Essays On A Polytheistic Philosophy of Religion by Edward P. Butler
Essays On A Polytheistic Philosophy of Religion by Edward P. Butler
Essays On A Polytheistic Philosophy of Religion by Edward P. Butler
P HILOSOPHY OF R ELIGION
E SSA YS ON A P OLYTHEISTIC
P HILOSOPHY OF R ELIGION
SECOND EDITION
EDWARD P. BUTLER
PHAIDRA EDITIONS
NEW YORK CITY
2014
C ON TEN TS
PREFACE
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AND
THE
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P R EF ACE
Upon completing my Ph.D. dissertation, The
Metaphysics of Polytheism in Proclus (2004), I
began to publish a series of articles based on it:
two general, programmatic essays which appeared
in the journal DionysiusPolytheism and
Individuality in the Henadic Manifold (2005);
The Gods and Being in Proclus (2008)and
three technical essays treating of the procession of
being according to Procluss Platonic Theology,
which appeared in the journal MthexisThe
Intelligible Gods in the Platonic Theology of
Proclus (2008); The Second Intelligible Triad
and the Intelligible-Intellective Gods (2010);
The Third Intelligible Triad and the Intellective
Gods (2012). These articles, as well as my
dissertation, are available from my website,
http://henadology.wordpress.com, and I have
also collected them in Essays on the Metaphysics
of Polytheism in Proclus (New York City: Phaidra
Editions, 2014).
At the same time that I was working on these
essays, and particularly in the period from 20052008, I was also pursuing the project of applying
the henadological metaphysics (that is, the
Platonic philosophy of individuation) to the
philosophy of religion. The principal results of
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T HE T HE OL OGIC AL I NT ER PR ET ATI ON O F
M YT H
ABSTRACT: This essay seeks in the Platonic
philosophers of late antiquity insights applicable
to a new discipline, the philosophy of Pagan
religion. An important element of any such
discipline would be a method of mythological
hermeneutics that could be applied crossculturally. The essay draws particular elements of
this method from Sallustius and Olympiodorus.
Sallustiuss five modes of the interpretation of
myth (theological, physical, psychical, material and
mixed) are discussed, with one of them, the
theological, singled out for its applicability to all
myths and because it interprets myth in reference
exclusively to the nature of the Gods and their
relationship to a model of the cosmos in its
totality. The other modes of interpretation, while
useful in particular contexts, are not uniformly
applicable to all myths, interpret the myths as
concerning things other than the Gods
themselves, and interpret the myths with reference
to particular sectors of the cosmos. Accordingly, it
is from Sallustiuss theological mode of
interpretation that the new method draws its
Originally published in vol. 7, no. 1 of The Pomegranate:
The International Journal of Pagan Studies (May 2005), pp.
27-41. Pagination from this publication appears in brackets.
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O FF ER ING TO TH E G ODS : A
N EO PL ATON IC P ERSP ECT IV E
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promising foundation
philosophy of religion.
for
polytheistic
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In Tim. 1.312.21-22.
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from
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Ibid., 263.
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Ibid., 276.
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In Crat. 139/79.18-24.
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In Tim. 1.364.
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In Crat. 174/99.27-100.7.
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In Crat. 148/83.19-26.
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In Parm. 936.
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In Crat. 171/94.22-29.
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In Crat. 174/97.1-8.
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In Crat. 179/105.18-24.
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Ibid., 105.24-27.
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Ibid., 105.29-106.3.
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Ibid., 106.5-11.
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Ibid., 106.25-107.6.
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manifest separately
combinations.34
or
in
other
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In Tim. 1.316.12-13
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In Tim. 3.200.27-31.
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Ibid., 201.27-28.
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In Parm. 844f.
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In Tim. 3.202.24-28.
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Ibid., 235.
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In Tim. 1.313f.
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Ibid., 185.
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In Parm. 1049.
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A T H EO LOGIC AL E X EG ESIS OF T HE I LI AD ,
BOOK ON E
The Neoplatonic philosopher Proclus alludes
in passing to a style of interpreting the Iliad
obviously well-known in his circle, but of which
we possess only such brief references as this one;
the present essay unfolds this interpretation in the
manner that the Neoplatonists might have done.
The key to the entire exegesis comes from
Procluss statement that Helen represents
the whole of that beauty that has to do
with the sphere in which things come to
be and pass away and that is the product
of the demiurge. It is over this beauty that
eternal war rages among souls, until the
more intellectual are victorious over the
less rational forms of life and return
hence to the place from which they came.
(In Remp. I. 175, trans. Lamberton)
Helen is intelligible beauty as posited within the
realm of generation. In fact, Proclus extends this
symbolic interpretation of Helen to her role in the
famous palinode of Stesichorus. Proclus states
that One who scorns visible beauty and gives
over his activity to thought and the intellective life,
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came into being, and when the way had passed by,
a goal [tekmr] followed on. And the way is like
an arch [a beginning or origin, philosophically
a principle], whereas the tekmr is like a telos
[goal, philosophically a final cause, that for-thesake-of-which something occurs] When Thetis
had come into being these became beginning and
end of all things.
Without making claims as to what Alkman
meant, we are nevertheless free to see in these
lines some kinship to Thetiss role in the Iliad. If
Zeus is the one who is arranging everything, as the
Neoplatonists will see him when they identify him
with the demiurge of Platos Timaeus, then a
way and a goal for his works are indeed
provided by Thetis. Thetis first makes possible,
then directs, the series of divine actions resulting
in finishing the procession of the divine into the
realm of generation. Zeus accedes to Thetiss
request: though it shall involve him in strife with
Hera,
I will take thought [melsetai: care] to
bring these things to pass [ophra teless].
Come now, I will bow my head to you, so
that you may be certain [ophra
pepoithis], for this from me is the surest
token [megiston tekmr] among the
immortals; no word of mine may be
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