Modes of knowledge and the transcendental : an introduction to Plotinus Ennead 5.3 (49) with a commentary and translation
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Bibliographic Information
Modes of knowledge and the transcendental : an introduction to Plotinus Ennead 5.3 (49) with a commentary and translation
(Bochumer Studien zur Philosophie, Bd. 17)
B.R. Grüner, 1991
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The philosophy of Plotinus is usually depicted as a quest for the absolute, outside and beyond the world of human knowledge and experience. Yet in the late treatise Ennead 5.3 [49], Plotinus shows himself a philosopher of the transcendental, rather than of the transcendent. Starting from a critical analysis of the idea of self-knowledge, he develops a world-view in which central notions of his metaphysics are represented, not as different "hypostases" or transcendent beings, but as limiting cases of reality as we human beings know it. Fundamental to this world-view is Plotinus' assumption that a close analogy can be established between the psychological and the physical description of man.
Table of Contents
- 1. Preface
- 2. I Introduction
- 3. 1 Interpreting Plotinus
- 4. 2 The Treatise Modes of Knowledge and the Transcendental
- 5. II Aspects of the Plotinian Universe
- 6. A Transcendental Method
- 7. Self-knowledge and the Concept of We
- 8. An Antithesis Between the Psychical and the Physical Realm?
- 9. Idealism or Realism?
- 10. Unity as a Limiting Concept
- 11. III Modes of Knowledge and the Transcendental
- 12. 1 Modes of Self-Knowledge
- 13. 2 The Ultimate Limit of Thought
- 14. Index of Classical Authors
- 15. Index of Greek Words
- 16. General Index
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