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Bond University epublications@bond From Word to Silence, 2. The Way of Negation, Christian and Greek From Word to Silence, by Raoul Mortley December 1986 Frontismatter, preface, table of contents. Raoul Mortley Bond University, raoul_mortley@bond.edu.au Follow this and additional works at: http://epublications.bond.edu.au/word_to_silence_ii Recommended Citation Mortley, Raoul, "Frontismatter, preface, table of contents. " (1986). From Word to Silence, 2. The Way of Negation, Christian and Greek. Paper 1. http://epublications.bond.edu.au/word_to_silence_ii/1 This Book Chapter is brought to you by the From Word to Silence, by Raoul Mortley at epublications@bond. It has been accepted for inclusion in From Word to Silence, 2. The Way of Negation, Christian and Greek by an authorized administrator of epublications@bond. For more information, please contact Bond University's Repository Coordinator.

From Word to Silence Vol. 11 by Raoul Mortley

THEOPHANEIA BEITRAGE ZUR RELIGIONS- UND KIRCHENGESCHICHTE DES ALTERTUMS Begriindet von Franz Joseph Dolger und Theodor Klauser, in Verbindung mit dem F. J. Dolger-Institut herausgegeben von Ernst Dassmann From Word The way of negation, Christian and Greek HANSTEIN BONN

From Word The way of negation, Christian and Greek by Raoul Mortley PIANSTEIN BONN

CIP-Kurztitelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Mortley, Raoul : From word to silence / by Raoul Mortley. - Bonn; Frankfurt am Main: Hanstein (Theophaneia;...) Vol. 2. Moitley, Raoul: The way of negation, Christian and Greek. - 1986 Mortley, Raoul: The way of negation, Christian and Greek / by Raoul Mortley. - Bonn; Frankfurt am Main: Hanstein, 1986. (From word to silence / by Raoul Monley; Vsl. 1) (Theophaneia; 3 1) ISBN 3-7756-1241-6 NE: 2. GT 1986 Peter Hanstein Verlag GmbH, Bonn-Frankfurt am Main Alle Rechte vorbehalten ohne ausdriickliche Genehmigung des Verlages ist es auch nicht gestattet, das Buch oder Teile daraus auf photomechanischem Wege (Photokopie, Mikrokopie) zu vervielfaltigen Gesamtherstellung: Bercker Graph. Betrieb GmbH, Kevelaer Printed in Germany ISBN 3-7756-1241-6

Dedicated to my mentor in the history of ideas, M. Jean P6gin

Preface This volume follows the first in that it attempts to draw together the threads which constitute the theme of the limits of discourse, and to examine its development in late antiquity. As the transcendent emerged from the Platonist and Neopythagorean tradition, it encountered the monotheistic God of the Jews. The resulting synthesis dominates the Christian approach to discourse, and the Platonist follows its own lines. Of the two, the Greek Platonists give the more thorough account of the negative way. The use of the negative to explore the transcendent properly belongs to Greek Neoplatonism: in Christianity it is never fully developed, and functions more as a modifier of discourse in its over-confident phase. These differences tend to dissolve, however, with the later Arian thinkers, and of course with the most crucial writer of all, Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, with whom the most complete synthesis of the Greek and Christian negative way occurs. This book is dedicated to Monsieur Jean??@in. Over fifteen years of association with him has taught me an enormous amount, and I gratefully acknowledge this. I also thank my friend Michel Tardieu for many vigorous discussions; I have learnt much from him. To Joan Elder, who with unfailing courtesy and good humour typed this manuscript, go my sincere thanks also. Macquarie University

1. The Middle Platonists, The Mathematicians, and The Gnostics 13 The question of the limits of discourse, 13; negative theology and anthropomorphism, 14; the disappearance of the via negativa from scholarly interest, 15; the Festugihre view on the continuity of mystical philosophy, 16; the Middle Platonists, 17; the terms of negative theology, 18; the role of the Mathematicians in its development, 20; Origen on this point, 24; the Gnostics and their interest in incommunicability (the Tripartite Tractate, Marcus and Basilides), 25; the Gnostics and the Neoplatonists on language, 27. 11. The First Christian negative theology: Justin and Clement 33 Justin, transcendence and the inefficacy of names, 34; Ps. Justin, Exhortation to the Greeks on names and multiplicity in language, 35; Clement on language and silence, 36; Clement's view of discourse, 38; language as concealment, 39; the Gnostic understands language, perceiving its secret significance, 40; the via negativa, 42; abstraction and the unities of PlatoJs Parmenides, 43. 111. Plotinus and abstraction The ineffable One, 46; abstraction and negative descriptions, 47; imaginative negation, 49; time and eternity, 50; aphaivesis in Plotinus, 52; self-developing accretions, 55; abstraction and privation, 57; the desire of thought, 59; the procedure of intelligence, 60. W. Origen: Christian mysticism without the via negativa The silence of Zacharias, 63; silence, speech and concealment, 64; God, language, and being, 65; knowing God, 68; the via negativa, 78; Brigenys mystical theology, 84. V. The logic of negation; between Plotinus and Proclus 85 The Neoplatonist tradition, 86; Syrianus on privation, 87; Syrianus on negation and privation, 88; Syrianus on the ccrniraculous power of being", 89; Syrianus on negation and the byperousios, 90; Dexippus on negation/affirmation, 91; Dexippus on the revelation of essence through negation, 92; Alexander on negation, 94; concluding synthesis, 95.

I0 Contents W. Proclus and positive negation 9 7 Desire for the One, 97; the theological Parmenides, 98; Proclus on names, 99; geometry and Euclid as the background for the via negativa, 103; privation, 106; the positive value of negation, 107; negation and privation, 108; being and negation, 109; Proclus and Hegel, 1 10; hypernegation, 11 0; negation as a test of conditional statements, 1 13; negation the "mother of affirmation", 1 14; the negation of negation and ultimate silence, 116; Beierwaltes' interpretation, 1 17; language rejected, 1 1 8. WI. Damascius and Hyperignorance 119 Damascius a new stage at the end of Greek philosophy, 119; the desire to know, 119; names, 120; an attack on negation and analogy, 121; does Damascius represent the anti-negation school implied by Proclus? 12 1 ; language as mere gesticulation, 122; hyperignorance, 122; that which is beyond the One, 123; unknowability and ignorance, 124; language reveals subjective states only, 125; language as "stepping into a hole", 127. WII. Arian negative theology: Aetius and Eunomius Aetius and the temporalists, 128; thesis 4 and incomparability, 129; theses 12, 16 and ingeneracy, 130; privation and negation, 13 1; theses 20, 24, 132; Aetius on names, 133; Eunomius and ingeneracy, 134; Eunomius, negation and privation, 137; Gregory's critique on privation, 141; Daniklou on Eunomius, 146; Eunomius and Gregory on names and being, 147; the meaning of 6nivcsta, 15 1; Eunomius and Gregory on analogy, 153; names as beings, 154; ingeneracy and negative theology, 157. IX. Basil and Letter 38: the negative theology of the amateur The Aristotelianism of Letter, 3 8, 16 1; divine incomprehensibility, 162; Basil on ingeneracy and epinoia, 165; Basil's negative theology, 167. X. Gregory of Nyssa and Eunomius: theology versus philosophy The deity and time, 172; speech and time, 173; hope and Eunomius' backward-looking piety, 176; negation, 177; names and beings, 1 80; analogy, 183; does language pre-exist- man? 184; language and reality, 187; privation and abstraction, 188; Gregory and the via negativa, 19 I.

Contents 11 XI. Augustine: the importance of meaning and the unimportance of the negative method. 192 The experience at Bstia, 192; mysticism, 193; desire for knowledge, 194; semantic desire, 196; discourse as linear, 199; signs and authorial guarantees of meaning, 205; the via negativa, 210; Lossky's view, 21 1; purity of heart stressed, rather than purity of mind, 2 12; Ambrose's negatives, 2 12; vision and anthropornorphism, 2 12; language and the Trinity, 215; the via negativa a preparatory discipline, 215; Augustine at his most agnostic on the value of language, 217. XII. Pseudo-Dionysius: a positive view of language and the via negativa. 22 1 The identity of the Areopagite, 221; his importance, 222; the importance of names, 223; names as beings, 224; analogy, 226; the ontic basis of names, 228; the via negativa, 229; aphairesis, 231; steresis (privation), 233; use of contradiction, 237; his reversal of the image of light, 238 ff. Conclusion 242- The invention of reason, and scepticism about it, 242; the hypostatization of reason, 243; word as mask, 244; the desire for knowledge, 246; names and nature, 247; Augustine and the vindication of language, 247; the via negativa, 248; silence and the via negativa, 25 1. Appendix I The meaning of privation: a reply to J.C.M. van Winden, 255. Appendix 11 The modern via negativa: Susan Sontag, 264; Jacques Derrida, 268; theology and the via negativa, 274. Bibliography Index