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         Plotinus:     more books (100)
  1. The Origin of Western Mysticism: Selected Writings of Plotinus (Classics of Mystical Literature Series)
  2. Plotinus on the Beautiful by Stephen MacKenna, 2010-05-22
  3. The Real Meaning of Plotinus's Intelligible World: A Paper Read to the Aquinas Society of London on February 23, 1949 by A. H. Armstrong, 1949
  4. Plotinus on the Soul: A Study in the Metaphysics of Knowledge by Jennifer Yhap, 2003-04
  5. Plotinus: Ennead V. 1 on the Three Principal Hypostases (Oxford Classical Monographs) by Michael Atkinson, 1983-12-15
  6. The Symposium: With Essays on the Dialogue by Plotinus by Plato, 2002
  7. The Influence Of Plotinus Traced In Dante by Stephen MacKenna, 2006-09-15
  8. Plotinus on Self: The Philosophy of the 'We' by Pauliina Remes, 2007-10-08
  9. The Influence Of Plotinus Traced In Spenser by Stephen MacKenna, 2006-09-15
  10. Plotinus On The Beautiful And On Intelligible Beauty by Plotinus, 2010-05-22
  11. Collected Writings of Plotinus (Thomas Taylor Series) by Plotinus, 1994-05
  12. Plotinus III by A. H. Armstrong (translated by), 1967-01-01
  13. Platonism Pagan and Christian: Studies in Plotinus and Augustine (Variorum Collected Studies Series, 719) by Gerard O'Daly, 2001-10
  14. The Influence Of Plotinus Traced In Tennyson by Stephen MacKenna, 2006-09-15

81. Hadot, Pierre: Plotinus Or The Simplicity Of Vision
Hadot, Pierre plotinus or the Simplicity of Vision, university pressbooks, shopping cart, new release notification.
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Hadot, Pierre Plotinus or the Simplicity of Vision . Translated by Michael Chase. With an Introduction by Arnold I. Davidson. Frontispiece, xii, 138 p., 1 halftone. 1994 Paper $13.00tx 0-226-31194-5 Spring 1998 Table of Contents
Translator's Preface
Abbreviations Used in References
Introduction: Reading Hadot Reading Plotinus by Arnold I. Davidson 1: Portrait 2: Levels of the Self 3: Presence 4: Love 5: Virtues 6: Gentleness 7: Solitude Postface to the Third Edition Chronological Biography Analytical Bibliography References Index of Plotinian Quotations Index Subjects:
  • Classical Studies Philosophy: History and Classic Works
The University of Chicago Press You may purchase this title at these fine bookstores . Outside the USA, consult our international information page File last modified on 3/10/2003. Questions about this title? email sales@press.uchicago.edu Email questions about books or availability to sales@press.uchicago.edu or questions about order status to custserv@press.uchicago.edu

82. The Cambridge Companion To Plotinus
at UTPJOURNALS.com. The Cambridge Companion to plotinus. Lloyd P.Gerson. Cambridge University Press 1996. xiv, 462. us$64.95 cloth
http://www.utpjournals.com/product/utq/681/plotinus54.html
Published in University of Toronto Quarterly - Volume 68 Number 1, Winter 1997/98- Letters in Canada. To see more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS online at UTPJOURNALS.com The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus
L loyd P. Gerson. Cambridge University Press 1996. xiv, 462. us$64.95 cloth, us$19.95 paper
Reviewed in University of Toronto Quarterly Volume 68, Number 1 Winter 1998/99- Letters in Canada 1997 Robert Todd
The editor and four of the contributors are Canadian, a tribute to the remarkable way in which the study of Greek philosophy has taken root here in recent decades. But the next generation of Canadian Plotinians, if there is to be one, will need to be nurtured by more accessible guides than the present `companion.' Now that our sadly ailing classics departments have largely abandoned the study of ancient philosophy, that generation can be drawn only from students specializing in philosophy. Their needs and interests might have been more effectively addressed in the present volume.

83. Launching-Points To The Realm Of The Mind
LaunchingPoints to the Realm of Mind. An Introduction to the Neoplatonic Philosophyof plotinus. Translated by Kenneth Guthrie. Introduction by Michael Hornum.
http://www.phanes.com/laupoi.html
Porphyry's
Launching-Points to the
Realm of Mind
An Introduction to the
Neoplatonic Philosophy
of Plotinus
Translated by Kenneth Guthrie
Introduction by Michael Hornum
Porphyry (circa 233-305 A.D.) is one of the most fascinating figures in the history of Western philosophy. A disciple of Plotinus, he was responsible for editing and transmitting the writings of his great master, and was a brilliant philosopher in his own right. Porphyry authored a great number and variety of philosophical works, many of which have either been lost or destroyed. Among these writings are a detailed treatise on vegetarianism (he considers the question both pro and con), several important metaphysical expositions, as well as a unique contribution to the science of textual criticism, Against the Christians , in which he correctly demonstrated that "The Book of Daniel" was a late forgery of the Maccabean period. This book is a summary of the teachings of the great Neoplatonic philosopher Plotinus and deals with the nature of incorporeal principles in the realm of Mind or Spirit. Porphyry shows how the realm of Mind, because it is nowhere, not being limited by time or space, is present everywhere — as Michael Hornum notes in his introduction, "Our higher self does not lie within us, as if an internal organ, or hover somewhere about the galaxy, but is present to each of us with an intimacy closer than any corporeal thing can have." Both Porphyry's text and Hornum's introduction invite the reader, in the words of Plotinus, "to wake to another mode of seeing, which every man has but which few men use."

84. Plotinus, Enneads II 5
Welcome to my web site, on the 'plotinus, Enneads II 5' page! plotinus,Treatise 25 On Potentiality and Actuality. (Enneads II. 5).
http://www.cosmin-andron.com/research/plotinus25.htm
Ph.D. [ Plotinus, Enneads II 5 ] Neoplatonism Online
Plotinus, Treatise : On Potentiality and Actuality Enneads II. 5)
-English edition with introduction, Greek text, translation, notes and commentary-
In the first half of the '90s a group of Irish scholars -who later created the The Centre for the Study of the Platonic Tradition - worked on Plotinus' Treatise 25 Enn . II. 5) with the intention of creating an edition of it. Although much discussion over a number of years took place, on paper their design was never followed through. In 2000, when I was approached by Professor John Dillon, the dossier contained a translation of the treatise (of which only the translation of chapter 3 done by Prof. Dillon's was original while the others were adapted versions of MacKeena or Armstrong's translations). The dossier contained notes ranging from the very brief to the more elaborate and included the draft of a chapter of the introduction by Prof. John J. Cleary (a draft later to become: 'Powers that be': the concept of potency in Plato and Aristotle published in Methexis XI / 1998 pp.19-64) and the draft of the opening of another chapter from the introduction by Prof. John Dillon.

85. THE SYSTEM
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ASTROLOGY. By JohnK Hammelton. THE SYSTEM OF plotinus.plotinus Christianity. plotinus was born in Egypt about AD 204.
http://www.soultrek.com/system.html
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ASTROLOGY
By JohnK Hammelton
THE SYSTEM OF PLOTINUS
It is said that Plotinus bridged the gap between Eastern religions and Western thought. His work is thoroughly grounded in Greek philosophy, and his debt to Plato is without question. But Plotinus' great contribution to philosophy was inspired through his own interior experiences. This 'inner illumination' became the means of explicating the architecture of the universe, which is but a reflection or image of the divine within every human soul. THE SYSTEM The ONE has a strange characteristic about it. It cannot be known. Its nature transcends all the knowable, hence we cannot properly attach any name to it. We are only able to speak of what it is not, not what it is: "We do not grasp it by knowledge," Plotinus says, "but that does not mean that we are utterly void of it; we hold it not so as to state it, but so as to be able to speak about it. . . unable to state it we may still possess it."6 What Plotinus seems to be saying is that the ONE is too near to us to become an object for our thought, and when we try to make it an object, we fall away from it. As he says, "We hover about it trying to interpret our own feelings about the ONE, sometimes drawing near and sometimes falling away in our own complexities about it."7 The ONE is a cause only in that its perfection implies an act, and the most perfect form of expressive act is thought or Intellection. In other words, perfection is not something that comes out of nothing; as a process it must be active or it could not become what it is. Perfection, as an active process, is realized as a product of thought.

86. Plotinus Texts
plotinus. Texts Enneads. Related Resources. • Texts and Translations Index.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_text_plotinus_enneads.htm
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Plotinus Texts - Enneads Related Resources Texts and Translations Index
Enneads 1
Enneads 2 Enneads 3 ... Enneads 6 Recent Discussions Ancient/Classical History Join these forum conversations Greek nouns in Latin Architect of the Roman Empire (Augustus) Friends Start a chat now! Subscribe to the Ancient/Classical History Newsletter Name Email Email this page! Sponsored Links Search Census Records - Free with Registration Genealogy.com provides beginners and experts with a wealth of tools, information, and advice to get you started or get past the stumbling blocks in your family search. http://www.genealogy.com/

87. PLOTINUS
P plotinus Greek philosopher born 205 AD in Egypt, author of the Enneads.Also see plotinus links Enneads. Return to Ancient History Glossary.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_plotinus.htm
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P
PLOTINUS Greek philosopher born 205 AD in Egypt, author of the Enneads Also see: Plotinus links
Enneads
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88. - LLibrary - Plotinus
../Llibrary plotinus. . The Six Enneads . back. A B C D E F G H I J K L M NO P Q R S Sh T U V W X Y Z. Computers Mathematics Movie Scripts Philosophy.
http://www.vet.bg.ac.yu/~vana/Library/p/plotinus.htm

89. Theosophy Library Online - Great Teacher Series - PLOTINUS
plotinus. The bonds of human fate are loosed for you plotinus was onesuch disciple. Holding that the personal history of the human form
http://theosophy.org/tlodocs/teachers/Plotinus.htm
PLOTINUS
The bonds of human fate are loosed for you, and, strong of heart, you beat your eager way from out the roaring tumult of this fleshly life to the shores of that wave-washed coast, free from the thronging of the guilty, thence to take the grateful path of the sinless soul. THE DELPHIC ORACLE
Creativity and decadence were mingled in a mixture of anticipation and apprehension in Alexandria during the second and third centuries of this era. Philosophers and theologians taught and fought over every conceivable metaphysical and practical issue, at once supporting a freedom of mind seldom known in recorded history while also offering fantastic forms of escape from the radical parameters of the human condition. Magicians and monks, emperors and entrepreneurs flooded Alexandria's streets and lecture halls with promises and predictions. Some preached the imminent end of the world, and indeed the doom of the Roman imperium was already in evidence. Others offered little more than imported potions to satisfy the hedonistic pursuits of those who sought surcease from the world's endless, weary round. Not all, however, were caught up in the contest between fatalism and salvationism. A few men and women of noble mind and compassionate heart sought out the inner meaning of forces and events and translated their lasting discoveries into words and deeds based on ethical understanding and metaphysical awareness. Ammonius Saccas

90. A.B.E. Marketing >> KSI¡¯KI >> SZUKAJ >> AUTOR :: "plotinus"
saur Jestesmy wylacznym przedstawicielem wydawnictwa KG.SAUR wiecej . KSIAZKI SZUKAJ AUTOR plotinus . wszedzie w wynikach wyszukiwania.
http://www.abe.com.pl/html/polish/search.php?autname=plotinus

91. Aesthetics - Plotinus
plotinus. plotinus' works were edited and collected by Porphyry into six booksof nine chapters each, known as the Enneads (Greek for The Nines ).
http://www2.rowan.edu/philosop/clowney/Aesthetics/philos_artists_onart/plotinus.
Plotinus
A main channel through whom Plato's ideas influenced the middle ages, Plotinus (204-270 CE) and his disciple Porphyry combined Plato's rationalism with mysticism to produce a powerfully influential version of neo-Platonism. Plotinus' works were edited and collected by Porphyry into six books of nine chapters each, known as the Enneads (Greek for "The Nines"). Plato had suggested, in Book VI of the Republic , that the Form of the Good was supreme in the world of the Forms. In fact, he said, What gives truth to the objects of knowledge, and to the knowing mind the power to know, is the Form of the Good. As it is the cause of knowledge and truth, think of it also as being the object of knowledge. Both knowledge and truth are beautiful, but you will be right to think of the Good as other and more beautiful than they. As in the visible world light and sight are rightly considered sunlike, but it is wrong to think of them as the sun, so here it is right to think of knowledge and truth as Good-like, but wrong to think of either as the Good, for the Good must be honored even more than they. ... [A]s for the objects of knowledge, not only is their being known due to the Good, but also their real being, though the Good is not being but superior to and beyond being in dignity and power" ( Republic The Enneads contain a chapter on Beauty (I.6) which was highly influential in the Middle Ages. After considering other theories of what beauty is, Plotinus concludes that it is formal Unity. When diverse or similar parts are unified by one form, the Soul recognizes and takes pleasure in the form of Unity. This may happen when we view a painting or a sculpture, listen to a piece of music, or follow an elegant mathematical proof. In all these cases, we are drawn toward Unity, and the form of Beauty Itself. We must get there by stages: like people emerging from a dark cave into sunlight, we must become accustomed to the light. In the following passage, Plotinus combines ideas from Plato's allegory of the Cave with themes from the

92. Plotinus (ad 204/5-70)
plotinus (ad 204/570). plotinus Stoicism. plotinus developed a metaphysicsof intelligible causes of the sensible world and the human soul.
http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/rep/A090.htm
Plotinus ( ad
Plotinus was the founder of Neoplatonism, the dominant philosophical movement of the Graeco-Roman world in late antiquity, and the most significant thinker of the movement. He is sometimes described as the last great pagan philosopher.His writings, the so called Enneads
  • Life and writings General characteristics The One and the hierarchy of principles ... Influence
  • 1. Life and writings
    We possess a fairly reliable account of Plotinus' life and writings by Porphyry , his student and editor. Porphyry composed a biography, On the Life of Plotinus and the Order of his Books , which prefaced his posthumous edition of Plotinus' writings. At the age of twenty eight Plotinus began his philosophical studies in Alexandria under a certain Ammonius (often called Ammonius Saccas, and not to be confused with Ammonius the teacher of or with Ammonius, son of Hermeas ) and studied with him for several years. After making a futile attempt at a journey to the East in order to acquaint himself with the philosophy of Persia and India, he settled in Rome at the age of forty. He established a school in Rome and stayed there except during his final illness. The extant corpus of Plotinus' writings is one of the largest we have of any ancient philosopher, and we probably possess everything he wrote. His works are treatises, written in Greek, that grew out of discussions in his school, and vary greatly in length and scope. Porphyry arranged the treatises according to subject matter into six 'enneads' - six sets of nine treatises. In order to arrive at this division he had to split some treatises. Conventionally, references to the

    93. Welcome To Kessinger Publishing's Rare Philosophy, Masonic And Freemasonry Books
    LLC. SEARCH RESULTS BY SUBJECT plotinus - (7 TITLES FOUND). BOOK TITLE,AUTHOR. plotinus on the Beautiful (1908), MacKenna, Stephen. plotinus
    http://www.kessinger-publishing.com/searchresults_subject.lasso?Category=Plotinu

    94. Salvation And The Human Ideal: Plato, Plotinus, Origen
    Salvation and the Human Ideal Plato, plotinus, Origen1. By EdwardMoore. proteus28@juno.com. Introduction. When desire. plotinus.
    http://www.newplatonism.homestead.com/files/Salvatio.html
    Salvation and the Human Ideal: Plato, Plotinus, Origen
    By Edward Moore
    proteus28@juno.com
    Introduction
    When we study Platonism, we are studying the history of the realization of an ideal. This ideal is the virtuous human being; and the history of this ideal is a salvation history. Philosophy did not begin with Platonism, but it did attain a self-knowledge, a reflective understanding of what it means to love wisdom, through the influence of the doctrines and problems (mostly through the problems) introduced by Plato. The Pre-Socratic philosophers were called phusikoi , which means that they were concerned primarily with the natural world. Aristotle, in Book A of the Metaphysics , tells us that this concern with the natural world was born of a certain awe or wonderment experienced by the observant, thinking human being, and that this awe is the cause or origin of philosophy. However, it is my view that the guiding spirit of the philosophical enterprise, from the very beginning (and even, perhaps, before what we call philosophy came upon the scene of history) was a concern with and an anxiety over the status of the human being in this ‘wondrous’ world. Nature is only awesome because it affects a being that is, at base, capable of being affected – and of

    95. Lt-Antiq: Re: Plotinus And Eastern Religions
    Re plotinus and Eastern Religions. Subject Re plotinus and Eastern ReligionsFrom ruthlewin (ruthlewin@ONE.NET.AU) Date Mon Oct 30 2000 214159 EST.
    http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu:8080/hyper-lists/lt-antiq/00-11-01/0070.html
    Re: Plotinus and Eastern Religions
    Date view Thread view Subject view Author view Subject: Re: Plotinus and Eastern Religions
    From: ruthlewin ( ruthlewin@ONE.NET.AU
    Date: Mon Oct 30 2000 - 21:41:59 EST You might find the following collection useful:
    R. Baines Harris (ed.), *Neoplatonism and Indian Thought,* State University
    of New York Press, 1982.
    Ruth Lewin
    School of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies
    University of Sydney
    NSW 2006
    Australia
    vance@U.WASHINGTON.EDU
    LT-ANTIQ@VM.SC.EDU LISTSERV@VM.SC.EDU or, if you experience difficulties, LT-ANTIQ-request@VM.SC.EDU To leave the list, send a SIGNOFF LT-ANTIQ command to LISTSERV@VM.SC.EDU or, if you experience difficulties, write to: LT-ANTIQ-request@VM.SC.EDU Date view Thread view Subject view ... Other Lists This archive was generated by hypermail 2b28critmail on Wed Nov 01 2000 - 00:00:04 EST

    96. Plotinus
    plotinus. plotinus An Introduction to the Enneads by Dominic J. O'Meara OxfordUniversity Press $15.95, paper; 142 pages ISBN 019-875147-8 cloth edition
    http://www.wordtrade.com/plotinus.htm
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    Plotinus
    PLOTINUS or the Simplicity of Vision by Pierre Hadot, Michael Chase (Translator), ($13.00, paperback, 152 pages Reprint edition, University of Chicago Press, ISBN: 0226311945) The Roman philosopher Plotinus (c. 205-70) is perhaps best known today for his doctrine of self-transformation through contemplation: "Never stop sculpting your own statue, until the godlike splendor of virtue shines forth to you." Since its publication in France in 1963 and through subsequent editions both there and abroad, Pierre Hadot's lively philosophical portrait of Plotinus has established itself as the preeminent introduction to the man and his thought. Michael Chase's lucid translation complete with a useful chronology and analytical bibliography-at last makes this book available to the English-speaking world. Hadot carefully examines Plotinus' views on the self, existence, love, virtue, gentleness, and solitude. He shows that Plotinus, like other philosophers of his day, believed that Plato and Aristotle had already articulated the essential truths; for him, the purpose of practicing philosophy was not to profess new truths but to engage in spiritual exercises so as to live philosophically. Seen in this light, Plotinus' counsel against fixation on the body and all earthly matters stemmed not from disgust or fear, but rather from his awareness of the negative effect that bodily preoccupation and material concern could have on spiritual exercises.

    97. Plotinus - Milestones In World History- World History Timeline Chart
    plotinus. (AD 204269). ©Interfoto München plotinus developed a metaphysicsof intelligible causes of the sensible world and the human soul.
    http://users.pandora.be/worldhistory/pages/plotinus.htm
    Plotinus
    (AD 204-269)
    See also:Neoplatonism Further reading
    O'Meara, D.J. (1993) Plotinus: An Introduction to the Enneads , Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Highly recommended introduction to Plotinus; contains a good bibliography.)
    Plotinus(c.AD 20566) Enneads ,trans. A.H. Armstrong, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press and London: Heinemann, 1966-88.(Based on the authoritative editions of P Henry and H.-R. Schwyzer, with minor modifications; Greek text with English translation.) Written by
    Source: Concise Routledge Dictionary of Philosophy Online texts
    Enneads

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