G. What are the conditions of the operation of memory and imagination?
- cosmic questions about memory depend on exact definition of what memory is.
- memory inapplicable except to beings subject to limitations of time.
- there is a timeless memory consisting of self-consciousness.
- definition of memory depends on whether it belongs to the soul or organism.
- the psychology of sensation.
- in any case memory is peculiar to the soul and body
- that the soul is incarnate is not the cause of her possessing memory.
- memory belongs to the soul alone.
- memory belongs both to the divine soul, and to that derived from the world-soul.
- what the rational soul, if separated, would remember of life.
- memory does not belong to appetite, because it may be reduced to sensation.
- what appetite keeps is an affection, but not a memory.
- memory does not belong to the faculty of sensation.
- memory does not belong exclusively to the power of perception.
- memory is not identical with feeling or reasoning.
- memory belongs to imagination.
- intellectual conceptions are not entirely preserved by imagination.
- the two kinds of memory imply two kinds of imagination.
- of the two imaginations one always predominates or overshadows the other.
- partition of the fund of memory between the two souls.
GUTHRIE, K. S. Plotinus: Complete Works: In Chronological Order, Grouped in Four Periods. [single Volume, Unabridged]. [s.l.] CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2017.
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 26) – THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SENSATION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 27) – MEMORY BELONGS BOTH TO THE DIVINE SOUL, AND TO THAT DERIVED FROM THE WORLD-SOUL (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 28) – MEMORY DOES NOT BELONG TO APPETITE (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 29) – MEMORY DOES NOT BELONG TO THE FACULTY OF SENSATION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 3) — Consciousness of some part of the body to the whole consciousness? (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 30) – INTELLECTUAL CONCEPTIONS ARE NOT ENTIRELY PRESERVED BY IMAGINATION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 31) – THE TWO KINDS OF MEMORY IMPLY TWO KINDS OF IMAGINATION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 4) — Intellectual difficulty of the soul being one and yet in all beings. (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 5) — Souls retain both their unity and differences on different levels. (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 6) — Why should creation be predicated of the universal soul and not of the human? (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 7) — Difference between individual and universal souls. (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 8) — Sympathy between individual and universal soul comes from common source. (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 9-17) – Descida das Almas aos Corpos (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3, 9) – TWO KINDS OF TRANSMIGRATION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 27 (IV, 3) – Psychological Questions. (Guthrie)