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02-24-2009, 02:32 PM | #11 | ||
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The Gnostic texts can be read as containing supernatural anthropomorphic entities existing in an astral realm but supporting that is a difficult task because of the nature of the subject matter. You can’t tell if the writers were taking philosophical concepts and turning them into supernatural understandings or you are just misinterpreting their symbolic/figurative language. Quote:
The Jewish Messiah is a political leader who is meant to help lead an oppressed people. And while a lot of the language in the NT should be understood under a Gnostic/platonic light, the savior part is probably more correctly understood from the stand point of Socrates death and Plato’s ideal society. It wasn’t all metaphysics back then; there was a political element as well. There are lots of understandings of the Logos out there. I think looking towards Philo would be the closest example for what they were trying to express. |
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02-24-2009, 11:41 PM | #12 | ||
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As for Gnostics being Platonist. The notion of a demented creator is not Platonist and that was central for Gnostics, wasn't it? Platonists went on and on about the goodness of divinity. Plotinus attacks the gnostics (on this point) and when Porphyry goes for the Christians, its for their angry, jealous demon of a god. Surely Gnostics are more like mystical Christians or Manicheans? Ala John's use of "Logos", their reuse of any terms from Plato and successors is probably just a matter of using what had become commonplace. Of course, if gnostics were "wayward" platonists, Iamblichus' devotion to even "dirty" matter being good would make him the ultimate "orthodox". |
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02-25-2009, 11:55 AM | #13 | |||
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By the masses I mean that it’s the basic philosophical greek worldview without having to go read greek philosophy. Quote:
Gnostics are like Manicheans sure, but mystics get their information/gnosis from a totally different source and would probably look down on the general Gnostic way of communicating the truth about the universe as just repeating what others have said without ever sniffing at the true reality. I could see a trend of inner circle exclusivity in the mystic practicing religions though and there were probably groups that tried to incorporate everything they could. For Logos, I don’t think they just grabbed a word without having a related meaning in mind. Unfortunately they grabbed a word like Logos that has multiple abstract meanings so you can’t tell what concept they were speaking to exactly. Quote:
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02-25-2009, 12:21 PM | #14 | |||||
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This is the main distinction between Platonism and Greek thought in general and Christian/Manichean/Persian/Gnostic thought. It was the focus of much of Platonic writings. As the gods were brought on board in the last classical centuries, they too were defined good and helpful, their different aspects clearly delineated. Quote:
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Sure they may have reused general philosophical terms ala John used "Logos" but that doesn't make them Platonists. Doesn't mean they teased out meaning from Plato. |
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02-25-2009, 12:45 PM | #15 | |
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Andrew Criddle |
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02-25-2009, 12:54 PM | #16 | |||||
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02-25-2009, 04:16 PM | #17 | ||||
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As for "Evil": distance or person and agent? Gnostics, as Plotinus, pointed out, held the latter (as would Mani's folks and Orthodox Christians when they came along) and he said they were wrong. Where they invoked Plato, they were slandering him (BTW, it's this sort of "true faith" speak that makes me think of "Orthodox Platonism".). Numenius believed in an evil world soul! He did? Numenius so influenced Plotinus that Plotinus was accused of plagerism. Plotinus sees good in soul. There is no agent of badness. Certainly impersonal matter isn't one. Ergo what did Numenius believe? I think the Christian lens sees what it wants to see. Quote:
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Jews (in a broad sense), gnostic, christian whatever, may have dabbled in Plato but their focus is on other texts. Were they influenced by Plato's words? Some were but that doesn't make them Platonists. And I don't see influence in the other direction. |
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02-25-2009, 05:10 PM | #18 | ||
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02-25-2009, 09:21 PM | #19 | |
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The layers of divinity is one part of a much larger and fundamentally non-Jewish picture. Take reincarnation. Clearly not a Jewish sect thing. But it is part and parcel of Platonism - Myth of Er sums it up nicely. And then there's the intrinsic goodness of divinity. These aren't add-ons to some "creator god" core. These are core. And they interplay to make a coherent story. The further you are (Odysseus easily straying crew was a favorite example) from the good, the more likely you are to return to this world after death and not to a good place. Few make it all the way "from the alone to the alone", achieve oblivion. Theurgy (playing with the gods), astrology, ... are just color for this drama. The Jewish drama, the philosopher's drama, they both had different poets over time, with different emphases and though these tellers drew on the tales of others, they never forgot the essentials of their own. Gnostics (as we call them) were essentially Jewish. Plato was at most icing. They weren't bringing Plato or Greek thought to the masses. That thought was an altogether non-Jewish thing. |
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02-26-2009, 06:44 AM | #20 | |
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I only mean to suggest that Christianity, if it was influenced at all by Platonism, may have adopted an already existing redeemer myth. It did not exhibit a very high level of philosophical sophistication, even when late 2nd and 3rd century fathers tried to do for it what Philo did for Judaism in the 1st century. In both cases, it was like trying to make a silk purse out of a sows ear.
Gnostics seem to have been much more directly influenced by Platonism, at least in their dualism, and yes in a bawlderized form (pure ideas vs material manifestations becomes a freedom of a perfect pleroma vs the prison of the material world), but that doesn't completely explain the redeemer myth. That is why I am interested in Pearson's research on Jewish influenced Gnosticism. A good deal of Jewish apocalyptic eschatology and technical terminology that betrays Hebrew and Aramaic origins is in a wide variety of Gnostic and Hermetic writings, not just "Sethian" ones. What he proposes is this: Gnosticism was a religions protest movement of late antiquity that, at least in its earliest history, based much of its mythology on Jewish scripture and tradition. It was a movement of intellectuals, and thus was able to incorporate ideas and traditions from the syncretistic milieu of the Hellenized Levant. The dominant impulse of the early stages of Gnostic history was its attitude towards Judaism. This attitude, as we have seen in our survey of Sethian texts, is o0ne of alienation and rejection, expressed in a very sophisticated, if perverse, way of reinterpreting biblical and Jewish traditions. Hence it seems most plausible to conclude that the earliest Gnostics were Jewish intellectuals eager to redefine their own religious self-understanding, convinced of the bankruptcy of traditional verities. It is quite possible that an important factor in the development of this Gnostiuc attitude was a profound sense of the failure of history. This appears to be reflected in the way in which the Gnostic sources depict the foibles and mechanizations of the Creator. The essential feature of Gnosticism in its earliest history is its revolutionary attitude toward Judaism and Jewish traditions. [Gnosticism, Judaism & Egyptian Christianity, pp 133-134]So perhaps I should be more specific and say that the same set of historical events (mainly the failure of the aims of the Jewish rebellion of 66-70 and the influence of popularized Platonic ideas) were key elements in the development of BOTH classical Gnosticism AND "proto-orthodox" Christianity. DCH Taking my 15 minute union mandated morning break to send a message composed yesterday evening, thank you. Quote:
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