Plotinus On The Structure of Self-Intellection: Bstract
Plotinus On The Structure of Self-Intellection: Bstract
Plotinus On The Structure of Self-Intellection: Bstract
IAN CRYSTAL
ABSTRACT
In this paper, I argue that Plotinus offers us a new and interesting account of
self-intellection. It is an account which is informed to some extent by a dilemma
that Sextus Empiricus raised about the intellect being to apprehend itself. The
signi cance of SextusÕ dilemma is that it sets out the framework within which
such a cognitive activity is to be dealt with, namely the intellect must apprehend
itself qua part or qua whole, both of which according to him are impossible.
Plotinus, I think, successfully gets around this dilemma and is able to explain
how the intellect can think itself qua whole. In the process of doing so, he offers
an account of self-intellection in which the thinking subject or thinker becomes
active in terms of generating its intellectual content, namely itself; a move which
is a break from the traditional Platonic/Aristotelian account of the intellect. The
paper itself is set up as follows. I start by mentioning the dilemma which Sextus
raises about self-intellection. Then I attempt, through an analysis of the noetic
intellectÕs structure, to show how Plotinus is able to offer an account of self-
intellection in terms of whole apprehending whole. I conclude with PlotinusÕ
analysis of the light analogy as a means of explaining how this intellectual
process works.
If, on the other hand, the epistemic subject apprehends itself qua whole,
then, according to Sextus, there will be no object for the subject to apprehend:
Now it will not be able as a whole to apprehend itself. For if as a whole it ap-
prehends itself, it will be as a whole apprehension and apprehending, and, the
apprehending subject being the whole, the apprehended object will no longer be
anything; . . . If as a whole, the object sought (zhtoæmenon) will be nothing. Adv.
Mathematicos, VII 311-312
Thus the whole/whole reading rules out satisfying both the subject-slot
and the object-slot of the intellectual act, rendering that act vacuous.
Now Plotinus also rejects the part/part model as an adequate structure
upon which to base self-intellection. To illustrate this, he explains that an
awareness or apprehension which we might have of our historical self
does not qualify as self-intellection precisely because in that context it is
a matter of one part of ourselves thinking or perceiving another part:
For it would not be the whole which was known in these circumstances, if that
thing which thought the others which were with it did not also think itself, and
this will be, not what we are looking for (zhtoæmenon),5 a thing which thinks
itself, but one thing thinking another. 5.3 [49].1.9-136
3
See 5.3 [49].6.6-8 and 5.8 [31].4.22-25 quoted below.
4
I say at least in part because Sextus was not the only in uence on Plotinus. Obviously,
Plato and Aristotle also had an enormous in uence on the development of PlotinusÕ
account of the intellect and self-intellection.
5
Even some of PlotinusÕ phraseology is strikingly similar to SextusÕ. So we read
in Sextus: oéd¢n ¦stai tò zhtoæmenon, while in Plotinus we nd: ¦stai te oé tò zhtoæmenon.
6
Also 5.3 [49].6.6-8 quoted below. Text and translations, unless otherwise stated,
266 IAN CRYSTAL
All thinking (nñhsiw) must have some sort of object or content about which
to think (tinñw). If not, the act itself will be rendered vacuous. Thus, under-
standing the differences between these intellectual acts will lie in the type
are based upon A.H. ArmstrongÕs Loeb edition. The Enneads, 7 vols., trans. A.H.
Armstrong (London: Loeb Classical Library. William Heinemann Ltd., 1966-88).
7
E.K. Emilsson in ÒPlotinus on the Objects of ThoughtÓ also developed this point.
However, I think EmilssonÕs interpretation is incorrect in that he takes the notion of
ÒwholesÓ and the subject-object distinction to be incompatible. In this sense, Emilsson
regards Plotinus as having accepted the force of SextusÕ claim that the intellect can-
not know itself qua whole and still have an intelligible object.
8
Cf. 5.3 [49].3.35. For a discussion of the terms Plotinus employs when discuss-
ing discursive reason such as tò dianohtikñn, logistikñn or logismñw, cf. John Rist
ÒIntegration and Undescended Soul in Plotinus,Ó American Journal of Philology 88
(1967), p. 416 and L. Gerson, Plotinus, p. 250, n. 63.
9
The fact that Plotinus thinks that all thinking is of something, which presumably
includes self-intellection, does not help EmilssonÕs thesis as discussed in n. 7.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 267
of objects each faculty has and in the type of relations the thinking sub-
ject has with that object.
According to Plotinus, the part of the soul that reasons discursively
combines (sun‹gon), divides (diairoèn) and compares incoming impres-
sions (tæpoi or eàdvla) which it receives from both sensory and noetic
worlds with ones which it had previously received.10 So, for example, one
recognises an individual, say Socrates, by comparing an incoming impres-
sion of that individual with an earlier impression of him.11 In the case of
normative judgements, such as Socrates is good, one can pass this type
of judgement in virtue of what Plotinus calls the rules (kanñnew) embed-
ded in the rational part of the soul. However, these rules too, like the
images, do not have their point of origin in the rational part of the soul.
Rather, the discursive subject acquires them through the intellectÕs illu-
mination. 12 The soul Òis written upon by the intellect.Ó13 So the kanñnew
can also be grouped with the tæpoi inasmuch as they form part of the
overall body of content which is given to the rational part of the soul, dif-
fering only in function: the soul employs them as a means of passing
judgement on other things.
What conclusions can be drawn from the discursive activity as out-
lined? The fact that the dianoetic faculty or subject is receptive of tæpoi
or eàdvla is crucial. For it implies that this faculty focuses upon objects
which enjoy a separate, independent and external existence. The discursive
subjectÕs relation to its objects is mediated by the images which resonate
from these objects. The discursive subject does not have direct contact
with the objects themselves.14 Even the kanñnew which reside in this fac-
ulty are only images, images of that which, strictly speaking, exists in the
noetic world.15 Now as the faculty requires external data in order to per-
form its discursive function, it can be inferred that the faculty itself is not
generative of its own content but rather is structured in such a way as to
look outwards, away from itself:
Does then this reasoning part (dianohtikòn) of the soul return upon itself? No it
does not. Rather it has understanding of the impressions (tæpvn) which it receives
from both sides. 5.3 [49].2.23-26
10
5.3 [49].2.7-14 and 5.3 [49].3.35-40.
11
5.3 [49].3.3-7.
12
5.3 [49].3.10-12 and 4.15-19.
13
5.3 [49].4.22. No doubt Plotinus has AristotleÕs De Anima 3.4 in mind here.
14
Cf. E.K. Emilsson, ÒCognition and its Objects,Ó The Cambridge Companion to
Plotinus, p. 225.
15
5.3 [49].4.21-23.
268 IAN CRYSTAL
In virtue of this relation, the discursive subject directs its gaze exclusively
towards external objects.
Two very important consequences follow from discursive reason being
disposed in this way: Firstly, it is fallible because its relation to its objects
is mediated by impressions. Here Plotinus is incorporating the ScepticÕs
attack on impressions and their unreliability. However, he limits fallibil-
ity to the discursive intellect. His incorporation of the ScepticÕs claim
about the fallibility of impressions will inform his account of the struc-
ture of the noetic intellect to the extent that at the latter level he effec-
tively derives a way in which to eliminate impressions from that realm
entirely.16 A direct consequence of such a move, i.e. the elimination of im-
pressions, is that the noetic intellect is infallible. The manner in which he
is able to rid the noetic intellect of impressions, as we shall see, is through
the thesis that intellectÕs objects are internal to it. And this thesis – call
it the Òinternality thesisÓ – will in turn have a direct effect on how Plotinus
is able to circumvent the second horn of SextusÕ dilemma. That is, the
Òinternality thesisÓ will play a pivotal role in his account of how it is that
the intellect is able to apprehend itself qua whole.17
The second conclusion to be drawn from the disposition of the discur-
sive intellect is that the type of relation in which the subject has itself as
an object of intellection does not occur at the discursive level. For the
relation between the subject and object at this level does not involve an
identity relation. It is only at the noetic level that the identity relation
becomes an issue and, along with it, self-intellection:
But why do we not give self-thinking to this part, and nish with the subject?
Because we gave this part the task of observing what is outside it (tŒ ¦jv skopeÝsyai)
and busying itself with it, but we think that it is proper to Intellect to observe
what belongs to itself and what is within itself (nÒ d¢ jioèmen êp‹rxein tŒ aétoè
kaÜ tŒ ¤n aétÒ skopeÝsyai). 5.3 [49].3.16-1918
16
Emilsson, I think, states the matter well: ÒSo, rather than attempting to show
where the sceptic goes wrong, Plotinus sees it as his task to nd adequate assump-
tions that provide a foundation of knowledge that is immune to sceptical attacks.Ó E.K.
Emilsson, ÒPlotinus on the Objects of Thought,Ó p. 36.
17
See the nal section.
18
Also cf. 5.3 [49].7.25-26. In this passage, the part of the soul directed inwards
does not affect my argument because, for all intents and purposes, it is the intellect.
This has its origins in the Plotinian doctrine that the entire soul does not descend from
intellect; a doctrine which subsequent Neoplatonists go on to reject, cf. Proclus,
Elements of Theology, §§ 211.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 269
19
However, it would be wrong to infer from this account that the dianoetic faculty
is unre exive simpliciter. It does have some sort of self-knowledge. For instance, it
knows that it is discursive reason and that it has a grasp of the world around it which
acts upon it. As Plotinus puts it, it thinks itself as belonging to another (cf. 5.3
[49].6.3-6, quoted below), and thus is not directly self-re exive. Cf. E.K. Emilsson,
ÒPlotinus on the Objects of Thought,Ó p. 32.
20
See n. 9.
21
Cf. 5.9 [5].8.20-22. Here Plotinus explicitly remarks that it is our thinking which
places these stages in temporal succession, when strictly speaking they should not be.
Rather, they are the structure of the intellectual activity, an activity which is eternal.
Also cf. Lloyd P. Gerson, Plotinus, p. 45.
22
5.3 [49].11.10-13. For a discussion of the inchoate intellect, see J. Bussanich, The
One and its Relation to the Intellect in Plotinus (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1988), pp. 11-14.
23
Also cf. 5.1 [10].5.18-19, 5.3 [49].11.26-31. and. 5.6 [24].1.5-6. However, it
should be noted that the last of these passages has proved most troublesome for mod-
ern commentators. The dif culty centres around whether the proper subject of ¥Åra is
the One or noèw. I follow Armstrong, OÕDaly and Schroeder who take it to be noèw
instead of the One because the One is beyond any sort of activity, including self-
intellection or awareness. See Armstrong, Plotinus: Enneads, vol. 5 (London: William
Heinemann Ltd., 1984), pp. 34-5, n. 1, G.J.P. OÕDaly, PlotinusÕ Philosophy of the Self
(Shannon: Irish University Press, 1973) p. 72 and F.M. Schroeder, ÒConversion and
Consciousness in Plotinus, ÔEnneadsÕ Ó 5.1 [10], 7 Hermes 114 (1986), p. 187.
270 IAN CRYSTAL
For thinking itself is, at least in part, the function (tò ¦rgon) of the intel-
lect.25 Unlike the discursive intellect, the noetic intellect is entirely oriented
towards itself, with the result that the noetic subject always has itself as
its object of intellection:
For the soul thought itself as belonging to another (¤nñei ¥aut¯n ÷ti llou), but
intellect did so as itself (õ d¢ noèw ÷ti aétòw), and as what and who it is and [it
started its thinking] from its own nature and thought reverting back upon itself
(¤pistr¡fvn eÞw aêtñn). 5.3 [49].6.3-6
The noetic intellect cannot intelligise without intelligising itself. The con-
tent of its thought is itself. The thinker and the object are in some sense
identical with one another.26 Thus, prima facie, self-intellection is secured
because the subject is the same as its object, since that object is itself.
However, this is an over-simpli cation. At the outset of this section, it
was said the realisation of intellect came about through its directing its
attention towards the One. The One is that in virtue of which the intel-
lect is what it is. It would seem, therefore, somewhat misguided to say
that the intellect is exclusively self-directed, i.e. only has itself as an object
of intellection. For such a claim would seem to be incompatible with the
claim that the intellect gazes upon the One, i.e. has it as an object, assum-
ing, of course, that we do not equate the One with the intellect. Plotinus
does not. 27 So there would seem to be a case for saying that the activity
of the intellect is not exclusively self-directed. PlotinusÕ response to such
a claim would, I think, be the following: The intellect never strictly appre-
hends the One.28 Even in its inchoate state, the intellect only has some
kind of image or impression (f‹ntasm‹ ti) of the One.29 Keeping to the
sight imagery, Plotinus does not say that the intellect, when fully articu-
lated, sees an independent external object different from itself, something
24
Also cf. 5.3 [49].6.39-42.
25
5.3 [49].6.35.
26
Cf. 3.8 [30].3.19.
27
Cf. 6.7 [38].41.12-22.
28
Cf. 5.3 [49].11.10-12 and J. Bussanich, The One and its Relation to the Intellect
in Plotinus, p. 14.
29
5.3 [49].11.7.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 271
which one might expect if it saw the One. But rather, he says, it sees the
seeing itself, i.e. its own activity: ¦sti gŒr ² nñhsiw ÷rasiw õrÇsa mfv
te §n.30 The purpose of the One in this context is to cause the intellect
to turn towards itself; to take itself as an object, thereby attaining its
proper intellectual self-directed relation. The intellectÕs apprehension of
the One is really the intellectÕs apprehension of itself.31 It sees the One
qua intellect:
Because what it contemplates is not the One. For when it contemplates the One,
it does not do as one: If it did, it would not become intellect (eÞ d¢ m®, oé gÛnetai
noèw). 3.8 [30].8.30-2
30
5.1 [10].5.19-20. It should be noted that there is some question about the ÒteÓ in
the manuscripts. I follow Armstrong and Henry and Schwyzer in retaining the Òte.Ó
See A. Armstrong, Enneads, vol. 5, p. 28, n. 1 and Henry and Schwyzer, Plotini Opera,
vol. II (Brussels: LÕƒdition Universelle, S.A., 1959), p. 272. As for the Òseeing
the seeing,Ó I shall return to this notion at the end of my study, since it is of pivotal
importance.
31
It might be said that the intellect sees the One inasmuch as it sees the effect of
the One on itself, its intellectual or epistemic unity.
32
As will become apparent in the next section, there is another very good reason
why the intellect cannot have the One as a proper object of thought. Namely, all the
objects of the intellect are internal to it. Consequently, the One would have to be within
the intellect itself, a point which Plotinus is aware of and rules out: mñnon gŒr ©n
¤keÝno: kaÜ eÞ m¢n p‹nta, ¤n toÝw oïsin ’n ·n. diŒ toèto ¤keÝno oéd¢n m¢n tÇn ¤n tÒ
nÒ , . . . 5.1 [10].7.21-23. Having said this, I must make some mention of 5.6
[24].5.16-17, a passage in which Plotinus speaks of the intellect thinking the One rst
and foremost and itself only incidentally (katŒ sumbebhkñw). Does this undermine all
that has been said and entail that the intellect is not directly re exive? I would say no
it does not. Two points must be made to defend this claim: First, it could be argued
that in this middle Ennead, [24], Plotinus was still under the sway of Alexander of
Aphrodisias much more than by the time he came to write 5.3 [49], his last Ennead.
For as OÕDaly has pointed out (PlotinusÕ Philosophy of the Self, pp. 79-80) Plotinus
gets this notion of katŒ sumbebhkñw from AlexanderÕs Commentary of AristotleÕs De
Anima (Alexander of Aphrodisias, De Anima, 86, 17ff. Bruns). For there Alexander,
developing AristotleÕs doctrine of the intellect, also speaks of the thinker knowing
itself incidentally (katŒ sumbebhkñw). Secondly, there is the issue of topic. 5.6 is
272 IAN CRYSTAL
The sketch thus far of PlotinusÕ position is such that the intellectual sub-
ject is clearly identical with its object, given that that object is itself. How-
ever, having said this, it is still very unclear as to how such an account
of the intellect has been reworked so that the relation between the subject
and its object is one of whole apprehending whole. For the claim that the
intellectual subject is identical with its object and thus thinks itself does
not explain the whole/whole relation. In order to achieve this end, the
nature of the intellectÕs content and how it relates to that content must be
explored.
speci cally about how and why the intellect must focus on the rst principle. Whereas,
5.3 is speci cally about self-intellection. So if one had to chose, 5.3 would be the safer
of the two as far as self-intellection is concerned. As Emilsson says, with 5.3 we have
PlotinusÕ most thorough and authoritative account of self-intellection. Thus, the worst
case scenario for me is that Plotinus did not hold the intellect to be directly self-
re exive early on in his philosophical career (although even in the early Enneads there
is evidence to the contrary). Whereas on the best case scenario, given the difference
in topic between the two Enneads, one should be cautious with 5.6 when it comes to
how the intellectÕs self-relation should be understood.
33
In this regard, Plotinus sees himself as adhering to the second hypothesis of
PlatoÕs dialogue, the Parmenides (144e5; 145a2). Cf. 4.8 [6].3.11, 5.1 [10].8.27, 5.3
[49].15.11ff., 6.2 [43].2.2, 6.2 [43].10.12, 6.2 [43].15.14-15, 6.2 [43].21.7, 6.2
[43].22.10, 6.5 [23].6.1-2, 6.6 [34].8.23, 6.6 [34].13.52-4, 6.7 [38].14.11-12 and 6.7
[38].39.11-14. Also cf. M. Atkinson, Ennead V.I: On the Three Principal Hypostases:
A Commentary with Translation (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983), pp. 196-8
and L. Gerson, Plotinus, pp. 44-5.
34
5.3 [49].3.18-19. This epistemological reason, i.e. the intellect being self-directed,
is by no means meant to be the only reason why Plotinus would want to locate the
objects of the intellect within it. There are several other reasons (epistemological,
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 273
within and not outside: kaÜ Éw noÇn ¤n ¥autÒ kaÜ oék ¦jv.35 Thus by being
part of the intellect, the intellect in a sense is thinking them in thinking
itself. However, this is still insuf cient to explain how the intellect can
have itself as a transparent object and yet relate to the many objects which
are supposed to be part of itself.
For a start, let me be clear what is intended by objects in this noetic
context. According to Plotinus, the objects of the intellect are the forms
or ideas:
If then the thought [of intellect] is of what is within it, that which is within it
is its immanent form, and this is the Idea. What then is this? Intellect and the
intelligent substance; each individual Idea is not other than intellect, but each is
intellect. And intellect as a whole is all the Forms, . . . 5.9 [5].8.1-436
As for the nature of the relation the intellectual subject has with these
object(s), there is evidence, I think, that shows that they enjoy a certain
sort of reciprocal relation. For the two sides entail one another in the
metaphysical and even cosmological) which are just as, if not more, central to his phi-
losophy which would motivate him to place the intellectÕs objects within it. For a start,
we have already seen that it is a way of circumventing the Sceptic on the issue of the
fallibility of impressions. There is also the following metaphysical motivation: As
the intellect is the most uni ed principle after the One, it should, after the One, be the
most uni ed. One way to accomplish this is to make its objects internal to it, thereby
making it more uni ed than, say, the soul whose objects are external to it. Cf. 5.4
[7].2.1-3. Placing the objects within the intellect is also conducive to his cosmologi-
cal account. For it is not the case in the Plotinian cosmos that the intellect transcends
the soul in the sense that it is outside of it. Rather, Plotinus speaks of noèw being a
circle around the One which in turn is contained by a larger circle, the soul (cf. 4.2
[1].1.25ff. and 5.1 [10].7.45). Thus, the noetic faculty is to be regarded as being inside
(¤ntaèya) or within the soul and discursive reason, affecting, i.e. illuminating, the
latter by owing outwards. (Dillon draws our attention to this point, remarking that
Òthe intellect presides over soul and the world transcendently within.Ó J. Dillon, ÒThe
Mind of Plotinus,Ó The Boston Colloquium on Ancient Philosophy (New York: The
American Press, 1987), p. 351.) Such a picture helps to explain why when Plotinus,
discussing the two intellectual processes, refers to the dianoetic process as a super-
structure (¤pikeÛmenon) over or around the noetic (6.7 [38].40.5-19). However, as I am
looking at the intellect from the point of view of self-intellection, I shall not concern
myself either with the metaphysical problems which surround emmanation from the
One and how and why the three hypostases and the physical world have the hierar-
chical structure that they do.
35
6.2 [43].8.11-12.
36
Also cf. 5.9 [5].3.4-8. The Middle Platonists, such as Albinus, spoke of the forms
as the ideas of God. For a thorough study of the Middle Platonic tradition, see
J. Dillon, The Middle Platonists (London: Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd., 1977).
274 IAN CRYSTAL
There are two reasons for Plotinus to place so much emphasis on the onto-
logical status of the intelligibles: Firstly, the objects which the intellect
thinks are intended to be real living entities, as opposed to what Plotinus
sometimes calls the lifeless abstractions of the Stoics (t‹ lekt‹).42 Sec-
ondly, Plotinus is a good Platonist in the sense that these objects are sup-
posed to be causes of the many particular instantiations of them in the
spatio-temporal realm.43 As for the nature of this reciprocal relation be-
tween the intellect and its objects (i.e. whether it is causal or logical), I
think the answer would have to be that it is stronger than simply a logical
37
Also cf. 6.7 [38].2.25-27.
38
Cf. 6.7 [38].40.11-15.
39
6.2 [43].8.4-5. Henry and Schwyzer delete ll’ ¦stin ula. See Henry and
Schwyzer, Plotini Opera, vol. III, p. 65.
40
Also cf. 3.8 [30].8.7-9 and 6.7 [38].41.18-21.
41
Yet, by the same token, at 5.4 [7].2.44-47 Plotinus explicitly rules out the objects
of the intellect taking priority and coming rst. For Plotinus is explicit in this matter:
noèw d¯ kaÜ øn taétñn. oé gŒr tÇn pragm‹tvn – Ësper ² aàsyhsiw tÇn aÞsyhtÇn –
proñntvn, ll’ aétòw noèw tŒ pr‹gmata, eàper m¯ eàdh aétÇn komÛzetai.
42
Cf. 5.4 [7].2.43 and 5.5 [32].1.38-9. Also cf. E.K. Emilsson, ÒPlotinus on the
Objects of Thought,Ó p. 40.
43
Cf. 6.3.9.24-9. Also cf. L. Gerson, Plotinus, pp. 45-6.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 275
Thus the intellect is not a nexus in which part ÒaÓ is external to part Òb.Ó
Rather each part – using the term very loosely – contains the whole.48
44
Cf. 1.1 [53].8.4-6, 3.7 [45].3.36-8 and 3.7 [45].5.25-8.
45
Perhaps, it might be more helpful just to speak of the two sides, the epistemic
subject and its objects, as having a dynamic relation and not a causal one, so as to
avoid confusion with the fact that the One is the cause of the intellect by way of
emmanation. Regardless of this, what is crucial for my purposes is that the reciprocal
relation between the two sides is understood as something which is not exclusively
logical.
46
6.2 [43].21.53ff.
47
Plotinus certainly does not intend us to take the noetic world in a literal spatial
sense. He is explicit that there is no place in that realm: kaÜ oéd¢ tñpow ¤keÝ: (6.2
[43].16.5). For what it is worth, Plotinus does actually use the term nohtñw tñpow twice
in 6.7. [38].35.5 and 41. However, on these occasions, he is using it for rhetorical pur-
poses, quoting from PlatoÕs Republic, 508c and 517b. The closest Plotinus comes to
the notion of place is when he says that each intelligible is the same as its place
(xÅra), 5.8 [31].4.18.
48
Emilsson, I think, states this very obscure matter well when he remarks:
ÒPlotinus, . . . claims that the intellect and the ideas are not even two distinct parts or
aspects of a thing uni ed into one (as one might say that the hard disk and the screen
276 IAN CRYSTAL
of a computer are one); they are one in a much stronger sense so that each idea in all
of its parts is intellect and intellect is throughout ideas; thus, in Plotinus intellect with-
out ideas is an impossibility and likewise ideas without intellect.Ó E.K. Emilsson,
ÒPlotinus on the Objects of Thought,Ó p. 21. Gerson, I think wrongly, does speak of
the forms in this context in terms of being aspects of the intellect. The problem with
aspects, pace Emilsson, is that they do not allow for the required transparency which
is so crucial to Plotinus. L. Gerson, ÒPlotinus,Ó pp. 50-1. Gerson actually does use the
term partial identity (p. 51) by which he means the ideas partially overlap. There
is an analogous problem in Plotinus about how the individual intellect, which we all
supposedly have, can contain the entire intellect, what Plotinus refers to as the pw.
For a discussion of this problem, see G.J.P. OÕDaly, PlotinusÕ Philosophy of the Self,
pp. 62-3.
49
6.6 [34].7.4. The phrase Òõmoè p‹ntaÓ occurs in the beginning of AnaxagorasÕ
book, Fr. B1 D-K.
50
5.8 [31].4.22-25. Plotinus goes on to compare it to the legend of Lynceus, an
individual who was supposed to have looked into the inside of the earth, see Apollo-
nius Rhodius I 151-5.
51
5.9 [5].10.10. Elsewhere we are told that the two sides, the subject and object,
are fused together (sugkray¡ntaw aétoÝw), 5.5 [32].2.1-9.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 277
52
6.2 [43].18.11-12.
53
6.2 [43].8.25-50 and 6.2 [43].15.1-19. Of course, the g¡nh are not exclusive to
the intellect. They apply to everything, save the One.
54
6.2 [43].15.11.
55
6.2 [43].15.9.
56
6.7 [38].13.39-40.
57
6.2 [43].7.26-28.
58
6.2 [43].7.30-31.
59
6.2 [43].8.35-37.
60
6.2 [43].15.14-15.
61
6.2 [43].8.37-38. This is not the only delineation that Plotinus offers of the ve
g¡nh. In 5.1 [10].4, he rst discusses same and other and then introduces motion and
rest.
62
6.2 [43].15.14-15.
63
6.2 [43].15.15. Of course, one might object and say that the m¡gista g¡nh apply
to everything save the One and so are not unique to the intellect. They do but not in
the same way. When it comes to the intellect, we are looking at something strictly
from a self-relational perspective.
278 IAN CRYSTAL
to as an inert lump (ögkow)?64 They do to this extent: the m¡gista g¡nh show
how it is that the intellect can be an ¤n¡rgeia . For intelligising in the con-
text of the intellect requires both self-identity (or, perhaps, self-sameness
is more correct) and self-otherness or difference,65 i.e. different intellectual
stages or intellectual moments which are not simply identical with one
another but rather that lend themselves to being distinguished:
Therefore he [Plato] rightly understands that there is otherness and sameness
where there is intellect and substance. For one must always understand intellect
as otherness and sameness if it is going to think (deÝ gŒr tòn noèn eÜ ¥terñthta
kaÜ taétñthta lamb‹nein, eàper no®sei). 6.7 [38].39.4-766
64
6.7 [38].14.8-11.
65
It must be borne in mind that PlotinusÕ account of the intellect in this context of
self-identity and otherness draws heavily on PlatoÕs Parmenides (in particular the sec-
ond hypothesis), a dialogue the dialectical exercise of which was not taken lightly by
Plotinus and the Neoplatonists. See n. 33 and also L. Gerson, Plotinus, p. 45, n. 9.
66
Also cf. 5.1 [10].4.34-35.
67
Cf. n. 9.
68
Similarly, at 5.6 [24].3.22ff. we read: ÔeÞ oïn tÒ nooènti pl°yow, deÝ ¤n tÒ <m¯>
pl®yei tò noeÝn m¯ eänaiÕ.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 279
ing principle. Thus it is necessary for it to be simple and not simple (ploèn ra
[sc. tò noeÝn] kaÜ oéx ploèn deÝ eänai). 5.6 [24].1.12-14
Thus the m¡gista g¡nh offer us a way of getting around the problem of sim-
ple identity without necessarily creating a plurality of existentially independ-
ent entities, which is necessary for PlotinusÕ theory of self-intellection.
The background to this argument from 5.3 [49].5 is that the intellect
always possesses its objects. If this were not the case, the intellect would
be vulnerable to the claim that it focused upon images.70 In virtue of hav-
ing its objects at each conceptual stage of its activity, Plotinus concludes
that the contemplator and the contemplated are the same (taétñn). At this
point it might appear that the distinction between the epistemic subject
and the intelligible object is untenable.71 Disregarding the evidence from
the previous section about the need for the subject-object distinction, I
think that the passage just quoted is not incompatible with this distinction
once it is made clear how Plotinus understands such a distinction.
For a start, that the activity of the intellect is constitutive of multiplic-
ity within itself is clear. Plotinus speaks of there being a sort of internal
occurrence (oåon parempesñn) when the intellect thinks itself, and it is this
which makes it, the intellect, many: eÞ oïn noèw, ÷ti polæw ¤sti, kaÜ tñ noeÝn
aétò oåon parempesñn, k’n ¤j aétoè Â, plhyæei. . . .72 Now we know that the
69
5.6 [24].1.6.
70
5.3 [49].5.17-20.
71
For this view, see E.K. Emilsson, ÒPlotinus on the Objects of Thought,Ó p. 33.
72
5.3 [49].11.26-28. Cf. 6.9 [9].9.8 for another occurrence of parempÛptv.
280 IAN CRYSTAL
Now given that the part/part reading has been ruled out, these active states
must be wholes.76 Moreover, as the multiplicity within the conceptual
framework of the intellect is accounted for in the primary sense by the
duality of subject and objects, it follows that the subject and objects will
73
Now, although the present passage is talking about a plurality of intelligible
objects, it is still relevant to the subject-object distinction for two reasons: Firstly,
Plotinus is talking about self-intellection, i.e. the intellectÕs act of thinking itself. And
that act is premised upon the epistemic subject having itself as an object of thought.
Secondly, any time one is talking about an intelligible or intelligibles, one has to pre-
suppose the subject-object distinction. For what it is to be an intelligible only makes
sense within the context of the subject-object distinction, i.e. the thinker and that which
is thought. Thus, I must be careful here to stress that multiplicity within the intellect
can be spoken of in two ways which must be kept distinct from one another. Firstly,
there is the multiplicity of ideas. Secondly, there is the multiplicity in that there is the
thinker and the object or objects which that thinker thinks. However, as the plurality
of intelligibles already presupposes the distinction between the subject and its objects,
it is of derivative importance for my account of self-intellection.
74
5.6 [24].1.5-6.
75
Although the term ÒstatesÓ is not PlotinusÕ own, I do not think it unfair of me
to use it, since it does capture what, I think, Plotinus is getting at when he talks about
the intellect qua thinker, as opposed to object thought. I could just as easily use the
term ÒdispositionÓ (or even ÒsenseÓ) and say the intellect has different dispositions
which amounts to the same thing, but again this is not PlotinusÕ own term. The impor-
tant point to get across is that intellect does have conceptual moments that differ from
one another connotationally.
76
See n. 3.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 281
77
It should be noted that Plotinus is not always consistent in his use of these three
terms, cf. J. Bussanich, The One and its Relation to the Intellect in Plotinus, p. 58.
However, at 5.3 [49].5.44-50 it is clear that they do represent different states of the
intellectual whole.
78
Cf. 2.9 [33].1.33ff. and G.J.P. OÕDaly, PlotinusÕ Philosophy of the Self, pp. 75-6
on the identity of subject and act.
79
Plotinus does sometimes refer to the intellect as having certain powers (dun‹-
meiw), powers which are always actualised, cf. 6.7 [38].35.21.
282 IAN CRYSTAL
and what thinks, that is, a plurality (oéx §teron, ll’ µ lñgÄ, tò nooæmenon kaÜ
tò nooèn, pl°yow ön), as has often been demonstrated. 6.7 [38].40.16-19
80
6.7 [38].39.12-13.
81
5.8 [31].4.5-6. Cf. 5.8 [31].4.22-25.
82
Cf. n. 78.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 283
reason the epistemic subject never loses sight of itself in this act – never
becomes opaque but always remains transparent to itself – is because this
act is generated by or from it. Plotinus, breaking from the Aristotelian
tradition, is actually allotting an active role to the intellectual subject in
its relation with its object, namely itself.83 In order to see how Plotinus
can successfully achieve such an identity relation, i.e. epistemic identity,
in which the intellectual subject and object are the same as one another,
yet connotationally differentiated but transparently so, I want to conclude
with an examination of the PlotinusÕ original reworking of the traditional
light analogy; an analogy which he employs to illustrate the noetic proc-
ess, and the identity thesis – what I call epistemic identity – around which
it operates.
VI. Light
If we return to the diafan° passage quoted above from 5.8 [31].4,
Plotinus, as he does elsewhere, employs the image of light illuminating
light: fÇw gŒr [sc. ¤sti diafan¡w] fvtÛ.84 By PlotinusÕ time, the light anal-
ogy had a very long tradition. The two most obvious instances being
PlatoÕs Republic and AristotleÕs De Anima.85 What both of these passages
have in common is that they are structured in such a way that the Sun
and the active intellect, respectively, are that in virtue of which the visi-
ble or intelligible objects are able to act upon the seer or the thinker. For
in both instances they actualise the medium in such a way that objects
become visible or intelligible. The Sun in the Republic does this by emit-
ting light and the active intellect by being in a certain state like light.86
Now there can be little doubt that Plotinus was very well aware of both
these passages and this traditional use of light.87 With this in mind, one
can appreciate what a signi cant shift there is in his reworking of this
83
Cf. E.K. Emilsson, ÒPlotinus on the Objects of Thought,Ó p. 41.
84
5.8 [31].4.6. Also cf. 5.6 [24].1.16-22.
85
Republic 509b2-20 and D.A. 430a15-17.
86
Obviously, I am not trying to imply that the roles of the Sun and the active intel-
lect are identical in their respective analogies, since the role of the latter is both much
more complex and broader in scope. Nonetheless they do have somewhat similar roles
in the context of allowing for the epistemic subject to be acted upon by creating the
right conditions.
87
Plotinus would certainly have known of the discussion of D.A. 3.5, if by no other
means than through Alexander of Aphrodisias. We have already witnessed his lifting
of the writing tablet analogy from D.A. 3.4. We also know he was aware of PlatoÕs
Sun analogy because he employs a very similar, if not identical, Sun analogy at 6.7
[38].16.25ff., when speaking of his rst principle.
284 IAN CRYSTAL
famous analogy. For Plotinus radically alters the relation between the intel-
lectual subject, the light and the object illuminated by the light:
But in the intelligible world, seeing is not through another [sc. medium], but
through itself, because it is not directed outside (¤keÝ d¢ oé di’ ¥t¡rou, llŒ di’
aêt°w, ÷ti mhd¢ ¦jv). Intellect therefore sees one light with another, not through
another (llÄ oïn fvtÜ llo fÇw õr˜, oé di’ llou). Light then sees another
light: it therefore itself sees itself (fÇw ra88 fÇw llo õr˜: aétò ra aêtò õr˜).
5.3 [49].8.21-2489
In the noetic world (¤keÝ), seeing is not through another (di’ ¥t¡rou) but
through itself (di’ aêt°w). This is because the focus of the subject, the seer,
is not directed outwards (÷ti mhd¢ ¦jv). The rst sentence of this passage,
I think, implies that the intellect qua the subject of the perception, is its
own medium. For it sees di’ aêt°w and, consequently, it itself establishes
or generates the correct conditions for the occurrence of sight. In this con-
text, the di‹ is pivotal because it is indicative of what Plotinus considers
to be passive and active. For if the intellect were to see di’ ¥t¡rou (the
traditional Platonic and Aristotelian usage), then there would be grounds
for taking the medium to be external to the intellectual subject, with the
result that when it, the medium, is in the proper state, i.e. activated, then
and only then can the subject be acted upon by the intelligible object. Thus
Plotinus, given his preference for di’ aêt°w as opposed to di’ ¥t¡rou,
clearly differs from both the Aristotelian and Platonic usage of light in
this epistemological context. For, according to their analogies, the source
of light was something independent of the subject. It is that which brought
about the right conditions which in turn enabled the objects to act upon
the epistemic subject.90 To make Plato and Aristotle conform to the
Plotinian usage, we would have to say that the seer and the passive intel-
lect themselves respectively activate the medium in such a way as to make
the visibles or intelligibles actually visible or intelligible. In other words,
they would have to make what they take to be passive active. That they
do not can be traced to the fact that they do not develop this doctrine of
noetic internality (÷ti mhd¢ ¦jv).
88
The Armstrong edition misprints this as ‘ra.
89
It should be noted that this sort of intellectual image of light meeting light can
be found in PlatoÕs Timaeus as an account of how actual vision works, cf. 45b2-d3.
I thank Gerard OÕDaly for pointing this out to me.
90
Recall that even with the Aristotelian usage from D.A. 3.5, it is only when the
active intellect is in a certain state that the intelligibles are able to act upon the intel-
lectual subject: . . . õ [sc. noèw] d¢ tÒ p‹nta poieÝn, Éw §jiw tiw, oåon tò fÇw: trñpon g‹r
tina kaÜ tò fÇw poieÝ tŒ dun‹mei önta xrÅmata ¤nergeÛ& xrÅmata.
PLOTINUS ON THE STRUCTURE OF SELF - INTELLECTION 285
Plotinus concludes (oïn) from the rst sentence that the intellect being
light (fÇw) sees another light (llo fÇw) with another light (llÄ fvtÛ)
not through another (di’ lloè). Are we to infer from this sentence that
we are dealing with three different lights and, if so, exactly how are they
different? Moreover, when intellect sees one light with another, what is
the force of the ÒwithÓ? Taking the questions in order, we know that the
lights are not different from one another as discrete parts of a whole dif-
fer from one another for two reasons: Plotinus has already rejected the
part/part reading and light, at least according to Plotinus, is an incorpo-
real entity,91 rendering it indivisible.92 Moreover, we also know that we
are not dealing with different separate independent substances (that is, dif-
ferent wholes qua substance), since he has already said in the opening
sentence that the intellectÕs attention is not directed outwards. The light
at which the intellect is looking must be itself. We are only examining
one numerical entity as far as substance is concerned. For the seer, the
seeing and the seen belong to the same thing. But the level of substance
is not the only one with which we are working. And this brings us to the
second question, the force of the Òwith.Ó
I understand the ÒwithÓ to mean that the intellect itself, in addition to
being the rst light (fÇw), i.e. the intellectual subject, is the other light
(llÄ fvtÛ) qua nñhsiw93 and that light brings itself to bear on the other
light (llo fÇw) which is itself qua nohtñn. For if one compares this sen-
tence to the sentence in the passage we had earlier, when discussing how
none of the wholes eclipsed one another (no®sei gŒr t» no®sei, ÷per ·n
aétñw, kaÜ no®sei tò nohtñn, ÷per ·n aétñw, 5.3 [49].5.43-50), one can see
that the ÒwithÓ picks out the bringing of the intellectÕs self quali ed in a
speci c way against itself quali ed in another way;94 what could be called
whole against whole. This interpretation of the sentence explains the
choice of ÒwithÓ over ÒthroughÓ in that ÒwithÓ in the present context, just
as di’ aêt°w in the previous sentence, renders the subject active, whereas
the ÒthroughÓ would make it passive.95 For the ÒwithÓ articulates the con-
91
2.1 [40].7.26-28 and 4.5 [29].6-7.
92
According to Plotinus at 6.4 [22].8.18-19 only corporeal bodies are divisible,
since they have magnitude.
93
Cf. 5.3 [49].6.7-8 and cf. n. 77.
94
The present passage which is under examination, much more than the one we
had previously, emphasises the transparency of the wholes in no uncertain terms.
95
Just as there were probable grounds for saying that Plotinus was consciously
altering the traditional light analogy, here it would seem as if he were consciously
inverting the through /with dichotomy which is central to SocratesÕ account of the epis-
286 IAN CRYSTAL
temic subject in the koin‹ passage of the Theaetetus. Plotinus either knows of the
Theaetetus directly or through Alexander. Plotinus, by using ÒwithÓ in this context, it
would seem, is further emphasising the identity between the epistemic subject and the
medium against a backdrop in the Theaetetus in which the two were heterogeneous,
i.e. the epistemic subject and its sense organs. Cf. Myles Burnyeat, ÒPlato on the Grammar
of Perceiving,Ó Classical Quarterly 26 (1976), p. 29.
96
PlotinusÕ use of light at 5.5 [32].7.13ff. does not contradict my argument, because
that context, again, is one of the intellectÕs inner light.
97
Cf. n. 78.