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         Plotinus:     more books (100)
  1. Plotinus: The Enneads by Plontinus, 1966
  2. The Influence Of Plotinus Traced In St. Augustine by Stephen MacKenna, 2006-09-15
  3. Reflections On The Soul: Variations On A Theme By Plotinus by Swami Abhayananda, 2010-06-09
  4. Plotinus V: Ennead V (Loeb Classical Library, 444) by Plotinus, 1984-01-01
  5. Plotinus on Intellect by Eyjólfur Kjalar Emilsson, 2007-04-12
  6. The philosophy of Plotinus ... by William Ralph Inge, James Nairne, et all 2010-08-30
  7. Arabic Plotinus: A Philosophical Study of the 'Theology of Aristotle' by Peter Adamson, 2003-03-17
  8. Plotinus: An Introduction to the Enneads by Dominic J. O'Meara, 1995-04-27
  9. Reading Plotinus: A Practical Introduction to Neoplatonism (History of Philosophy) (Purdue University Press Series in the History of Philosophy) by Kevin Corrigan, 2004-12-10
  10. Plotinus' Psychology: His Doctrines of the Embodied Soul by H.J. Blumenthal, 1971-07-31
  11. From Aristotle To Plotinus by T.V. Smith, 2007-03-15
  12. Theosophies of Plato, Aristotle and Plotinus by Dibinga Wa Said, 1970
  13. Reading Neoplatonism: Non-discursive Thinking in the Texts of Plotinus, Proclus, and Damascius by Sara Rappe, 2007-08-20
  14. Plotinus on Eudaimonia: A Commentary on Ennead I.4 by Kieran McGroarty, 2006-11-30

21. Plotinus - Wikipedia
Translate this page plotinus was een Grieks filosoof afkomstig uit Egypte, die leefde van 204/5 tot 270 n. Chr. In 244 vestigde hij zich als docent te Rome, waar hij gauw een
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plotinus
Plotinus
Uit Wikipedia, de vrije encyclopedie
Ga naar: navigatie zoeken Afbeelding:Plotinus.jpg Buste van Plotinos in de Vaticaanse musea in Rome Plotinus was een Grieks filosoof afkomstig uit Egypte , die leefde van 204/5 tot 270 n. Chr. In 244 vestigde hij zich als docent te Rome, waar hij gauw een grote aanhang verwierf. Onder zijn gehoor bevonden zich talrijke senatoren. Keizer Gallienus gaf hem de toestemming om bij wijze van experiment een stad te stichten die volgens de " Wetten " van Plato zou bestuurd worden. Het experiment werd echter verijdeld door tegenwerking van Gallienus' hovelingen. Het van hem overgeleverde werk is tot ons gekomen onder de titel 'Enneaden', wat duidt op de indeling van 6 maal negen ('ennea') essays, waarin zijn leerling Porphyrius zijn werk, soms wat arbitrair, heeft opgesplitst. Plotinus heeft de ambitie het werk van Plato te verklaren, en pretendeert niet een nieuwe filosofie te brengen. Maar voor ons staat hij mijlenver van Plato af, en de manier waarop hij zijn Plato-citaten ter adstructie bijeenraapt maakt op ons een wat onsamenhangende indruk. Reden waarom wij hem tegenwoordig tot het Neoplatonisme rekenen, een filosofische stroming die, anders dan de naam suggereert, gebruik maakt ook van het werk van andere filosofen dan Plato. Plotinus geldt als de belangrijkste vertegenwoordiger van dit Neoplatonisme.

22. ON THE DEMONOLOGY OF PLOTINUS
It is a common fact that the impact of the philosophy of plotinus (204/5 270) *1 on the Eastern and Western philosophy as well as to the Christian
http://www.folklore.ee/folklore/vol9/plotinus.htm
ON THE DEMONOLOGY OF PLOTINUS
It is a common fact that the impact of the philosophy of Plotinus (204/5 - 270) on the Eastern and Western philosophy as well as to the Christian theology has been immense. Considering that it seems paradoxical that the philosophy of Plotinus has been undertaken systematically and perhaps even comprehensive in the last 20 years only. During this short period of time more research papers have been written about him than during the whole one and a half millennium following his death. The flow broke loose after the final completion of the new text-critical 3-volumed issue of Plotinus' Enneads by Paul Henry and Hans-Rudolph Schwyzer (1973) , which is "undoubtedly the most important contribution to Plotinian scholarship since Porphyry published the Enneads and which has been called with a certain specific hauteur the first scientific edition of Plotinus' works . The Lexicon Plotinianum compiled by John Sleeman and Gilbert Pollet has contributed to the study of Plotinus likewise. All 54 treatises of Plotinus have not attracted equal attention. Some treatises have been constantly reissued with new comments attached, and quite frequently two separate commentaries are issued concurrently. At the same time, there are a small number of treatises that have attracted little or no attention at all, not to mention the republications with comments

23. COLLOQUIUM PLOTINUS 204/205-2005 ~ MAIN
Organized by Marin Balan and Cristian Ducu, hosted by Department of Philosophy, University of Bucharest. It contains some resources on plotinus, as well.
http://www.hybris.ro/plotinus/
In honorem
ARAM M. FRENKIAN
Location Photos Accommodation ... Journal of Neoplatonic Studies November 12, 2005
9.00, Mircea Florian Amf.
Department of Philosophy
, University of Bucharest
Splaiul Independentei 204 (Grozavesti)
Programme/Program
The organizers gratefully acknowledge the support of:
Eveniment organizat cu sprijinul: Cristian Ducu
University of Bucharest
Department of Philosophy
Last updated: 11/07/2005, 12.00. CET s_rid="hybrisroplotinus";s_sp=1;s_iw=1;s_ih=1;

24. Great Theosophists--Plotinus (10 Of 29)
After the death of Ammonius, the work of recording the Neoplatonic teachings was taken up by his pupil plotinus, and it is to him that we owe most of our
http://www.blavatsky.net/magazine/theosophy/ww/setting/plotinus.html
THEOSOPHY, Vol. 25, No. 3, January, 1937 (Pages 101-110; Size: 26K) (Number 10 of a 29-part series)
GREAT THEOSOPHISTS
P LOTINUS
AMMONIUS Saccas, like many other great Teachers, never committed anything to writing. Following the custom of the ancient Hierophants, he transmitted his teachings orally, and bound his pupils by an oath not to divulge his most profound doctrines except to those who could be trusted not to disclose or misuse them. After the death of Ammonius, the work of recording the Neoplatonic teachings was taken up by his pupil Plotinus, and it is to him that we owe most of our knowledge of that system. Plotinus was an Egyptian by birth, and a native of Lycopolis. The Keynote of Plotinus' whole nature is summed up in the word impersonality. He was so resolved to keep his personality in the background that he refused to tell the place of his birth or the names of his parents. When he was asked to have his portrait painted he replied: "Is it not enough to have to carry around this image? Must I transmit the image of this image as worthy of attention?" Nothing is known of the early years of Plotinus' life. We meet him for the first time in Alexandria when he was twenty-eight years old. At that time he was devoting himself to the study of philosophy, and was seeking among the different schools for a system which would satisfy him. Having failed in his search, he met a friend one day and told him of his predicament. His friend advised him to visit the school of Ammonius Saccas. As soon as Plotinus heard Ammonius speak he cried: "This is the man I have been seeking!" And from that day on he attended Ammonius' classes, remaining with him for eleven years.

25. Consciousness Studies Online: Category Archive For Plotinus
Peak Experiences (3) phenomenology (1) plotinus (1) Psychology (5) Consciousness Studies Online Category Archive for plotinus
http://blog.consciousnessstudiesonline.com/categories/vUpOL8P-YlEGvvM-rS7k8r86h9
@import "http://blog.consciousnessstudiesonline.com/scripts/vPIP/vPIPBox.css"; Consciousness Studies Online http://www.MetanoiaMind.com

26. Plotinus' Practical Mysticism
Perennialist teachers, such as plotinus, distinguish precisely between exoteric (public) and esoteric (covert) teachings reserved for the qualified initiate
http://www.hermes-press.com/plotinusindex.htm

27. Harvard University Press: Plotinus, I, Porphyry On The Life Of Plotinus. Ennead
plotinus, I, Porphyry on the Life of plotinus. Ennead 1 by plotinus, published by Harvard University Press.
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/L440.html
Plotinus, I, Porphyry on the Life of Plotinus. Ennead 1
Plotinus
Translator A. H. Armstrong
    Plotinus (204/5-270 CE ) was the first and greatest of Neoplatonic philosophers. His writings were edited by his disciple Porphyry, who published them many years after his master's death in six sets of nine treatises each (the Enneads). Plotinus regarded Plato as his master, and his own philosophy is a profoundly original development of the Platonism of the first two centuries of the Christian era and the closely related thought of the Neopythagoreans, with some influences from Aristotle and his followers and the Stoics, whose writings he knew well but used critically. He is a unique combination of mystic and Hellenic rationalist. His thought dominated later Greek philosophy and influenced both Christians and Moslems, and is still alive today because of its union of rationality and intense religious experience. In his acclaimed edition of Plotinus, Armstrong provides excellent introductions to each treatise. His invaluable notes explain obscure passages and give reference to parallels in Plotinus and others.

28. The Terrorist's Dictionary
Posted by plotinus at 1053 PM 0 comments plotinus Please send suggestions to dvjohnso at gmail dot com. View my complete profile
http://www.theterroristsdictionary.blogspot.com/
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The Terrorist's Dictionary
A lexicon of post-9/11 American English
Monday, December 31, 2007
maverick - noun
A politician who campaigns on a platform of speaking honestly to the public. Posted by Plotinus at 12:19 PM 0 comments Labels: M
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
bundling - noun
A populist measure for extending political representation to the upper-middle class. Posted by Plotinus at 10:47 PM 0 comments Labels: B
Thursday, November 1, 2007
obstruction - noun
A counterterrorism tactic in lawfare , whereby the enemy is deprived of evidential arms. Posted by Plotinus at 8:36 AM 1 comments Labels: O
1. Hopefully not
2. Not often enough to know or recall Posted by Plotinus at 8:35 AM 0 comments Labels: N
Monday, October 22, 2007
Diversion: an interview with Philip K. Dick
Posted by Plotinus at 10:53 PM 0 comments
Thursday, October 18, 2007
inspection - noun
A search for incriminating evidence, the absence of which confirms the worst. Posted by Plotinus at 2:28 PM 0 comments Labels: I
Monday, October 15, 2007
interim - adjective
Without advice or consent.

29. Gaia Community | M. Alan's Blog - Tagged With Plotinus
In working on my book Integral Metaphysics Transformation I ve been brushing up on plotinus and Ibn Arabi; because their insighst should be incorporated
http://kheper.gaia.com/blog/tags/plotinus
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M. Alan's Blog - Tagged with Plotinus

30. Oxford Scholarship Online: Plotinus On Intellect
Abstract This book focuses on plotinus notion of Intellect. Intellect comes second in plotinus hierarchical model of reality, after the One,
http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/oso/public/content/philosophy/9780199281701/toc

31. Plotinus Resources At Erratic Impact's Philosophy Research Base
plotinus Resources at Erratic Impact s Philosophy Research Base. Resources include annotated links, biographies, commentaries, online texts, The Enneads,
http://www.erraticimpact.com/~ancient/html/plotinus.htm

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Plotinus A. D. 204 - 270
Texts: Neoplatonism Texts: Plotinus Texts: The Enneads ... Know of a Resource? Plotinus Online Texts The Enneads (at vt.edu) The Enneads (at Classics Archive) Plotinus Biography From the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy . Examines the life and thought of Plotinus, a Roman philosopher of Egyptian descent. Includes his studies in religion and ethics. Excerpt: Enneads , placing them in logical order from the simplest to the most abstruse, as well as chronological sequence. They were first printed in a Latin translation by Marsilio Ficino at Florence in 1492, then in Greek and Latin at Basel, in 1580. On Beauty Ennead 's On Beauty is a copy of Plotinus' critique of beauty translated by Stephen MacKenna. Neoplatonism Resources on Neoplatonism at Erratic Impact. History Names Subjects CFP ... Add URL A service for the online network of worldwide philosophers erraticimpact.com

32. 20th WCP: Remarks On The Spoudaios In Plotinus I 4 [46]
This question turns out to be fundamental, especially when trying to make out an ethical dimension in plotinus. Treatise I 4 46 offers, concerning that
http://www.bu.edu/wcp/Papers/Anci/AnciSchn.htm
Ancient Philosophy Remarks on the spoudaios in Plotinus I 4 [46] Alexandrine Schniewind
University of Fribourg
Alexandrine.Schniewind@unifr.ch
ABSTRACT: Who is the Plotinian spoudaios and what is his function in the Enneads ? This question turns out to be fundamental, especially when trying to make out an ethical dimension in Plotinus. Treatise I 4 [46] offers, concerning that question, not only the longest sustained discussion of the spoudaios , but also shows how highly problematic it is to figure out more precisely his characteristics. This is due to the terminological ambiguity with the term sophos , which is also the reason why the two terms are often considered synonymous by translators. It appears in I 4 that this ambiguity is closely related to the question of aisthesis . And this is also perhaps the main problematic point concerning the spoudaios status questionis Who is the plotinian spoudaios and what is his function in the Enneads ? This question occurs especially in regard to treatise I 4 [46] which offers the longest sustained discussion of the spoudaios The main problem which presents itself as regards the term spoudaios is its apparent terminological similarity with sophos . As most translations show, both terms seem to be taken as almost synonymous, the most problematic one being Bréhier's French translation of the

33. Plotinus (205-270): Free Web Books, Online
plotinus (205270). Biographical note. plotinus (205-270). Works. The Six Enneads / translated by Stephen MacKenna and Bertram Samuel Page read download
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/p/plotinus/
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34. The Enneads By Plotinus - The Gold Scales
The Enneads by plotinus for quiet reflection of the big picture. Into the inner self and coming out wiser if time and conditions allow
http://oaks.nvg.org/sa1ra6.html
Study of thoughts of other may be philosophical.
The Enneads by Plotinus
Plotinus, a bust The Enneads were put down in writing around 250 AD. This updated presentation is rooted in a translation by a very often unwell and miserable Stephen MacKenna (1872-1934) and Bertram Samuel Page, a young scholar who relieved MacKenna of translating Enneads 6:1-3 for the last volume somewhere between 1928 and 1930, when it was published.
The text that follows here, is rooted in MacKenna's and Pages' translation. It was lightly re-edited by me. - T. Kinnes
Contents
The first ennead:
  • The animate and the man
  • On virtue
  • On dialectic [the upward way]
  • On true happiness ...
  • The reasoned dismissal The second ennead:
  • On the cosmos or on the heavenly system
  • The heavenly circuit
  • Are the stars causes
  • Matter in its two kinds ...
  • Against those that affirm the creator of the cosmos and the cosmos itself to be evil: [generally quoted as "Against the gnostics"] The third ennead:
  • Fate
  • On providence (1)
  • On providence (2)
  • Our tutelary spirit ...
  • Detached considerations The fourth ennead:
  • On the essence of the soul (1)
  • On the essence of the soul (2)
  • Problems of the soul (1)
  • Problems of the soul (2) ...
  • Are all souls one?
  • 35. PLOTINUS
    plotinus studied philosophy in Alexandria, Egypt. He then joined a military campaign against Persia, in the hope of learning Persian and Indian philosophy.
    http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/people_n2/persons3_n2/plotinus.html
    PLOTINUS
    Greeek Philosopher
    Plotinus studied philosophy in Alexandria, Egypt. He then joined a military campaign against Persia, in the hope of learning Persian and Indian philosophy. Around 244 he went to Rome at a time when Christian churches competed with Oriental religions. Plotinus, under the influence of these events, developed his own philosophic ideas. He believed that man should reject material things and should purify his soul and to lift it up to a communion with a higher spirit. Plotinus became the founder of the Neo-platonic school of philosophy, which became the most formidable rival of Christianity in the ancient world. www link :
    From the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    Biography

    36. HinesSight: Plotinus
    Brian and Laurel offer up a view of what s happening in their lives.
    http://hinessight.blogs.com/hinessight/plotinus/index.html
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    37. Internet Archive: Details: Plotinus The Six Enneads
    Title, plotinus The Six Enneads. Creator, B. S. Page. Publisher, Encyclopadia Britannica, Inc. Date, 1952. Language, eng
    http://www.archive.org/details/plotinusthesixen002391mbp
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    38. Online Library Of Liberty - Plotinus
    The Online Library of Liberty is provided in order to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals by making freely
    http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php?person=4053&

    39. Studies In Comparative Philosophy - Plotinus
    plotinus, the celebrated mystic, comes nearest in his views to the Vedanta philosophy, and is practically in full agreement with the Eastern sages,
    http://www.swami-krishnananda.org/com/com_plot.html
    Swami Krishnananda The Divine Life Society Yoga, Meditation, Spiritual Practice Bhagavadgita, Vedanta, Hinduism ... Video studies in comparative philosophy by Swami Krishnananda
    The Divine Life Society - Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh, India PLOTINUS This is nothing short of the Advaita Vedanta of Shankara. Only the view that the world is an overflow of the Perfection of God is peculiar to Plotinus. For, to the Vedanta, there is no such overflow; there is, to it, only the Absolute, and the world is its appearance; not an emanation from or an overflow of its being. This is the position, in spite of the acceptance of a relativistic creation of the Universe from the Absolute, as adumbrated in the Upanishads. For Plotinus the world is neither the creation of God nor an evolute from Him, but just an emanation. Plotinus, no doubt, takes care to see that this emanation does not in any way affect the Perfection of God. Plotinus is not advocating the parinamavada or the transformation theory of some of the Indian schools. God does not become the world by modification or transformation of Himself. He is ever what He is and the emanation is something like that of light from the sun. God never gets lost or exhausted in the world. Plotinus is thus free from the charge of propounding a pantheism. God is both transcendent and immanent. The world originates, subsists and finally merges in God. The Thought of God and the Object of this Thought are one and the same, and the world is God's Thought. God's Thought is merely the activity of His own being; it is the immediate, instantaneous, all-comprehending Essence of pure Consciousness, direct and intuitive, knowing everything at one stroke, and transcending the dualistic categories of relative reason, which functions through a succession of ideas.

    40. Plotinus
    plotinus is generally considered the founder of the Neoplatonic school of philosophy, though his philosophical system built upon those of his predecessors,
    http://www.alcott.net/alcott/home/champions/Plotinus.html

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