Plotinos: Complete Works, v. 4 / In Chronological Order, Grouped in Four Periods

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FIRST ENNEAD, BOOK FOUR. Whether Animals May Be Termed Happy. 1 DEFINITIONS OF HAPPINESS.

THIRD ENNEAD, BOOK TWO. Of Providence. 20 EPICURUS TAUGHT CHANCE AND THE GNOSTICS AN EVIL CREATOR.

THIRD ENNEAD, BOOK THREE. Continuation of That on Providence.

FIFTH ENNEAD, BOOK THREE. The Self-Consciousnesses, and What is

THIRD ENNEAD, BOOK FIVE. 114 Of Love, or "Eros." LOVE AS GOD, GUARDIAN AND PASSION.

FIRST ENNEAD, BOOK EIGHT. Of the Nature and Origin of Evils. 156 QUESTIONS TO BE DISCUSSED.

SECOND ENNEAD, BOOK THREE. Whether Astrology is of any Value. 198 OF THE INFLUENCE OF THE STARS.

FIRST ENNEAD, BOOK ONE. The Organism and the Self. 270 PSYCHOLOGIC DISTINCTIONS IN SOUL.

FIRST ENNEAD, BOOK SEVEN. Of the First Good, and of the Other

PORPHYRY, COMMENTARIES OR OUTLINES OF THE ENNEADS OF PLOTINOS.

CONCORDANCE OF THE NUMBERS OF THE 44 PARAGRAPHS OF PORPHYRY'S

PRINCIPLES OF THE THEORY OF THE INTELLIGIBLES, BY PORPHYRY. 321

FIRST ENNEAD, 322 BOOK TWO. Of Virtues.

FIRST ENNEAD, BOOK NINE. Of Suicide. OF THE SEPARATION OF THE SOUL AND BODY.

SECOND ENNEAD, BOOK FOUR. Of Matter. OF THE CONCEPTION OF MATTER (10).

THIRD ENNEAD, BOOK SIX. Of the Impassibility of Incorporeal Things. OF THE INCORPOREAL (3).

THIRD ENNEAD, BOOK EIGHT. Of Nature, Contemplation, and of the One. OF THOUGHT.

FOURTH ENNEAD, BOOK TWO. Of the Nature of the Soul.

FOURTH ENNEAD, BOOK THREE. Problems About the Soul. UNION OF THE SOUL AND THE BODY.

FOURTH ENNEAD, BOOK SIX. Of Sensation and Memory. OF SENSATION.

FIFTH ENNEAD, BOOK TWO. Of Generation and of the Order of

FIFTH ENNEAD, BOOK THREE. Of the Hypostases that Mediate

SIXTH ENNEAD, BOOK FOUR. The One and Identical Being Is

SIXTH ENNEAD, BOOK FIVE. The One and Identical Being is

PSYCHOLOGICAL FRAGMENTS. A. On the Faculties of the Soul, by Porphyry. 356 OBJECT OF THE BOOK.

PLOTINIC STUDIES IN SOURCES, DEVELOPMENT AND INFLUENCE. I. DEVELOPMENT IN THE TEACHINGS OF PLOTINOS.

II. PLATONISM: SIGNIFICANCE, PROGRESS AND RESULTS.

III. PLOTINOS'S VIEW OF MATTER.

IV. PLOTINOS'S CREATION OF THE TRINITY.

V. RESEMBLANCES TO CHRISTIANITY. TRINITARIAN SIGNIFICANCE OF PLOTINOS.

VII. PLOTINOS'S INDEBTEDNESS TO NUMENIUS. 1. HISTORICAL RELATIONS BETWEEN NUMENIUS AND PLOTINOS.

VALUE OF PLOTINOS. IMPORTANCE IN THE PAST.

CONCORDANCE TO PLOTINOS.

Plotinos, his Life, Times and Philosophy

Transcriber's Notes

Transcriber's Notes

This is part of a four-volume set. It contains many references to passages in this volume, other volumes of this set, and other books by various authors.

External links are underlined like this; support for them depends on the device and program used to display this eBook.

Each volume of this set contains irregularities that are summarized in the Transcriber's Notes at the end of that volume.

VOLUME IV.
WORKS OF PLOTINOS.


PLOTINOS
Complete Works

In Chronological Order, Grouped in Four Periods;

With
BIOGRAPHY by Porphyry, Eunapius, & Suidas,
COMMENTARY by Porphyry,
ILLUSTRATIONS by Jamblichus & Ammonius,
STUDIES in Sources, Development, Influence;
INDEX of Subjects, Thoughts and Words.

by
Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie,
Professor in Extension, University of the South, Sewanee;
A.M., Sewanee, and Harvard; Ph.D., Tulane, and Columbia.
M.D., Medico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia.

Vol. IV
Eustochian Books, 46–54; Comment.

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE PRESS

P. O. Box 42, ALPINE, N.J., U.S.A.

Copyright, 1918, by Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie.
All Rights, including that of Translation, Reserved.

Entered at Stationers' Hall, by
George Bell and Sons, Portugal Street, Lincoln's Inn, London.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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