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PLOTINUS Ennead I.8 on the Nature and Source of Evil
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PLOTINUS Ennead I.8 on the Nature and Source of Evil

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Ennead I.8 was written not long before Plotinus' death in 270 AD, at a time when he was particularly concerned with ethical issues. The treatise' primary purpose is to argue that evil is not intrinsic to the soul, but since Plotinus always considers ethical issues within a metaphysical framework, it includes an account of the ontological status of matter. Plotinus does his best to preserve a belief in the dependence of all things on a single, supremely good First Principle while admitting that there is evil in the world. He offers a subtle account of the origin of evil in the soul as caused not by either the soul or matter on its own but by the combination of the two. Sheppard shows how Plotinus is responding to ideas found in Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and Middle Platonism as well as to the challenge presented by Gnosticism, and argues that the views expressed in I.8 are not inconsistent with what Plotinus has to say about matter and its generation elsewhere. She further considers the criticisms of Plotinus' views put forward by Proclus and concludes that, despite its weaknesses, Plotinus' account remains an ingenious attempt to defend monism and the essential goodness of the soul while recognizing the existence of evils.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Parmenides Publishing
Country
United States
Date
14 August 2025
Pages
198
ISBN
9798988320128

Ennead I.8 was written not long before Plotinus' death in 270 AD, at a time when he was particularly concerned with ethical issues. The treatise' primary purpose is to argue that evil is not intrinsic to the soul, but since Plotinus always considers ethical issues within a metaphysical framework, it includes an account of the ontological status of matter. Plotinus does his best to preserve a belief in the dependence of all things on a single, supremely good First Principle while admitting that there is evil in the world. He offers a subtle account of the origin of evil in the soul as caused not by either the soul or matter on its own but by the combination of the two. Sheppard shows how Plotinus is responding to ideas found in Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and Middle Platonism as well as to the challenge presented by Gnosticism, and argues that the views expressed in I.8 are not inconsistent with what Plotinus has to say about matter and its generation elsewhere. She further considers the criticisms of Plotinus' views put forward by Proclus and concludes that, despite its weaknesses, Plotinus' account remains an ingenious attempt to defend monism and the essential goodness of the soul while recognizing the existence of evils.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Parmenides Publishing
Country
United States
Date
14 August 2025
Pages
198
ISBN
9798988320128