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2020 | 75 | 3 | 237 – 250

Article title

WHAT IS THAT WHICH IS ALWAYS BECOMING, AND WHAT IS THAT WHICH ALWAYS IS?

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This paper explores the Neoplatonic interpretations of the distinction that Plato draws at the beginning of Timaeus (27d6 – 28a1) between “that which always is and has no becoming” and “that which is always becoming but never is”. Philoponustriesto show that Plato understands “generated” in the sense of “generated in time”, rejecting Aristotle’s incompatible thesis. According to the Neoplatonic reading that Plotinus inaugurates, and Porphyry subsequently develops, “generated” (γενητóν) has two meanings: to depend on a cause and to exist by virtue of a composition. The first meaning is assigned to the incorporeal – the Intelligence and the Soul; the two meanings, on the other hand, are assigned to bodies. The Intelligence depends on a cause, the One-Good; and, in turn, the Soul depends on a cause, the Intelligence. These realities are not in the range of “that which is always generated and never is”, but of “that which always is and is not generated”, i.e. of “that which is without ceasing to be”.

Keywords

Year

Volume

75

Issue

3

Pages

237 – 250

Physical description

Contributors

  • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-b8694eae-162d-464d-9030-f68990a0e271
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