MEMORY IS NOT AS HIGH AS UNREFLECTIVE IDENTIFICATION.
4. In the intelligible world, the soul sees the Good by intelligence; for intelligence does not hinder her from arriving to the Good. Between the soul and the Good, the intermediary is not the body, which could be no more than an obstacle; for if the bodies can ever serve as intermediaries, it would only be in the process of descending from the first principles to third rank entities. When the soul occupies herself with inferior objects, she possesses what she wished to possess conformably to her memory and imagination. Consequently memory, even should it apply itself to the very best things, is not the best thing possible; for it consists not only in feeling that one remembers, but also in finding oneself in a disposition conformable to the affections, to the earlier intuitions which are remembered. Now it may happen that a soul possesses something unconsciously, so that she possesses it better than if she were conscious thereof. In fact, when she is conscious thereof, she possesses it like something foreign to her, and from which she is keeping herself distinct; when, on the contrary, she is unconscious of it she becomes what she possesses; and it is especially this latter kind of memory which can most thoroughly effect her degradation (when she conforms herself to sense-objects, by applying her imagination thereto).
INTELLIGIBLE ENTITIES ARE NOT MERELY IMAGES, BUT POTENTIALITIES FOR MEMORY.
That the soul, on leaving the intelligible world, brings away with her memories thereof, implies that even in the (intelligible) world she to a certain degree already possessed memory; but this potentiality was eclipsed by the thought of the intelligible entities. It would be absurd to insist that the latter existed in the soul in the condition of simple images; on the contrary, they there constituted an (intellectual) potentiality which later passed into the condition of actualization. Whenever the soul happens to cease applying herself to the contemplation of intelligible entities she no longer sees what she formerly saw (that is, sense-objects).
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 36) – NOTHING IN THE UNIVERSE IS ENTIRELY INANIMATE (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 37) – CONSCIOUSNESS DEPENDS ON CHOOSING (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 38) – PRODUCTION IS DUE TO SOME PHYSICAL SOUL, NOT TO ANY ASTROLOGICAL POWER (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 39) – ASTROLOGICAL SIGNS ARE ONLY CONCATENATIONS FROM UNIVERSAL REASON (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 40) – MAGIC OCCURS BY LOVE WORKING AS SYMPATHY (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 41) – HOW PRAYERS ARE ANSWERED (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 42) – AS THE STARS ANSWER PRAYERS UNCONSCIOUSLY, THEY DO NOT NEED MEMORIES THEREFOR (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 43) – HOW THE WISE MAN ESCAPES ALL ENCHANTMENTS (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 44) – MAGIC HAS POWER OVER MAN BY HIS AFFECTIONS AND WEAKNESSES (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 45) – EVERY BEING THEREFORE IS A SPECIALIZED ORGAN OF THE UNIVERSE (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 5) – INTELLIGIBLE ENTITIES RETURN, NOT BY MEMORY, BUT BY FURTHER VISION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 6-17) – Nos astros, no demiurgo e na alma do mundo, não há memória (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 6) – MEMORY IS LIMITED TO SOULS THAT CHANGE THEIR CONDITION (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 7) – THESE SOULS DO NOT REMEMBER GOD; FOR THEY CONTINUE TO SEE HIM (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 8) – MANY NEW THINGS ARE UNNOTICED; NOTHING FORCES THE PERCEPTION OF NEW THINGS (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4, 9) – DOES JUPITER’S ROYAL ADMINISTRATION IMPLY A USE OF MEMORY? (Guthrie)
- Tratado 28 (IV, 4) – Questions About the Soul. (Second Part.) (Guthrie)