how Germanic tribal identity and culture were eventually replaced with feudalism. It is obviously complex and hard to pin down, but here are three things I think should be considered:
1.) The Catholic Church had no interest in competing with tribal chieftains for power and conversion. Local chieftains often had the backing of tradition (including pagan religious practices) to keep them in power. Wherever a chieftain converted to Christianity, so went the tribe. Thus converting to Christianity, often stripped away tribal privileges and rites to Christian ones, taking away local identity and replacing it with a more universal one.
2.) Charlemagne's own policies unified Germanic tribal identities. His court was filled with key positions from leaders of different tribal affiliations. He can have Saxon, Gothic, Jutes, Burgundians, all in the same court. This intermixing led to slow dissipation over probably 100 years of keeping tribal affiliations intact in favor of hereditary identification only.
3.) Roman Law- With the integration of Germanic tribes into the Roman political and military system, these Germans became more Romanized. This in itself, could have diminished the identity with tribe for identity with a territory or legal entity. Thus various Germanic "dux" (dukes) within the Roman Empire were already in place along Spain and southern France (as were ancestors of Charlemagne). Being incorporated in a multi-ethnic Empire itself could diminish the fealty towards local affiliation with any one tribe. With the Church's help in keeping records in monasteries and libraries, these leaders retained Roman law far into the Holy Roman Empire's reign.
4.) Nobility transfer by kings- Since the unification of Charlemagne, there was a conference of land and title from top-down sources. As local tribal kings (chieftains?) were quashed during the wars of Charlemagne, he then doled out titles of land (dukes and counts) to those he favored, thus diminishing the local identity of leadership further. — schopenhauer1
are you just demonstrating to frank, how bad it feels to get downvoted, and normally you wouldn't post plain thumbs? — Jarmo
I think it might be beneficial if up and down voting were added to the forum so people could get a better sense of how their posts are perceived by others.
If only temporarily? — frank
Good Luck, It's a well-written piece of work and in the end I did agree with you — TheMadFool
Even among humans there's a gradation in intelligence that matches the gradation in morality. Apart from the familiar trope of hyper-intelligent super-villains in comics and movies, most philosophers, scientists, mathematicians, most scholars, who make up the brains of society are, well, good people. When was the last time you heard of a scandal involving a philosopher? Even if you did, it's rare, very rare indeed.
The greatest virtue should be your own well-being.
— Gus Lamarch
At this point I'd like to call on stage the notion of altruism by which I mean taking an interest in the well-being of others. There are two forms altruism can take that don't differ in terms of outcomes - both forms manifest as being good to others - but they're different nonetheless - different in their rationale.
One form of altruism I'll refer to as my altruism - she is my wife, he is my friend, this is my family, community, town, city, state, country, world, and last but not the least, universe.. This type of altruism is a case of one's ego expanding itself to include other things like those I mentioned above. In essence this is still egoism because the other people/things you care about have value only because of their association to you.
The other kind of altruism is what I call your altruism - I am your husband, I am your friend, I am your son, I am your citizen, your tenant (of the universe). In yours altruism you submit yourself to someone else's ego and this type of altruism can be taken to the extreme - to the point where your ego completely disappears from the set of equations that describe reality.
Since the outcomes are indistinguishable betwen these two varieties of altruism, from a consequentialist standpoint, egoism seems compatible with virtue and morality and if you really look at it my egoism makes more sense than your egoism because in the former case everyone benefits but in the latter there's someone who doesn't, viz you. — TheMadFool
The more we try to define unity the farther we travel from it, because definitions are by their nature divisive. — Hippyhead
Ancient texts is just some guy like us sharing his opinion at a time now long past. — Hippyhead
The reason I suggested using the word space to describe "The One" is that doing so translates an abstract religious sounding concept in to a tangible property of the natural world. Much of the language traditionally used to discuss such things was developed long before science came to dominate our culture. Translations may be helpful in reaching modern audiences. — Hippyhead
Oh is that why he went to Rome to be sacred emperor by the pope? You're being ridiculous. — Olivier5
Charlemagne lived in a period that even the ashes of the ancient flame of Rome had already been forgotten; — Gus Lamarch
We're exactly at this stage now, I think: the system is already dead but we can't see it yet. — Olivier5
I am not talking about widespread extermination of the Roman population. What I say is that with the Roman population growth decreasing since the 2th century, and with the growth of the Germanic population, and soon after, with the barbarian invasions of the Roman Empire, the culture, values, morals, traditions, taboos, etc. of the Romans died and were supplanted by medieval Germanic European culture - Charlemagne lived in a period that even the ashes of the ancient flame of Rome had already been forgotten; the Byzantine Empire was already seen as a "Greek Empire" and not important at all for the events in Western Europe -. Independent Roman culture died at the end of the 4th century with its Empire.
Why do you think Charlemagne was recognized as "Pater Europae" and "Augustus Romanum gubernans Imperium" - "Father of Europe" and "August Emperor, governing the Roman Empire" respectively - Because he rekindle that lost memory that the whole land where they lived - the Germanic barbarians - had once been something incredibly glorious and splendor, something that had been completely forgotten by the masses of the barbarian population. — Gus Lamarch
The Salian Franks, of which Charlemagne was a descendent, fought on Rome's side against Atilla. — Olivier5