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
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
It’s not like it’s some other reality or metaphysical dimension that we don’t have access to.
— praxis
This is practically what Plotino claims the One is. If you disagree, that is a matter of opinion, but if it is about Plotinus' philosophy, it is a misinterpretation. — Gus Lamarch
It’s not like it’s some other reality or metaphysical dimension that we don’t have access to — Praxis
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
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
The One is not the Other, obviously.
— praxis
So you can joke? — Gus Lamarch
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
The One, as comprehended by Plotinus is a "metaphysics of radical transcendence that extends beyond being and intellection." — Gus Lamarch
For the mere fact of attributing it to a finite concept - Is - we are no longer talking about the One, but to something less than it.
Plotinus, using a venerable analogy, likens the One to the Sun which emanates light indiscriminately without thereby diminishing itself, or reflection in a mirror which in no way diminishes or otherwise alters the object being reflected.
Plotinus asserted the ultimately divine nature of material creation — Gus Lamarch
I claimed that it's not some other thing and you appeared to suggest that it is some other thing, — 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
I claimed that it's not some other thing and you appeared to suggest that it is some other thing,
— praxis
What if "things" don't actually exist but are instead conceptual inventions of the human mind?
When does a glass of water you drink become you? We could reasonably draw that boundary in any number of places, which illustrates that boundaries are convenient human conceptual creations. And if boundaries aren't real, things aren't either. And then we're left with the real world being a single unified phenomena. The One? — Hippyhead
Indeed, so how can there be an Other as Gus seems to claim there is? — praxis
This part is less complex than it appears to be. Plotinus is claiming that the "proper name" - if I may put it so - of the One is enough to conceive all of its abstraction. — Gus Lamarch
It is a good description of the same concept that Plotinus is conceptualizing, but I think it unnecessary — Gus Lamarch
but you forgot that the very nature of the intellect is already something less than the One, so we cannot fully comprehend it. — Gus Lamarch
What’s there to argue, the One cannot have an other. — praxis
Yeah Praxis, you really didn't understand anything, and worse, you don't even try to argue for your wrong point. — Gus Lamarch
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
What’s there to argue, the One cannot have an other. How is it at all reasonable to claim otherwise? — praxis
the One cannot have an other — praxis
The purpose of this discussion was practically to resolve why people confused the concept of the One of Plotinus with the theistic concept of God. — Gus Lamarch
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
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
The point is that the One of this hypothetical "clay" would be the entire soil of the Earth. — Gus Lamarch
And everything, yes? — praxis
How did you get interested in Neoplatonism? — frank
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