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05-18-2013, 11:31 PM | #41 | |
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This is also very significant:
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05-18-2013, 11:39 PM | #42 | |
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Musurillo on Methodius's borrowing from Irenaeus
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05-19-2013, 08:43 AM | #43 |
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Could Eusebius's Maximus have been the Platonist Maximus of Tyre who lived at the very same time? His understanding of the relationship of matter and evil seems uncannily similar
* The true answer to this most important question, which is but imperfectly solved by*Maximus,*is as follows: The habitude or relation which divinity has to things differs from that of ours; and again, things are related to divinity in a manner different from their relation to us: for there is one kind of relation of wholes to parts and another of parts towards each other. With reference to divinity, therefore, nothing is*evil,*not even among things which are called evils, for these he employs to beneficent purposes. But, on the other hand, with respect to partial natures, there is a certain*evil*with which they are naturally connected; and the same thing is*evilto a part, but to the universe and to wholes good. For so far as a thing has being, and so far as it participates of order, it is good.In short, there is no*evil*which is not, in a certain respect good, because the beneficent illuminations of Providence extend to all things, and even irradiate the dark and formless nature of*matter. Evil,*therefore, neither subsists in intellectual natures, for the whole intellectual order is void of*evil,*nor in souls or bodies which rank in the universe as*wholes;*for all*wholes*are free from*evil*on account of theirperpetually*subsisting according to nature. Hence*evil*must either subsist in partial souls, or in partial bodies, but yet not in the essences of these, because all their essences are of divine origin; nor in their powers, for these subsist according to nature. It remains, therefore, that*evil*must subsist in their energies. But among souls it cannot be in the energies of such as are rational, for all these aspire after good; nor in the energies of such as are irrational, for these energize according to nature; but it must take place*in*the*privation*of*symmetry*between*the*two .*And with respect to bodies,*evil*can neither subsist in their form, for it desires to rule over*matter,*nor inmatter,*for it aspires after the supervening irradiations of form; but in the*asymmetryof*form*with*respect*to*matter.*From hence, likewise, it is evident that every thing*evilhas nothing more than a shadowy kind of being; that at the same time it is coloured by good; that, consequently, all things are good through the will of divinity; and that evenevil*is necessary to the perfection of the universe, as without its shadowy nature generation could not subsist. See more on this very interesting subject in the introduction to my translation of five books of Plotinus. The above observations are extracted from that introduction, and are derived from the very adytum of Platonic philosophy. |
05-19-2013, 09:04 AM | #44 |
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Maximus of Tyre very closely resembles the Platonic theology of Maximus/Methodius and strangely for a Platonist acknowledges the existence of free will and understands it to be at least partially responsible for the existence of evil in the world (Dissertation 41). http://books.google.com/books?id=Dn5...tput=html_text This is at the core of the argument in Maximus's On Matter/Methodius's On Free Will
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05-19-2013, 09:06 AM | #45 |
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Methodius is connected with Tyre by Jerome
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05-19-2013, 10:06 AM | #46 |
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The "dissertations" of Maximus of Tyre survive with the subscription "philosophumena" the very name of an expanded version of Irenaeus's Against Heresies which survived at Mount Athos http://books.google.com/books?id=Ooz...ed=0CC4Q6AEwAg Ramelli sees the title of Hippolytus's work as deriving from a contemporary genre epitomized by Hierocles's work of the same name directed as it was against various philosophical "sects" (= heresies). In short another circumstantial reason for connecting Irenaeus to his contemporary Maximus of Tyre
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05-20-2013, 03:29 AM | #47 | |
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05-20-2013, 09:44 AM | #48 |
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Thank you. The translation of De Lepra is particularly significant. I notice again the translator makes reference to significant differences between the Greek and Slavonic throughout
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06-03-2013, 09:34 AM | #49 | |
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I sent an email to my friend Michael Trapp of King's College who happened to have authored a new translation of Maximus a while back asking if there are any parallels between Maximus the Platonist and Maximus the Platonist Christian. Here is his email:
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