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Essays and Fragments of Proclus
Translated by Thomas Taylor
ISBN 1 898910 17 0
Proclus on the Soul and Fate
From his essay on
Fate, Providence and That Which is Within our Power, (section
IV)
If you are willing, however, we will betake ourselves to the
second discussion, viz. the consideration of the soul which is
separable, and of that which is inseparable from bodies. But assume
this also from the philosophy of Aristotle. For he says, that every
soul which has an energy not at all indigent of body, is likewise
allotted an essence beyond and separable from body. And this
necessarily. For if we should arrange energy as existing independent
of body, but essence inseparable from body, energy would be better
than essence, since it would not be at all indigent of a subordinate
essence, that being rooted in it, it might have a subsistence
according to nature. This however is impossible. It is necessary,
therefore, that the soul which has an energy separable from body,
should also be itself separable. Consider then, my friend, what soul
it is in us, which we acknowledge is not at all indigent of body, in
the energies of itself according to nature? Is it sense? But every
sensitive power uses corporeal instruments, and together with them
energizes about its proper sensibles; viz. it uses the eyes, the
ears, and all the other senses, being at the same time moved and
copassive with them. What then shall we say of anger and desire? But
do you not see that these frequently co-operate with the corporeal
parts, with the heart and the liver, and that these also are not
pure from body? For how is it possible that things which energize
with sense, should not also be indigent of body, since sense is
always moved through body? But with respect to the orectic powers,
that these energize with sense, is I conceive known to all of us.
For what deprived of sense, can either be angry, or desire? Plotinus
also rightly asserting, that all the passions are either senses, or
are not without sense. If, therefore, that which is angry is so in
conjunction with sense, possessing at the same time a sense of
sorrow, and that which desires possesses a sense of delight; but
that which energizes with sense energizes with body, for sense
subsists with body; - if this be the case, it is necessary that
every thing which is angry and desires, should energize with body.
Hence, these species of life, being all of them irrational, have
that energy which is according to nature in conjunction with body.
Looking now, however, to the rational nature itself, consider the
life of it which is seated in the inferior lives, and corrects
either what is deficient in them according to knowledge, as when
from above it evinces that sense is deceived about its own objects
of knowledge. I mean for instance, when it shows that sense is
deceived in asserting that the sun is but a foot in diameter, or
when sense with its usual deception asserts of such things any thing
of a similar nature: or when reason disciplines anger, which is
immoderate in its motions, when it is agitated with fury. Hence
Ulysses in Homer exclaims "endure, my heart," and represses the
impulse of anger barking like a dog or when the rational nature
represses the wantonness of desire, and frustrates its endeavours to
detain the soul by the delights that germinate from the body, the
petulance of these delights being ameliorated by the corporeal
temperaments. For in all such energies the rational soul evidently
represses all the irrational motions both gnostic and orectic, and
liberates itself from them, as from things foreign to its nature. It
is necessary, however, to investigate the nature of every thing, not
from the perverted use of it, but from its natural energies. Hence,
if reason, when it is moved in us as reason, restrains the shadowy
impression of the delights of desire, punishes the precipitate
motion of anger, and reproves sense as full of deception, asserting
that we neither hear nor see any thing accurately, and if it asserts
these things looking to its internal reasons, none of which it knows
through body, or through corporeal cognitions, it is evident that
according to this energy it elongates itself from the senses,
contrary to the decision of which it is separated from those sorrows
and delights. After this, however, I see another and a better energy
of our rational soul, the inferior powers being now at rest, and
exhibiting no tumult, as in many things they are accustomed to do,
according to which energy she is converted to herself, sees her own
essence and the powers she contains, the harmonic ratios of which
she consists, and the many lives of which she is the completion, and
re-discovers herself to be a rational world, the image indeed of the
natures prior to herself, and from which she has departed, but the
paradigm of the natures posterior to herself, and over which she
presides. To this energy of the soul, my friend, arithmetic, and
geometry, the mother of your art, are said to contribute much, which
indeed elongate the soul from the senses, purify the intellect from
the irrational forms of life with which it is surrounded, and lead
it to the incorporeal comprehension of forms, extending as it were,
the lustrations to the future mystics that are anterior to the most
sacred mysteries. For consider from intellectual energies after what
manner the above-mentioned sciences are allotted the purifying power
of which we have been speaking. For if they assume the soul replete
with images, and knowing nothing subtile, and unattended with
material garrulity, and if they cause reasons to shine forth which
possess an irrefragable necessity of demonstration, and forms full
of all certainty and immateriality, and by no means calling to their
assistance the grossness which is in sensibles, do they not
evidently purify our intellectual life from those things that fill
us with folly, and which are unadapted to the divine circumscription
of beings? After both these energies of the rational soul, let us
survey her now running back to her highest intelligence, through
which she sees her sister souls in the world, which are allotted the
heavens and the whole of generation according to the will of the
father, and of which she being a part, desires the contemplation of
them. But she sees above all souls, intellectual essences and
orders. For above every soul a deiform intellect resides, which
imparts to the soul an intellectual habit. She also sees prior to
these, the monads of the Gods themselves which are above intellect,
and from which the intellectual multitudes receive their unions. For
it is necessary that unific causes should be placed above things
united, in the same manner as vivifying causes are above things
vivified, causes that impart intellect are above things
intellectualized, and in a similar manner imparticipable hypostases
are above all participants. For according to all these elevating
intellections, I conceive it is evident to those that are not
perfectly blind, how the rational soul leaving sense and bodies
behind, is led upward by intellectual surveys about the inflected
and truly mystic intuitions of the supermundane Gods. Or whence, and
from what kind of energies have the progeny of the Gods unfolded to
us the occult dispensations of divinity? And after what manner are
souls said to energize enthusiastically, and assuming a mania better
than temperance to be conjoined to the Gods themselves? I speak of
the Sibyl who soon after she was born uttered admirable things, and
told those who were present at the time who she was, and from what
order she came into this terrestrial abode, and I allude to any
other soul who in a similar manner was of a divine destiny. In
short, we must say that the rational and intellectual soul in
whatever way it may energize, is beyond body and sense; and
therefore it is necessary that it should have an essence separable
from both these. This however though of itself now evident, I will
again manifest from hence, that when it energizes according to
nature, it is superior to the influence of Fate, but that when it
falls into sense, and becomes irrational and corporeal, it follows
the natures that are beneath it, and living with them as with
intoxicated neighbours, is held in subjection by a cause that has
dominion over things that are different from the rational essence.
For again, it is necessary that there should be a certain genus of
beings of this kind, which according to essence indeed is above
Fate, but according to habitude is sometimes arranged under it. For
if indeed the beings which are wholly eternal are placed above the
laws of Fate, but there are beings which according to the whole of
their life, are arranged under the periods of Fate, it will also be
necessary that there should be an intermediate nature between these
two, which sometimes indeed is above the productions of Fate, and
sometimes is under its dominion. For the progression of beings much
more than the situation of bodies, leaves no vacuum; but there are
every where media between the extremes, which also bind the extremes
to each other. And not only Plato, but likewise the oracles of the
Gods have revealed these things to us. For in the first place
indeed, they order those divine men who were thought worthy to be
the auditors of those mystic discourses, "not to look upon nature,
because the name of it is fatal." And again, they order them "not to
co-augment Fate." Every where also, they exhort them to turn from
the life which is according to Fate, and to avoid "becoming
corporeal with the fatal herds;" by all which they withdraw us from
the senses and material desires; for through these we become
corporeal, and are then acted upon from necessity by Fate. For
similitude every where copulates beings to each other; but that
which is assimilated enjoys the same polity as that to which it is
assimilated, whatever it may be, and consequently is under the
dominion of the ruler of that polity. For nothing is without a ruler
and a principality in the universe, whether you speak of wholes, or
of parts. But different things have different rulers, because these
live in one way, and those in another. Afterwards, the oracles
teaching concerning our most divine life, and that immaculate
polity, which we enjoy when liberated from every polity of Fate,
say, "The souls that become venerable by understanding the works of
the father will escape the fatal wing of Destiny." The soul,
therefore, embracing this life, and such a life as this, will not
rank among those souls that are led by Fate. But if it wishes to
conform itself to body, aspires after what are called corporeal
goods, and pursues honours, power and riches, it suffers the same
thing as a philosopher who is chained, and in this condition enters
a ship. For he becomes subservient to the winds that move the ship,
[and cannot help himself] if some one of the sailors should trample
on him, or some fettered slave should insult him. Bidding farewell,
therefore, to the things to which we are bound, we should direct our
attention to the strength of virtue, and consider Fate not as
effecting any thing in us, but in the things which surround us. For
with respect, my friend, to all external circumstances that may
befall us, enemies may demolish the walls of our city, and reduce
its buildings to ashes, they may deprive us of our possessions, and
leave us in a state of indigence; but all these being mortal and
external, are in consequence of this in the power of other beings,
and not in ours. But with respect to the things which are in our
power, there is no one so potent as to able to take away any one of
them, even though he should possess all human power. For if we are
temperate, we shall still continue to be so, though these calamities
may befall us, and if we are contemplators of true beings, neither
shall we be plundered of this habit; but all these dreadful events
taking place, we shall still persevere in celebrating the rulers of
all things, and in investigating the causes of effects. By no means,
therefore, must we reprobate the necessity of the soul from its
ultimate energies, but looking to its first energies, we should
admire its unconquerable power. And if we are thus wise, nothing
will disturb us pertaining to the passions of the inferior parts of
the soul; but when the body is disturbed, and we say that we sustain
something of a dreadful nature, it is not we who thus speak, but it
is the language of desire; for the delights of the body, and
therefore its sorrows pertain to this part. When also being robbed
of our wealth, or not obtaining riches, we are grieved, this passion
belongs to that power of the soul which is a lover of wealth. And
again, when being reproached, and falling from power, we are
indignant, this is not the passion of the superior soul, but of that
which dwells downward, about the heart. For this pertains to the
part which is a lover of honour. But the reason which is in us,
being in all such particulars deceived, follows and is at the same
time is disturbed with the subordinate powers of the soul, being a
blind intellect, and not having that eye yet purified, by which it
is able to perceive itself, and the natures prior and posterior to
itself. When, however, it becomes purified from those things with
which it was invested when it fell, it will then know what that is
which is in its power, how it is neither in corporeal natures; for
these are posterior to reason; nor in those beings in whom there is
the liberty of divine will; for they are prior to reason; but that
it consists in living according to virtue. For this alone is free
and unservile, and adapted to liberty, and is truly the power of the
soul, and confers power on its possessor. For it is the province of
all power to contain and preserve that which possesses it. But he
who directs his attention to vice, looks at the debility of the
soul, though she should possess all other power. For the power of
instruments is one thing, and the power of those beings that ought
to use the instruments another. Hence, every soul, so far as it
participates of virtue, and so far as it is [a rational soul], is
free; but so far as it is vicious and debilitated, and is not
[rational], it is subservient to other things, and not to Fate only,
but to every thing, in short, that is either willing to give that
which is appetible, or is able to take it away. For he who possesses
virtue is subservient to those beings who are alone sufficient to
impart to and coaugment with him that which is desirable; but these
are the Gods, with whom there is true virtue, and from whom that
which is in our power is derived. Plato also somewhere says, that
this voluntary servitude is the greatest liberty. For by being
subservient to those who possess all the power of all things, we
become assimilated to them, so that, as he says, we govern the whole
world; i.e. when we are perfect and winged, and reign on high. This,
therefore, pertains to the most divine of our souls, just as it
pertains to the last of them, to be as it were bound in prison, and
to live an involuntary, instead of a voluntary free life. But to the
souls that have an intermediate subsistence between these, it
belongs, so far as they are liberated from passions and the body, to
ascend above necessity to a life which has dominion over generation.
For again, if intellect and deity are prior to soul, but passions
and bodies are posterior to it; and if to these it belongs to act
from compulsion, but to intellect and deity, to act in a manner
better than all necessity, and which is alone free, it is necessary
that the soul betaking itself either to the former or to the latter,
should either enter under the necessity of subordinate, or exert the
liberty of more excellent natures; and that it should be subservient
either to supernal dominion, or to dominion inferior to itself. But
if it is subservient, it must either rule in conjunction with the
powers that rule over it, or be alone subservient in conjunction
with subservient natures. Here, therefore, the soul ascending and
resuming its power, which is virtue, will consider nothing as
dreadful whatever it may be, that takes place about and external to
the body. For the passions of instruments do not pass to those that
use them; but in whatever manner they may subsist, it is possible
for the soul to energize according to virtue; strenuously indeed, if
the body should happen to be languid, but moderately when it is
sane. And when poverty is present, it may energize sublimely, but in
affluence magnificently; but every where from occurring
circumstances, it may extol virtue that uses them; and being
ameliorated by its inward strength may vanquish external calamities.
For you must not suppose that you mechanists alone, are to be
permitted to say, that you can move a given weight with a given
power; for this you are well known to assert; but it is much more
possible for those who live according to virtue, truly to adorn a
power given from every circumstance by another power. And he who
does this is generous and free; but the bad man is the slave of all
things though he should rule over all things. For he resembles those
who are punished in Egypt, by laughing vizards that surround them.
Over these also, who are not able to govern themselves, necessity
prevails. For being elongated from the Gods, the universe uses them
as brutes. When, therefore, you wish to see that which is in our
power, look at the soul living according to nature. But the soul
which is not debile lives according to nature. For there is nothing
debile in that which is conformable to nature. The soul, however, is
not debile, which is not replete with vice, [the evil of the soul];
for in all things evil is debile. And if you consider the soul in
this point of view, you will see what the nature is of that which is
in our power. For you will see that it uses all circumstances
rightly, and either prohibits them from taking place, or
providentially attends to calamitous events when they occur. It also
permits Fate to act upon those things which are posterior to Fate,
and of which it is the lord; but is coordinated to the natures prior
to itself, and from which being more excellent than itself, it is
not divulsed. And thus much for the second particular which we
proposed to discuss.
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