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Passages similar to: Stromata (Miscellanies) — Chapter IV: The Heathens Made Gods Like Themselves, Whence Springs All Superstition.
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Christian Mysticism
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter IV: The Heathens Made Gods Like Themselves, Whence Springs All Superstition. (27)
For instance, the tragedy says: Menelaus. "What disease, Orestes, is destroying thee?" Orestes. "Conscience. For horrid deeds I know I've done." For in reality there is no other purity but abstinence from sins. Excellently then Epicharmus says: "If a pure mind thou hast, In thy whole body thou art pure." Now also we say that it is requisite to purify the soul from corrupt and bad doctrines by right reason; and so thereafter to the recollection of the principal heads of doctrine. Since also before the communication of the mysteries they think it right to apply certain purifications to those who are to be initiated; so it is requisite for men to abandon impious opinion, and thus turn to the true tradition.
Neoplatonic
Beauty (6)
Hence the Mysteries with good reason adumbrate the immersion of the unpurified in filth, even in the Nether-World, since the unclean loves filth for i...
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Neoplatonic
On Virtue (4)
We come, so, to the question whether Purification is the whole of this human quality, virtue, or merely the forerunner upon which virtue follows?...
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Neoplatonic
The Impassivity of the Unembodied (5)
Because representations attack it at what we call the affective phase and cause a resulting experience, a disturbance, to which disturbance is joined ...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XVII. (2)
And these things, indeed, O Hipparchus, you learnt with diligent assiduity, but you have not preserved them; having tasted, O excellent man, of Sicili...
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Neoplatonic
I, Chapter XI (4)
Another reason, also, of these things may be assigned. The powers of the human passions that are in us, when they are entirely restrained, become...
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Neoplatonic
Magical and Philosophical Precepts (178)
The Oracles of the Gods declare, that through purifying ceremonies, not the Soul only, but bodies themselves become Worth) of receiving much...
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Neoplatonic
On Virtue (5)
Likeness to what Principle? Identity with what God? The question is substantially this: how far does purification dispel the two orders of passion- an...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XVIII. (2)
Tell, O ye Gods! the source from whence you came, Say whence, O men! thus evil you became? These therefore, and such as these, are the auditions of...
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Neoplatonic
On Virtue (6)
In all this there is no sin- there is only matter of discipline- but our concern is not merely to be sinless but to be God. As long as there is any...
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Greek
Book II (365)
He proceeded: And now when the young hear all this said about virtue and vice, and the way in which gods and men regard them, how are their minds like...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XVI. (1)
This adaptation therefore of souls was procured by him through music. But another purification of the dianoetic part, and at the same time of the...
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Neoplatonic
On Virtue (7)
The virtues in the Soul run in a sequence correspondent to that existing in the over-world, that is among their exemplars in the...
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Neoplatonic
The Impassivity of the Unembodied (2)
Let us begin with virtue and vice in the Soul. What has really occurred when, as we say, vice is present? In speaking of extirpating evil and...
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Neoplatonic
On Virtue (1)
Since Evil is here, "haunting this world by necessary law," and it is the Soul's design to escape from Evil, we must escape hence. But what is this...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (10)
(15) That the soul is of the family of the diviner nature, the eternal, is clear from our demonstration that it is not material: besides it has...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXXII. (9)
But the precept which is next to this in efficacy is that which exhorts to be beyond measure studious of purifying the intellect, and by various metho...
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Neoplatonic
Beauty (5)
These Lovers, then, lovers of the beauty outside of sense, must be made to declare themselves. What do you feel in presence of the grace you discern...
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Greek
Time and Celestial Bodies (44c)
Timaeus: that this state of his soul be reinforced by right educational training, the man becomes wholly sound and faultless, having escaped the...
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Neoplatonic
FROM CLINIAS. (1)
Every virtue is perfected, as was shown by us in the beginning, from reason, deliberate choice, and power. Each of these, however, is not by itself a...
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Hermetic
Section XIV (1)
[Asclepius] Who, therefore, will the men be after us ? [Trismegistus] They will be led astray by sophists’ cleverness, and turned from True...
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