The Six Enneads

 Table of Contents

 The First Ennead.

 First Tractate. The Animate and the Man.

 Second Tractate. On Virtue.

 Third Tractate. On Dialectic [The Upward Way].

 Fourth Tractate. On True Happiness.

 Fifth Tractate. Happiness and Extension of Time.

 Sixth Tractate. Beauty.

 Seventh Tractate. On the Primal Good and Secondary Forms of Good

 Eighth Tractate. On the Nature and Source of Evil.

 Ninth Tractate. The Reasoned Dismissal.

 The Second Ennead.

 First Tractate. On the Kosmos or on the Heavenly System.

 Second Tractate. The Heavenly Circuit.

 Third Tractate. Are the Stars Causes?

 Fourth Tractate. Matter in its Two Kinds.

 Fifth Tractate. On Potentiality and Actuality.

 Sixth Tractate. Quality and Form-Idea.

 Seventh Tractate. On Complete Transfusion.

 Eighth Tractate. Why Distant Objects Appear Small.

 Ninth Tractate. Against those that Affirm the Creator of the Kosmos and the Kosmos Itself to Be Evil [Generally quoted as Against the Gnostics].

 The Third Ennead.

 First Tractate. Fate.

 Second Tractate. On Providence (1).

 Third Tractate. On Providence (2).

 Fourth Tractate. Our Tutelary Spirit.

 Fifth Tractate. On Love.

 Sixth Tractate. The Impassivity of the Unembodied.

 Seventh Tractate. Time and Eternity.

 Eighth Tractate. Nature Contemplation and the One.

 Ninth Tractate. Detached Considerations.

 The Fourth Ennead.

 First Tractate. On the Essence of the Soul (1).

 Second Tractate. On the Essence of the Soul (2).

 Third Tractate. Problems of the Soul (1).

 Fourth Tractate. Problems of the Soul (2).

 Fifth Tractate. Problems of the Soul (3).

 Sixth Tractate. Perception and Memory.

 Seventh Tractate. The Immortality of the Soul.

 Eighth Tractate. The Soul's Descent into Body.

 Ninth Tractate. Are All Souls One?.

 The Fifth Ennead.

 First Tractate. The Three Initial Hypostases.

 Second Tractate. The Origin and Order of the Beings.

 Third Tractate. The Knowing Hypostases and the Transcendent.

 Fourth Tractate. How the Secondaries Rise from the First: and on the One.

 Fifth Tractate. That the Intellectual Beings are Not Outside the Intellectual-Principle: And on the Nature of the Good.

 Sixth Tractate. That the Principle Transcending Being has no Intellectual Act. What Being has Intellection Primally and what Being has it Secondarily.

 Seventh Tractate. Is There an Ideal Archetype of Particular Beings?

 Eighth Tractate. On the Intellectual Beauty.

 Ninth Tractate. The Intellectual-Principle, the Ideas, and the Authentic Existence.

 The Sixth Ennead.

 First Tractate. On the Kinds of Being (1).

 Second Tractate. On the Kinds of Being (2).

 Third Tractate. On the Kinds of Being (3).

 Fourth Tractate. On the Integral Omnipresence of the Authentic Existent (1).

 Fifth Tractate On the Integral Omnipresence of the Authentic Existent (2).

 Sixth Tractate. On Numbers.

 Seventh Tractate. How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-Forms came into Being: and Upon the Good.

 Eighth Tractate. On Free-Will and the Will of the One.

 Ninth Tractate. On the Good, or the One.

Second Tractate.

The Origin and Order of the Beings.

Following on the First.

1. The One is all things and no one of them; the source of all things is not all things; all things are its possession - running back, so to speak, to it - or, more correctly, not yet so, they will be.

But a universe from an unbroken unity, in which there appears no diversity, not even duality?

It is precisely because that is nothing within the One that all things are from it: in order that Being may be brought about, the source must be no Being but Being's generator, in what is to be thought of as the primal act of generation. Seeking nothing, possessing nothing, lacking nothing, the One is perfect and, in our metaphor, has overflowed, and its exuberance has produced the new: this product has turned again to its begetter and been filled and has become its contemplator and so an Intellectual-Principle.

That station towards the one [the fact that something exists in presence of the One] establishes Being; that vision directed upon the One establishes the Intellectual-Principle; standing towards the One to the end of vision, it is simultaneously Intellectual-Principle and Being; and, attaining resemblance in virtue of this vision, it repeats the act of the One in pouring forth a vast power.

This second outflow is a Form or Idea representing the Divine Intellect as the Divine Intellect represented its own prior, The One.

This active power sprung from essence [from the Intellectual-Principle considered as Being] is Soul.

Soul arises as the idea and act of the motionless Intellectual-Principle - which itself sprang from its own motionless prior - but the soul's operation is not similarly motionless; its image is generated from its movement. It takes fulness by looking to its source; but it generates its image by adopting another, a downward, movement.

This image of Soul is Sense and Nature, the vegetal principle.

Nothing, however, is completely severed from its prior. Thus the human Soul appears to reach away as far down as to the vegetal order: in some sense it does, since the life of growing things is within its province; but it is not present entire; when it has reached the vegetal order it is there in the sense that having moved thus far downwards it produces - by its outgoing and its tendency towards the less good - another hypostasis or form of being just as its prior (the loftier phase of the Soul) is produced from the Intellectual-Principle which yet remains in untroubled self-possession.

2. To resume: there is from the first principle to ultimate an outgoing in which unfailingly each principle retains its own seat while its offshoot takes another rank, a lower, though on the other hand every being is in identity with its prior as long as it holds that contact.

In the case of soul entering some vegetal form, what is there is one phase, the more rebellious and less intellectual, outgone to that extreme; in a soul entering an animal, the faculty of sensation has been dominant and brought it there; in soul entering man, the movement outward has either been wholly of its reasoning part or has come from the Intellectual-Principle in the sense that the soul, possessing that principle as immanent to its being, has an inborn desire of intellectual activity and of movement in general.

But, looking more minutely into the matter, when shoots or topmost boughs are lopped from some growing thing, where goes the soul that was present in them? Simply, whence it came: soul never knew spatial separation and therefore is always within the source. If you cut the root to pieces, or burn it, where is the life that was present there? In the soul, which never went outside of itself.

No doubt, despite this permanence, the soul must have been in something if it reascends; and if it does not, it is still somewhere; it is in some other vegetal soul: but all this means merely that it is not crushed into some one spot; if a Soul-power reascends, it is within the Soul-power preceding it; that in turn can be only in the soul-power prior again, the phase reaching upwards to the Intellectual-Principle. Of course nothing here must be understood spatially: Soul never was in space; and the Divine Intellect, again, is distinguished from soul as being still more free.

Soul thus is nowhere but in the Principle which has that characteristic existence at once nowhere and everywhere.

If the soul on its upward path has halted midway before wholly achieving the supreme heights, it has a mid-rank life and has centred itself upon the mid-phase of its being. All in that mid-region is Intellectual-Principle not wholly itself - nothing else because deriving thence [and therefore of that name and rank], yet not that because the Intellectual-Principle in giving it forth is not merged into it.

There exists, thus, a life, as it were, of huge extension, a total in which each several part differs from its next, all making a self-continuous whole under a law of discrimination by which the various forms of things arise with no effacement of any prior in its secondary.

But does this Soul-phase in the vegetal order, produce nothing?

It engenders precisely the Kind in which it is thus present: how, is a question to be handled from another starting-point.