Particular entities thus attain their Magnitude through being drawn out by the power of the Existents which mirror themselves and make space for themselves in them. And no violence is required to draw them into all the diversity of Shapes and Kinds because the phenomenal All exists by Matter [by Matter’s essential all-receptivity] and because each several Idea, moreover, draws Matter its own way by the power stored within itself, the power it holds from the Intellectual Realm. Matter is manifested in this sphere as Mass by the fact that it mirrors the Absolute Magnitude; Magnitude here is the reflection in the mirror. The Ideas meet all of necessity in Matter [the Ultimate of the emanatory progress]: and Matter, both as one total thing and in its entire scope, must submit itself, since it is the Material of the entire Here, not of any one determined thing: what is, in its own character, no determined thing may become determined by an outside force – though, in becoming thus determined, it does not become the definite thing in question, for thus it would lose its own characteristic indetermination. Enneads: III VI. 17
Fenômeno
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,10 (III,6,10) — A matéria não sofre alteração
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,11 (III,6,11) — Em que sentido a matéria má, participa do Bem
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,12 (III,6,12) — Sequência da reflexão sobre a “participação impassível”
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,13 (III,6,13) — Em que sentido a matéria “foge da forma”
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,14 (III,6,14) — Existência da matéria; interpretação alegórica do mito de Poros e Penia
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,15 (III,6,15) — As formas estão na matéria como as representações na alma
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,16 (III,6,16) — A matéria e a dimensão: o problema da grandeza
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,17 (III,6,17) — Sequência do exame da grandeza material
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,18 (III,6,18) — Sequência e fim do exame da grandeza material
- MacKenna: Tratado 26,19 (III,6,19) — Em que sentido compreender que a matéria seja comparada a uma “mãe”