Searching...
Showing 1-8
Passages similar to: The Six Enneads — The Intellectual-principle, the Ideas, and the Authentic Existence
Source passage
Neoplatonic
The Six Enneads
The Intellectual-principle, the Ideas, and the Authentic Existence (11)
Now as to the arts and crafts and their productions: The imitative arts- painting, sculpture, dancing, pantomimic gesturing- are, largely, earth-based; on an earthly base; they follow models found in sense, since they copy forms and movements and reproduce seen symmetries; they cannot therefore be referred to that higher sphere except indirectly, through the Reason-Principle in humanity. On the other hand any skill which, beginning with the observation of the symmetry of living things, grows to the symmetry of all life, will be a portion of the Power There which observes and meditates the symmetry reigning among all beings in the Intellectual Kosmos. Thus all music- since its thought is upon melody and rhythm- must be the earthly representation of the music there is in the rhythm of the Ideal Realm. The crafts, such as building and carpentry which give us Matter in wrought forms, may be said, in that they draw on pattern, to take their principles from that realm and from the thinking There: but in that they bring these down into contact with the sense-order, they are not wholly in the Intellectual: they are founded in man. So agriculture, dealing with material growths: so medicine watching over physical health; so the art which aims at corporeal strength and well-being: power and well-being mean something else There, the fearlessness and self-sufficing quality of all that lives. Oratory and generalship, administration and sovereignty- under any forms in which their activities are associated with Good and when they look to that- possess something derived thence and building up their knowledge from the knowledge There. Geometry, the science of the Intellectual entities, holds place There: so, too, philosophy, whose high concern is Being. For the arts and products of art, these observations may suffice.
Greek
Book VII (532)
I agree in what you are saying, he replied, which may be hard to believe, yet, from another point of view, is harder still to deny. This, however, is ...
Loading concepts...
Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
The Celestial Hierarchy, Caput II (4)
It is, then, possible to frame in one's mind good contemplations from everything, and to depict, from things material, the aforesaid dissimilar...
Loading concepts...
Hermetic
Section XIII (1)
[Trismegistus] ’Tis in this way, Asclepius;—by mixing it, by means of subtle expositions, with divers sciences not easy to be grasped,—such as...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book III (401)
Or is the same control to be extended to other artists, and are they also to be prohibited from exhibiting the opposite forms of vice and intemperance...
Loading concepts...
Christian Mysticism
Chapter XVII: Philosophy Conveys Only An Imperfect Knowledge of God. (29)
Now, too what is good in the arts as arts, have their beginning from God. For as the doing of anything artistically is embraced in the rules of art,...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book X (602)
True. And the arts of measuring and numbering and weighing come to the rescue of the human understanding—there is the beauty of them—and the apparent ...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
III, Chapter XXVIII (2)
The maker of images, however, is said to elaborate them through the revolving stars. But the thing does not in reality subsist so as it appears to do....
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book VI (510)
And by images I mean, in the first place, shadows, and in the second place, reflections in water and in solid, smooth and polished bodies and the like...
Loading concepts...