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Passages similar to: On the Mysteries — III, Chapter XXIV
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Neoplatonic
On the Mysteries
III, Chapter XXIV (1)
In what follows, while you endeavour to unfold divination, you entirely subvert it. For if a passion of the soul is admitted to be the cause of it, what wise man will attribute to an unstable and stupid thing orderly and stable foreknowledge? Or how is it possible that the soul, which is in a sane and stable condition according to its better powers, viz. those that are intellectual and dianoetic, should be ignorant of futurity; but that the soul which suffers according to disorderly and tumultuous motions, should have a knowledge of what is future? For what has passion in itself adapted to the theory of beings? And is it not rather an impediment to the more true intellection of things? Farther still, therefore, if the things contained in the world were constituted through passions, in this case passions, through their similitude, would have a certain alliance to them. But if they are produced through reasons and through forms, there will be another foreknowledge of them, which is liberated from all passion. Again, passion alone perceives that which is present, and which now has a subsistence; but foreknowledge apprehends things which do not yet exist. Hence, to foreknow is different from being passively affected.
Neoplatonic
Fate (10)
To sum the results of our argument: All things and events are foreshown and brought into being by causes; but the causation is of two Kinds; there...
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Neoplatonic
On Providence (2) (6)
The predictions of the seers are based on observation of the Universal Circuit: how can this indicate the evil with the good? Clearly the reason is th...
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Hermetic
12. About The Common Mind (11)
All things incorporeal when in a body are subject unto passion, and in the proper sense they are [themselves] all passions. For every thing that...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput VII (2)
From It the contemplated and contemplating powers of the angelic Minds have their simple and blessed conceptions; collecting their divine knowledge,...
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