autores:ttaylor:taylor:8
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision | |||
| autores:ttaylor:taylor:8 [06/01/2026 18:16] – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1 | autores:ttaylor:taylor:8 [06/01/2026 18:16] (current) – ↷ Page moved and renamed from autores:ttaylor:taylor:taylor-plotino-8:start to autores:ttaylor:taylor:8 mccastro | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| + | ===== Introdução a Plotino (8) ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | And thus much for the life of Plotinus, who was a philosopher pre-eminently distinguished for the strength and profundity of his intellect, and the purity and elevation of his life. He was a being wise without the usual mixture of human darkness, and great without the general combination of human weakness and imperfection. He seems to have left the orb of light solely for the benefit of mankind; that he might teach them how to repair the ruin contracted by their exile from good, and how to return to their true country, and legitimate kindred and allies. I do not mean that he descended into mortality, for the purpose of unfolding the sublimest truths to the vulgar part of mankind; for this would have been a vain and ridiculous attempt ; since the eyes of the multitude, as Plato justly observes, are not strong enough to look to truth. But he came as a guide to the few who are born with a divine destiny (theia moira) ; and are straggling to gain the lost region of light, but know not how to break the fetters by which they are detained: who are impatient to leave the obscure cavern of sense, where all is delusion and shadow, and to ascend to the realms of intellect, where all is substance and reality. | ||
| + | |||
| + | This very extraordinary man also appears to have been the first of the Platonic philosophers, | ||
| + | |||
| + | This likewise appears to he the peculiarity of the philosophy of Plotinus, that it considered all the above-mentioned orders, all true beings that are superior to soul, and the multiform variety of ideas, or paradigms of things, as comprehended in one supreme intellect, which it denominates the intelligible world, and as there subsisting in impartible union, without any specific distinction. Hence Plotinus was more anxiously employed in profoundly investigating the nature of this divine world, than in scientifically unfolding the order of the beings it contains. Indeed, his genius on every subject seems to have been more adapted to an intimate perception of the occult essence of a thing, than to an explanation of its gradual evolution, and a description of the mode of its participations. However, though he did not develops the more particular progressions of true beings, yet he inserted the principles of this sublime investigation in his writings; and laid the foundation of that admirable and beautiful system, which was gradually revealed by succeeding Platonists, and at last received its perfection by the acute, accurate, and elegant genius of Proclus. | ||
