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022_000071/0000

Initiation into the Mysteries. A Collection of Studies in Religion, Philosophy and the Arts

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Field of science
Irodalomelmélet, összehasonlító irodalomtudomány, irodalmi stílusok / Literary theory and comparative literature, literary styles (13021)
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Collection Károli. Collection of Papers
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tanulmánykötet
022_000071/0180
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Page 181 [181]
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022_000071/0180

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MYSTICISM AND RATIONALITY. A NEOPLATONIC PERSPECTIVE 3. THE QUESTION OF SCEPTICISM REVISITED We have seen earlier that the late Neoplatonists recognized different theological approaches to divine truth. Damascius often points out that the different theologies provide different answers to a question. The point is not that they are to be disbelieved, but rather that philosophical inquiry and argument must be the judge, not so much in order to decide who is right, but to discern that they are all expressions of a truth that lies beyond their reach. This truth, Damascius says, is known only to the gods: Someone could adduce evidence for either hypothesis from the theologies: from the Chaldaean and Orphic he could maintain the second thesis, but from the Egyptian and from the Phoenician the first. The gods alone would know the truth. But let this point be the end of our deliberation concerning these matters. Perhaps we shall make some investigation again concerning them.® This echoes a point that was made by Plato himself, namely that our human knowledge is not sufficient to understand all reality. In the Parmenides, one of the self-criticisms of Plato’s theory of ideas has it that we cannot know the true nature of the ideas, as that would require a divine viewpoint.’ And in his many references to the traditional gods, Plato always leaves open the question of their nature, as we cannot know such things." That does not prevent Plato, however, from scrutinizing the gods’ nature or the ideas. It is more like a caveat that indicates that there will always be more to it than what our human capacities can achieve. Also, in the case of Damascius, this caveat does not mean that rational discourse, or philosophy, has no role to play. Reason remains a true guide to the contemplation of truth. This may become clear, for instance, from Damascius’ discussion of the principles of limit and the unlimited (mépac and dmetpov), which stem from Plato’s Philebus, but which have an equivalent in different theological traditions: the Orphics talk about aether and Chaos that come after Chronos, the Chaldaean Oracles want there to be a dyad of father and power after the one god, etc.!' According to Damascius, these terminologies are interchangeable: Damascius, DP II 212, 13-19:”Exoı 6’ Av Tıg EKatepqa dnoBéoEL papropia Erayayeiv amo TOV BeoAoyı®v, and uEv TÄS XaAdaikfig TE Kal Hppırfis Peßaıwv tv devrepav, And dE TS alyurrtiag kal Tig Potvikwv tiv mpotépay. Td pév obv AAndEG adroi Av eiôetev oi Beoi- nuiv OÈ LÉXpt TODÔE Sinnopnodw nepi TOdTwWv- Täxa yap Av Kal addıs adrwv noımoönedd Tiva Ernotv. 9° Plato, Parm. 134 b-e. 10 See, e.g., Plato, Tim. 40 d-e; Phaedrus 246 e. Cf. Damascius, DP II 24, 1-24: “Let us now say something about this subject, opposition. Should we then, as virtually all philosophers and even more theologians, hold that the dyad should be placed after the celebrated first principle, also place the dyad here, speaking now + 179 + Daréczi-Sepsi-Vassänyi_Initiation_155x240.indb 179 6 2020.06.15. 11:04:19

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