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Demiurge

In the Platonic, Neopythagorean, Middle Platonic, and Neoplatonic schools of philosophy, the demiurge (/ˈdɛmi.ɜːr/) is an artisan-like figure responsible for fashioning and maintaining the physical universe. The Gnostics adopted the term demiurge. Although a fashioner, the demiurge is not necessarily the same as the creator figure in the monotheistic sense, because the demiurge itself and the material from which the demiurge fashions the universe are both considered consequences of something else. Depending on the system, they may be considered either uncreated and eternal or the product of some other entity.

The word demiurge is an English word derived from demiurgus, a Latinised form of the Greek δημιουργός or dēmiurgós. It was originally a common noun meaning "craftsman" or "artisan", but gradually came to mean "producer", and eventually "creator". The philosophical usage and the proper noun derive from Plato's Timaeus, written c. 360 BC, where the demiurge is presented as the creator of the universe. The demiurge is also described as a creator in the Platonic (c. 310–90 BC) and Middle Platonic (c. 90 BC–AD 300) philosophical traditions. In the various branches of the Neoplatonic school (third century onwards), the demiurge is the fashioner of the real, perceptible world after the model of the Ideas, but (in most Neoplatonic systems) is still not itself "the One". In the arch-dualist ideology of the various Gnostic systems, the material universe is evil, while the non-material world is good. According to some strains of Gnosticism, the demiurge is malevolent, as it is linked to the material world. In others, including the teaching of Valentinus, the demiurge is simply ignorant or misguided.

Platonism and Neoplatonism

Plato and the Timaeus

Plato, as the speaker Timaeus, refers to the Demiurge frequently in the Socratic dialogue Timaeus (28a ff.), c. 360 BC. The main character refers to the Demiurge as the entity who "fashioned and shaped" the material world. Timaeus describes the Demiurge as unreservedly benevolent, and so it desires a world as good as possible. Plato's work Timaeus is a philosophical reconciliation of Hesiod's cosmology in his Theogony, syncretically reconciling Hesiod to Homer.[1][2][3]

Middle Platonism

In Middle Platonist and Numenius's Neo-Pythagorean cosmogenies, the Demiurge is second God as the nous or thought of intelligibles and sensibles[4] (Middle Platonism and Neo-Pythagoreanism overlapped: both originating in the early 1st century BC and extending through to the end of the 2nd century AD or even into the 3rd century).

Neoplatonism

The work of Plotinus and other later Platonists in the 3rd century AD to further clarify the Demiurge is known as Neoplatonism. To Plotinus, the second emanation represents an uncreated second cause (see Pythagoras' Dyad). Plotinus sought to reconcile Aristotle's energeia with Plato's Demiurge,[5] which, as Demiurge and mind (nous), is a critical component in the ontological construct of human consciousness used to explain and clarify substance theory within Platonic realism (also called idealism). In order to reconcile Aristotelian with Platonian philosophy,[5] Plotinus metaphorically identified the demiurge (or nous) within the pantheon of the Greek Gods as Zeus.[6]

Henology

The first and highest aspect of God is described by Plato as the One (Τὸ Ἕν, 'To Hen'), the source, or the Monad.[7] This is the God above the Demiurge, and manifests through the actions of the Demiurge. The Monad emanated the demiurge or Nous (consciousness) from its "indeterminate" vitality due to the monad being so abundant that it overflowed back onto itself, causing self-reflection.[8] This self-reflection of the indeterminate vitality was referred to by Plotinus as the "Demiurge" or creator. The second principle is organization in its reflection of the nonsentient force or dynamis, also called the one or the Monad. The dyad is energeia emanated by the one that is then the work, process or activity called nous, Demiurge, mind, consciousness that organizes the indeterminate vitality into the experience called the material world, universe, cosmos. Plotinus also elucidates the equation of matter with nothing or non-being in The Enneads[9] which more correctly is to express the concept of idealism or that there is not anything or anywhere outside of the "mind" or nous (c.f. pantheism).

Plotinus' form of Platonic idealism is to treat the Demiurge, nous, as the contemplative faculty (ergon) within man which orders the force (dynamis) into conscious reality.[10] In this, he claimed to reveal Plato's true meaning: a doctrine he learned from Platonic tradition that did not appear outside the academy or in Plato's text. This tradition of creator God as nous (the manifestation of consciousness), can be validated in the works of pre-Plotinus philosophers such as Numenius, as well as a connection between Hebrew and Platonic cosmology (see also Philo).[11]

The Demiurge of Neoplatonism is the Nous (mind of God), and is one of the three ordering principles:

  • Arche (Gr. 'beginning') – the source of all things,
  • Logos (Gr. 'reason/cause') – the underlying order that is hidden beneath appearances,
  • Harmonia (Gr. 'harmony') – numerical ratios in mathematics.

Before Numenius of Apamea and Plotinus' Enneads, no Platonic works ontologically clarified the Demiurge from the allegory in Plato's Timaeus. The idea of Demiurge was, however, addressed before Plotinus in the works of Christian writer Justin Martyr who built his understanding of the Demiurge on the works of Numenius.[12]

Iamblichus

Later, the Neoplatonist Iamblichus changed the role of the "One", effectively altering the role of the Demiurge as second cause or dyad, which was one of the reasons that Iamblichus and his teacher Porphyry came into conflict.

The figure of the Demiurge emerges in the theoretic of Iamblichus, which conjoins the transcendent, incommunicable “One,” or Source. Here, at the summit of this system, the Source and Demiurge (material realm) coexist via the process of henosis.[13] Iamblichus describes the One as a monad whose first principle or emanation is intellect (nous), while among "the many" that follow it there is a second, super-existent "One" that is the producer of intellect or soul (psyche).

The "One" is further separated into spheres of intelligence; the first and superior sphere is objects of thought, while the latter sphere is the domain of thought. Thus, a triad is formed of the intelligible nous, the intellective nous, and the psyche in order to reconcile further the various Hellenistic philosophical schools of Aristotle's actus and potentia (actuality and potentiality) of the unmoved mover and Plato's Demiurge.

Then within this intellectual triad Iamblichus assigns the third rank to the Demiurge, identifying it with the perfect or Divine nous with the intellectual triad being promoted to a hebdomad (pure intellect).

In the theoretic of Plotinus, nous produces nature through intellectual mediation, thus the intellectualizing gods are followed by a triad of psychic gods.

Gnosticism

Gnosticism presents a distinction between the highest, unknowable God or Supreme Being and the demiurgic "creator" of the material, commonly identified as Yahweh, the God of the Hebrew Bible. Several systems of Gnostic thought present the Demiurge as antagonistic to the will of the Supreme Being: his act of creation occurs in an unconscious semblance of the divine model, and thus is fundamentally flawed, or else is formed with the malevolent intention of entrapping aspects of the divine in materiality. Thus, in such systems, the Demiurge acts as a solution to (or, at least possibly, the problem or cause that gives rise to) the problem of evil.[14]

Angels

Psalm 82 begins, "God stands in the assembly of El [LXX: assembly of gods], in the midst of the gods he renders judgment",[15] indicating a plurality of gods, although it does not indicate that these gods were co-actors in creation. Philo had inferred from the expression "Let us make man" of the Book of Genesis that God had used other beings as assistants in the creation of man, and he explains in this way why man is capable of vice as well as virtue, ascribing the origin of the latter to God, of the former to his helpers in the work of creation.[16]

The earliest Gnostic sects ascribe the work of creation to angels, some of them using the same passage in Genesis.[17] So Irenaeus tells[18] of the system of Simon Magus,[19] of the system of Menander,[20] of the system of Saturninus, in which the number of these angels is reckoned as seven, and[21] of the system of Carpocrates. In the report of the system of Basilides,[22] we are told that our world was made by the angels who occupy the lowest heaven; but special mention is made of their chief, who is said to have been the God of the Jews, to have led that people out of the land of Egypt, and to have given them their law. The prophecies are ascribed not to the chief but to the other world-making angels.

The Latin translation, confirmed by Hippolytus of Rome,[23] makes Irenaeus state that according to Cerinthus (who shows Ebionite influence), creation was made by a power quite separate from the Supreme God and ignorant of him. Theodoret,[24] who here copies Irenaeus, turns this into the plural number "powers", and so Epiphanius of Salamis[25] represents Cerinthus as agreeing with Carpocrates in the doctrine that the world was made by angels.

Yaldabaoth

 
A lion-faced, serpentine deity found on a Gnostic gem in Bernard de Montfaucon's L'antiquité expliquée et représentée en figures may be a depiction of the Demiurge.

In the Archontic, Sethian, and Ophite systems, which have many affinities with the doctrine of Valentinus, the making of the world is ascribed to a company of seven archons, whose names are given, but still more prominent is their chief, "Yaldabaoth" (also known as "Yaltabaoth" or "Ialdabaoth").

In the Apocryphon of John c. AD 120–180, the demiurge arrogantly declares that he has made the world by himself:

Now the archon ["ruler"] who is weak has three names. The first name is Yaltabaoth, the second is Saklas ["fool"], and the third is Samael ["blind god"]. And he is impious in his arrogance which is in him. For he said, 'I am God and there is no other God beside me,' for he is ignorant of his strength, the place from which he had come.[26]

He is Demiurge and maker of man, but as a ray of light from above enters the body of man and gives him a soul, Yaldabaoth is filled with envy; he tries to limit man's knowledge by forbidding him the fruit of knowledge in paradise. At the consummation of all things, all light will return to the Pleroma. But Yaldabaoth, the Demiurge, with the material world, will be cast into the lower depths.[27]

Yaldabaoth is frequently called "the Lion-faced", leontoeides, and is said to have the body of a serpent. The demiurge is also[28] described as having a fiery nature, applying the words of Moses to him: "the Lord our God is a burning and consuming fire". Hippolytus claims that Simon used a similar description.[29]

In Pistis Sophia, Yaldabaoth has already sunk from his high estate and resides in Chaos, where, with his forty-nine demons, he tortures wicked souls in boiling rivers of pitch, and with other punishments (pp. 257, 382). He is an archon with the face of a lion, half flame, and half darkness.

In the Nag Hammadi text On the Origin of the World, the three sons of Yaldabaoth are listed as Yao, Eloai, and Astaphaios.[30]

Under the name of Nebro (rebel), Yaldabaoth is called an angel in the apocryphal Gospel of Judas. He is first mentioned in "The Cosmos, Chaos, and the Underworld" as one of the twelve angels to come "into being [to] rule over chaos and the [underworld]". He comes from heaven, and it is said his "face flashed with fire and [his] appearance was defiled with blood". Nebro creates six angels in addition to the angel Saklas to be his assistants. These six, in turn, create another twelve angels "with each one receiving a portion in the heavens".

Names

 
Drawing of the lion-headed figure found at the Mithraeum of C. Valerius Heracles and sons, dedicated 190 CE at Ostia Antica, Italy (CIMRM 312).

The etymology of the name Yaldabaoth has been subject to many speculative theories. Until 1974, etymologies deriving from the unattested Aramaic: בהותא, romanized: bāhūthā, supposedly meaning "chaos", represented the majority view. Following an analysis by the Jewish historian of religion Gershom Scholem published in 1974,[31] this etymology no longer enjoyed any notable support. His analysis showed the unattested Aramaic term to have been fabulated and attested only in a single corrupted text from 1859, with its claimed translation having been transposed from the reading of an earlier etymology, whose explanation seemingly equated "darkness" and "chaos" when translating an unattested supposed plural form of Hebrew: בוהו, romanizedbōhu.[31][32]

"Samael" literally means "Blind God" or "God of the Blind" in Hebrew (סמאל‎). This being is considered not only blind, or ignorant of its own origins, but may, in addition, be evil; its name is also found in Judaism as the Angel of Death and in Christian demonology. This link to Judeo-Christian tradition leads to a further comparison with Satan. Another alternative title for the demiurge is "Saklas", Aramaic for "fool". In the Apocryphon of John, Yaldabaoth is also known as both Sakla and Samael.[33]

The angelic name "Ariel" (Hebrew: 'the lion of God')[34] has also been used to refer to the Demiurge and is called his "perfect" name;[35] in some Gnostic lore, Ariel has been called an ancient or original name for Ialdabaoth.[36] The name has also been inscribed on amulets as "Ariel Ialdabaoth",[37][38] and the figure of the archon inscribed with "Aariel".[39]

Marcion

According to Marcion, the title God was given to the Demiurge, who was to be sharply distinguished from the higher Good God. The former was díkaios, severely just, the latter agathós, or loving-kind; the former was the "god of this world",[40] the God of the Old Testament, the latter the true God of the New Testament. Christ, in reality, is the Son of the Good God. The true believer in Christ entered into God's kingdom, the unbeliever remained forever the slave of the Demiurge.[27]

Valentinus

It is in the system of Valentinus that the name Dēmiurgos is used, which occurs nowhere in Irenaeus except in connection with the Valentinian system; we may reasonably conclude that it was Valentinus who adopted from Platonism the use of this word. When it is employed by other Gnostics either it is not used in a technical sense, or its use has been borrowed from Valentinus. But it is only the name that can be said to be specially Valentinian; the personage intended by it corresponds more or less closely with the Yaldabaoth of the Ophites, the great Archon of Basilides, the Elohim of Justinus, etc.

The Valentinian theory elaborates that from Achamoth (he kátō sophía or lower wisdom) three kinds of substance take their origin, the spiritual (pneumatikoí), the animal (psychikoí) and the material (hylikoí). The Demiurge belongs to the second kind, as he was the offspring of a union of Achamoth with matter.[27][41] And as Achamoth herself was only the daughter of Sophía the last of the thirty Aeons, the Demiurge was distant by many emanations from the Propatôr, or Supreme God.[27]

In creating this world out of Chaos the Demiurge was unconsciously influenced for good; and the universe, to the surprise even of its Maker, became almost perfect. The Demiurge regretted even its slight imperfection, and as he thought himself the Supreme God, he attempted to remedy this by sending a Messiah. To this Messiah, however, was actually united with Jesus the Saviour, Who redeemed men. These are either hylikoí or pneumatikoí.[27]

The first, or material men, will return to the grossness of matter and finally be consumed by fire; the second, or animal men, together with the Demiurge, will enter a middle state, neither Pleroma nor hyle; the purely spiritual men will be completely freed from the influence of the Demiurge and together with the Saviour and Achamoth, his spouse, will enter the Pleroma divested of body (hyle) and soul (psyché).[27][42] In this most common form of Gnosticism the Demiurge had an inferior though not intrinsically evil function in the universe as the head of the animal, or psychic world.[27]

The devil

Opinions on the devil, and his relationship to the Demiurge, varied. The Ophites held that he and his demons constantly oppose and thwart the human race, as it was on their account the devil was cast down into this world.[43] According to one variant of the Valentinian system, the Demiurge is also the maker, out of the appropriate substance, of an order of spiritual beings, the devil, the prince of this world, and his angels. But the devil, as being a spirit of wickedness, is able to recognise the higher spiritual world, of which his maker the Demiurge, who is only animal, has no real knowledge. The devil resides in this lower world, of which he is the prince, the Demiurge in the heavens; his mother Sophia in the middle region, above the heavens and below the Pleroma.[44]

The Valentinian Heracleon[45] interpreted the devil as the principle of evil, that of hyle (matter). As he writes in his commentary on John 4:21,

The mountain represents the Devil, or his world, since the Devil was one part of the whole of matter, but the world is the total mountain of evil, a deserted dwelling place of beasts, to which all who lived before the law and all Gentiles render worship. But Jerusalem represents the creation or the Creator whom the Jews worship. ... You then who are spiritual should worship neither the creation nor the Craftsman, but the Father of Truth.

This vilification of the creator was held to be inimical to Christianity by the early fathers of the church. In refuting the beliefs of the gnostics, Irenaeus stated that "Plato is proved to be more religious than these men, for he allowed that the same God was both just and good, having power over all things, and himself executing judgment."[46]

Cathars

Catharism apparently inherited their idea of Satan as the creator of the evil world from Gnosticism. Quispel[who?] writes, "There is a direct link between ancient Gnosticism and Catharism. The Cathars held that the creator of the world, Satanael, had usurped the name of God, but that he had subsequently been unmasked and told that he was not really God."[47]

Neoplatonism and Gnosticism

Gnosticism attributed falsehood or evil to the concept of the Demiurge or creator, though in some Gnostic traditions the creator is from a fallen, ignorant, or lesser—rather than evil—perspective, such as that of Valentinius.

Plotinus

The Neoplatonic philosopher Plotinus addressed within his works Gnosticism's conception of the Demiurge, which he saw as un-Hellenic and blasphemous to the Demiurge or creator of Plato. Plotinus, along with his teacher Ammonius Saccas, was the founder of Neoplatonism.[48] In the ninth tractate of the second of his Enneads, Plotinus criticizes his opponents for their appropriation of ideas from Plato:

From Plato come their punishments, their rivers of the underworld and the changing from body to body; as for the plurality they assert in the Intellectual Realm—the Authentic Existent, the Intellectual-Principle, the Second Creator and the Soul—all this is taken over from the Timaeus.

— Ennead 2.9.vi; emphasis added from A. H. Armstrong's introduction to Ennead 2.9

Of note here is the remark concerning the second hypostasis or Creator and third hypostasis or World Soul. Plotinus criticizes his opponents for "all the novelties through which they seek to establish a philosophy of their own" which, he declares, "have been picked up outside of the truth";[49] they attempt to conceal rather than admit their indebtedness to ancient philosophy, which they have corrupted by their extraneous and misguided embellishments. Thus their understanding of the Demiurge is similarly flawed in comparison to Plato’s original intentions.

Whereas Plato's Demiurge is good wishing good on his creation, Gnosticism contends that the Demiurge is not only the originator of evil but is evil as well. Hence the title of Plotinus' refutation: "Against Those That Affirm the Creator of the Kosmos and the Kosmos Itself to be Evil" (generally quoted as "Against the Gnostics"). Plotinus argues of the disconnect or great barrier that is created between the nous or mind's noumenon (see Heraclitus) and the material world (phenomenon) by believing the material world is evil.

The majority of scholars tend[50] to understand Plotinus' opponents as being a Gnostic sect—certainly (specifically Sethian), several such groups were present in Alexandria and elsewhere about the Mediterranean during Plotinus' lifetime. Plotinus specifically points to the Gnostic doctrine of Sophia and her emission of the Demiurge.

Though the former understanding certainly enjoys the greatest popularity, the identification of Plotinus' opponents as Gnostic is not without some contention. Christos Evangeliou has contended[51] that Plotinus' opponents might be better described as simply "Christian Gnostics", arguing that several of Plotinus' criticisms are as applicable to orthodox Christian doctrine as well. Also, considering the evidence from the time, Evangeliou thought the definition of the term "Gnostics" was unclear. Of note here is that while Plotinus' student Porphyry names Christianity specifically in Porphyry's own works, and Plotinus is to have been a known associate of the Christian Origen, none of Plotinus' works mention Christ or Christianity—whereas Plotinus specifically addresses his target in the Enneads as the Gnostics.

A. H. Armstrong identified the so-called "Gnostics" that Plotinus was attacking as Jewish and Pagan, in his introduction to the tract in his translation of the Enneads. Armstrong alluding to Gnosticism being a Hellenic philosophical heresy of sorts, which later engaged Christianity and Neoplatonism.[52][53]

John D. Turner, professor of religious studies at the University of Nebraska, and famed translator and editor of the Nag Hammadi library, stated[54] that the text Plotinus and his students read was Sethian Gnosticism, which predates Christianity. It appears that Plotinus attempted to clarify how the philosophers of the academy had not arrived at the same conclusions (such as dystheism or misotheism for the creator God as an answer to the problem of evil) as the targets of his criticism.

Emil Cioran also wrote his Le mauvais démiurge ("The Evil Demiurge"), published in 1969, influenced by Gnosticism and Schopenhauerian interpretation of Platonic ontology, as well as that of Plotinus.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Fontenrose, Joseph (1974). Python: A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origin. Biblo & Tannen Publishers. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-8196-0285-5.
  2. ^ Sallis, John (1999). Chorology: On Beginning in Plato's Timaeus. Indiana University Press. p. 86. ISBN 0-253-21308-8.
  3. ^ Keightley, Thomas (1838). The mythology of ancient Greece and Italy. Oxford University. p. 44. theogony timaeus.
  4. ^ Kahn, Charles (2001). Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans. Indianapolis: Hacket Publishing. pp. 124. ISBN 978-0-872205758.
  5. ^ a b Karamanolis, George (2006). Plato and Aristotle in Agreement?: Platonists on Aristotle from Antiochus to Porphyry. Oxford University Press. p. 240. ISBN 0-19-926456-2.
  6. ^ The ordering principle is twofold; there is a principle known as the Demiurge, and there is the Soul of the All; the appellation "Zeus" is sometimes applied to the Demiurge and sometimes to the principle conducting the universe.[citation needed]
  7. ^ Wear, Sarah; Dillon, John (2013). Dionysius the Areopagite and the Neoplatonist Tradition: Despoiling the Hellenes. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 15. ISBN 9780754603856.
  8. ^ Wallis, Richard T.; Bregman, Jay, eds. (1992). Neoplatonism and Gnosticism. International Society for Neoplatonic Studies. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-1337-1.
  9. ^ "Matter is therefore a non-existent"; Plotinus, Ennead 2, Tractate 4 Section 16.
  10. ^ Schopenhauer wrote of this Neoplatonist philosopher: "With Plotinus there even appears, probably for the first time in Western philosophy, idealism that had long been current in the East even at that time, for it taught (Enneads, iii, lib. vii, c.10) that the soul has made the world by stepping from eternity into time, with the explanation: 'For there is for this universe no other place than the soul or mind' (neque est alter hujus universi locus quam anima), indeed the ideality of time is expressed in the words: 'We should not accept time outside the soul or mind' (oportet autem nequaquam extra animam tempus accipere)." (Parerga and Paralipomena, Volume I, "Fragments for the History of Philosophy", § 7) Similarly, Professor Ludwig Noiré wrote: "For the first time in Western philosophy we find idealism proper in Plotinus (Enneads, iii, 7, 10), where he says, 'The only space or place of the world is the soul', and 'Time must not be assumed to exist outside the soul'." [5] It is worth noting, however, that like Plato but unlike Schopenhauer and other modern philosophers, Plotinus does not worry about whether or how we can get beyond our ideas in order to know external objects.
  11. ^ Numenius of Apamea was reported to have asked, "What else is Plato than Moses speaking Greek?" Fr. 8 Des Places.
  12. ^ Droge, Arthur J. (1987). "Justin Martyr and the Restoration of Philosophy". Church History. 56 (3): 303–319. doi:10.2307/3166060. JSTOR 3166060. S2CID 162623811.
  13. ^ See Theurgy, Iamblichus and henosis 2010-01-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. ^ Gilhus, Ingvild Sælid (1 October 1984). "The gnostic demiurge—An agnostic trickster". Religion. 14 (4): 301–311. doi:10.1016/S0048-721X(84)80010-X.
  15. ^ verse 1
  16. ^

    It is on this account that Moses says, at the creation of man alone that God said, "Let us make man," which expression shows an assumption of other beings to himself as assistants, in order that God, the governor of all things, might have all the blameless intentions and actions of man, when he does right attributed to him; and that his other assistants might bear the imputation of his contrary actions.

    — "Philo: On the Creation, XXIV". www.earlyjewishwritings.com.
  17. ^ Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho. c. 67.
  18. ^ Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 23, 1.
  19. ^ Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 23, 5.
  20. ^ Irenaeus, i. 24, 1.
  21. ^ Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 25.
  22. ^ Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 24, 4.
  23. ^ Hippolytus, Refutation of All Heresies. vii. 33.
  24. ^ Theodoret, Haer. Fab. ii. 3.
  25. ^ Epiphanius, Panarion, 28.
  26. ^ "Apocryphon of John," translation by Frederik Wisse in The Nag Hammadi Library. Accessed online at gnosis.org
  27. ^ a b c d e f g   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Demiurge". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  28. ^ Hipp. Ref. vi. 32, p. 191.
  29. ^ Hipp. Ref. vi. 9.
  30. ^ Marvin Meyer and James M. Robinson, The Nag Hammadi Scriptures: The International Edition. HarperOne, 2007. pp. 2–3. ISBN 0-06-052378-6
  31. ^ a b Scholem, Gershom (1974). "Jaldabaoth Reconsidered". Mélanges d'histoire des religions offerts à Henri-Charles Puech. Paris: Collège de France/Presses Universitaires de France: 405–421 – via Academia.edu.
  32. ^ Black, Matthew (1983). An Aramaic Etymology for Jaldabaoth?. The New Testament and Gnosis: Essays in honour of Robert McL. Wilson. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 69–72. doi:10.5040/9781474266277.ch-005. ISBN 978-1-4742-6627-7.
  33. ^ Marvin Meyer and James M. Robinson, The Nag Hammadi Scriptures: The International Edition. HarperOne, 2007. ISBN 0-06-052378-6
  34. ^ Scholem, Gershom (1965). Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition. Jewish Theological Seminary of America. p. 72.
  35. ^ Robert McLachlan Wilson (1976). Nag Hammadi and gnosis: Papers read at the First International Congress of Coptology. BRILL. pp. 21–23. Therefore his esoteric name is Jaldabaoth, whereas the perfect call him Ariel, because he has the appearance of a lion.
  36. ^ Gustav Davidson (1994). A dictionary of angels: including the fallen angels. Scrollhouse. p. 54.
  37. ^ David M Gwynn (2010). Religious Diversity in Late Antiquity. BRILL. p. 448.
  38. ^ Campbell Bonner (1949). "An Amulet of the Ophite Gnostics". The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Hesperia Supplements, Vol. 8: 43–46. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  39. ^ Gilles Quispel; R. van den Broek; Maarten Jozef Vermaseren (1981). Studies in gnosticism and hellenistic religions. BRILL. pp. 40–41.
  40. ^ 2 Corinthians 4:4
  41. ^ "Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 5".
  42. ^ "Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 6".
  43. ^ "Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 30, 8".
  44. ^ "Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, i. 5, 4".
  45. ^ "Heracleon, Frag. 20".
  46. ^ "Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, iii. 25".
  47. ^ Quispel, Gilles and Van Oort, Johannes (2008), p. 143.
  48. ^ John D. Turner. .
  49. ^ "For, in sum, a part of their doctrine comes from Plato; all the novelties through which they seek to establish a philosophy of their own have been picked up outside of the truth." Plotinus, "Against the Gnostics", Ennead II, 9, 6.
  50. ^ Plotinus, Arthur Hilary Armstrong (trans.) (1966). Plotinus: Enneads II (Loeb Classical Library ed.). Harvard University Press. From this point to the end of ch. 12 Plotinus is attacking a Gnostic myth known to us best at present in the form it took in the system of Valentinus. The Mother, Sophia-Achamoth, produced as a result of the complicated sequence of events which followed the fall of the higher Sophia, and her offspring the Demiurge, the inferier and ignorant maker of the material universe, are Valentinian figures; cp. Irenaeus, Adversus haereses 1.4 and 5. Valentinius had been in Rome, and there is nothing improbable in the presence of Valentinians there in the time of Plotinus. But the evidence in the Life ch. 16 suggests that the Gnostics in Plotinus's circle belonged rather to the older group called Sethians or Archontics, related to the Ophites or Barbelognostics: they probably called themselves simply 'Gnostics'. Gnostic sects borrowed freely from each other, and it is likely that Valentinius took some of his ideas about Sophia from older Gnostic sources, and that his ideas in turn influenced other Gnostics.
  51. ^ Evangeliou, "Plotinus's Anti-Gnostic Polemic and Porphyry's Against the Christians", in Wallis & Bregman, p. 111.
  52. ^ From "Introduction to Against the Gnostics", Plotinus' Enneads as translated by A. H. Armstrong, pp. 220–222: "The treatise as it stands in the Enneads is a most powerful protest on behalf of Hellenic philosophy against the un-Hellenic heresy (as it was from the Platonist as well as the orthodox Christian point of view) of Gnosticism. There were Gnostics among Plotinus's own friends, whom he had not succeeded in converting (Enneads ch. 10 of this treatise) and he and his pupils devoted considerable time and energy to anti-Gnostic controversy (Life of Plotinus ch. 16). He obviously considered Gnosticism an extremely dangerous influence, likely to pervert the minds even of members of his own circle. It is impossible to attempt to give an account of Gnosticism here. By far the best discussion of what the particular group of Gnostics Plotinus knew believed is M. Puech's admirable contribution to Entretiens Hardt V (Les Sources de Plotin). But it is important for the understanding of this treatise to be clear about the reasons why Plotinus disliked them so intensely and thought their influence so harmful."
  53. ^ Armstrong, pp. 220–22: "Short statement of the doctrine of the three hypostasis, the One, Intellect and Soul; there cannot be more or fewer than these three. Criticism of the attempts to multiply the hypostasis, and especially of the idea of two intellects, one which thinks and that other which thinks that it thinks. (ch. 1). The true doctrine of Soul (ch. 2). The law of necessary procession and the eternity of the universe (ch.3). Attack on the Gnostic doctrine of the making of the universe by a fallen soul, and on their despising of the universe and the heavenly bodies (chs. 4–5). The senseless jargon of the Gnostics, their plagiarism from and perversion of Plato, and their insolent arrogance (ch. 6). The true doctrine about Universal Soul and the goodness of the universe which it forms and rules (chs. 7–8). Refutation of objections from the inequalities and injustices of human life (ch. 9). Ridiculous arrogance of the Gnostics who refuse to acknowledge the hierarchy of created gods and spirits and say that they alone are sons of God and superior to the heavens (ch. 9). The absurdities of the Gnostic doctrine of the fall of "Wisdom" (Sophia) and of the generation and activities of the Demiurge, maker of the visible universe (chs. 10–12). False and melodramatic Gnostic teaching about the cosmic spheres and their influence (ch. 13). The blasphemous falsity of the Gnostic claim to control the higher powers by magic and the absurdity of their claim to cure diseases by casting out demons (ch. 14). The false other-worldliness of the Gnostics leads to immorality (ch. 15). The true Platonic other-worldliness, which love and venerates the material universe in all its goodness and beauty as the most perfect possible image of the intelligible, contracted at length with the false, Gnostic, other-worldliness which hates and despises the material universe and its beauties (chs. 16–18)."
  54. ^ Turner, "Gnosticism and Platonism", in Wallis & Bregman.

Sources

  • This article incorporates text from the entry Demiurgus in A Dictionary of Christian Biography, Literature, Sects and Doctrines by William Smith and Henry Wace (1877), a publication now in the public domain.

External links

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Demiurge" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Reydams-Schils, G. (1999). Demiurge and Providence. Stoic and Platonist Readings of Plato's Timaeus. Monothéismes et Philosophie. Vol. 2. doi:10.1484/M.MON-EB.5.112278. ISBN 978-2-503-50656-2.
  • Mohr, Richard D. (1985). "Plato's Theology Reconsidered: What the Demiurge Does". History of Philosophy Quarterly. 2 (2): 131–144. JSTOR 27743717.
  • Pagels, Elaine H. (October 1976). "'The Demiurge and his Archons'—A Gnostic View of the Bishop and Presbyters?". Harvard Theological Review. 69 (3–4): 301–324. doi:10.1017/S0017816000017491. S2CID 162393673.

demiurge, this, article, about, philosophical, concept, universal, fashioner, other, uses, disambiguation, platonic, neopythagorean, middle, platonic, neoplatonic, schools, philosophy, demiurge, ɜːr, artisan, like, figure, responsible, fashioning, maintaining,. This article is about philosophical concept of a Universal Fashioner For other uses see Demiurge disambiguation In the Platonic Neopythagorean Middle Platonic and Neoplatonic schools of philosophy the demiurge ˈ d ɛ m i ɜːr dʒ is an artisan like figure responsible for fashioning and maintaining the physical universe The Gnostics adopted the term demiurge Although a fashioner the demiurge is not necessarily the same as the creator figure in the monotheistic sense because the demiurge itself and the material from which the demiurge fashions the universe are both considered consequences of something else Depending on the system they may be considered either uncreated and eternal or the product of some other entity The word demiurge is an English word derived from demiurgus a Latinised form of the Greek dhmioyrgos or demiurgos It was originally a common noun meaning craftsman or artisan but gradually came to mean producer and eventually creator The philosophical usage and the proper noun derive from Plato s Timaeus written c 360 BC where the demiurge is presented as the creator of the universe The demiurge is also described as a creator in the Platonic c 310 90 BC and Middle Platonic c 90 BC AD 300 philosophical traditions In the various branches of the Neoplatonic school third century onwards the demiurge is the fashioner of the real perceptible world after the model of the Ideas but in most Neoplatonic systems is still not itself the One In the arch dualist ideology of the various Gnostic systems the material universe is evil while the non material world is good According to some strains of Gnosticism the demiurge is malevolent as it is linked to the material world In others including the teaching of Valentinus the demiurge is simply ignorant or misguided Contents 1 Platonism and Neoplatonism 1 1 Plato and the Timaeus 1 2 Middle Platonism 1 3 Neoplatonism 1 3 1 Henology 1 3 2 Iamblichus 2 Gnosticism 2 1 Angels 2 2 Yaldabaoth 2 2 1 Names 2 3 Marcion 2 4 Valentinus 2 5 The devil 2 6 Cathars 3 Neoplatonism and Gnosticism 3 1 Plotinus 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Sources 6 External linksPlatonism and Neoplatonism EditPlato and the Timaeus Edit Plato as the speaker Timaeus refers to the Demiurge frequently in the Socratic dialogue Timaeus 28a ff c 360 BC The main character refers to the Demiurge as the entity who fashioned and shaped the material world Timaeus describes the Demiurge as unreservedly benevolent and so it desires a world as good as possible Plato s work Timaeus is a philosophical reconciliation of Hesiod s cosmology in his Theogony syncretically reconciling Hesiod to Homer 1 2 3 Middle Platonism Edit In Middle Platonist and Numenius s Neo Pythagorean cosmogenies the Demiurge is second God as the nous or thought of intelligibles and sensibles 4 Middle Platonism and Neo Pythagoreanism overlapped both originating in the early 1st century BC and extending through to the end of the 2nd century AD or even into the 3rd century Neoplatonism Edit The work of Plotinus and other later Platonists in the 3rd century AD to further clarify the Demiurge is known as Neoplatonism To Plotinus the second emanation represents an uncreated second cause see Pythagoras Dyad Plotinus sought to reconcile Aristotle s energeia with Plato s Demiurge 5 which as Demiurge and mind nous is a critical component in the ontological construct of human consciousness used to explain and clarify substance theory within Platonic realism also called idealism In order to reconcile Aristotelian with Platonian philosophy 5 Plotinus metaphorically identified the demiurge or nous within the pantheon of the Greek Gods as Zeus 6 Henology Edit The first and highest aspect of God is described by Plato as the One Tὸ Ἕn To Hen the source or the Monad 7 This is the God above the Demiurge and manifests through the actions of the Demiurge The Monad emanated the demiurge or Nous consciousness from its indeterminate vitality due to the monad being so abundant that it overflowed back onto itself causing self reflection 8 This self reflection of the indeterminate vitality was referred to by Plotinus as the Demiurge or creator The second principle is organization in its reflection of the nonsentient force or dynamis also called the one or the Monad The dyad is energeia emanated by the one that is then the work process or activity called nous Demiurge mind consciousness that organizes the indeterminate vitality into the experience called the material world universe cosmos Plotinus also elucidates the equation of matter with nothing or non being in The Enneads 9 which more correctly is to express the concept of idealism or that there is not anything or anywhere outside of the mind or nous c f pantheism Plotinus form of Platonic idealism is to treat the Demiurge nous as the contemplative faculty ergon within man which orders the force dynamis into conscious reality 10 In this he claimed to reveal Plato s true meaning a doctrine he learned from Platonic tradition that did not appear outside the academy or in Plato s text This tradition of creator God as nous the manifestation of consciousness can be validated in the works of pre Plotinus philosophers such as Numenius as well as a connection between Hebrew and Platonic cosmology see also Philo 11 The Demiurge of Neoplatonism is the Nous mind of God and is one of the three ordering principles Arche Gr beginning the source of all things Logos Gr reason cause the underlying order that is hidden beneath appearances Harmonia Gr harmony numerical ratios in mathematics Before Numenius of Apamea and Plotinus Enneads no Platonic works ontologically clarified the Demiurge from the allegory in Plato s Timaeus The idea of Demiurge was however addressed before Plotinus in the works of Christian writer Justin Martyr who built his understanding of the Demiurge on the works of Numenius 12 Iamblichus Edit See also Panentheism Later the Neoplatonist Iamblichus changed the role of the One effectively altering the role of the Demiurge as second cause or dyad which was one of the reasons that Iamblichus and his teacher Porphyry came into conflict The figure of the Demiurge emerges in the theoretic of Iamblichus which conjoins the transcendent incommunicable One or Source Here at the summit of this system the Source and Demiurge material realm coexist via the process of henosis 13 Iamblichus describes the One as a monad whose first principle or emanation is intellect nous while among the many that follow it there is a second super existent One that is the producer of intellect or soul psyche The One is further separated into spheres of intelligence the first and superior sphere is objects of thought while the latter sphere is the domain of thought Thus a triad is formed of the intelligible nous the intellective nous and the psyche in order to reconcile further the various Hellenistic philosophical schools of Aristotle s actus and potentia actuality and potentiality of the unmoved mover and Plato s Demiurge Then within this intellectual triad Iamblichus assigns the third rank to the Demiurge identifying it with the perfect or Divine nous with the intellectual triad being promoted to a hebdomad pure intellect In the theoretic of Plotinus nous produces nature through intellectual mediation thus the intellectualizing gods are followed by a triad of psychic gods Gnosticism EditGnosticism presents a distinction between the highest unknowable God or Supreme Being and the demiurgic creator of the material commonly identified as Yahweh the God of the Hebrew Bible Several systems of Gnostic thought present the Demiurge as antagonistic to the will of the Supreme Being his act of creation occurs in an unconscious semblance of the divine model and thus is fundamentally flawed or else is formed with the malevolent intention of entrapping aspects of the divine in materiality Thus in such systems the Demiurge acts as a solution to or at least possibly the problem or cause that gives rise to the problem of evil 14 Angels Edit Psalm 82 begins God stands in the assembly of El LXX assembly of gods in the midst of the gods he renders judgment 15 indicating a plurality of gods although it does not indicate that these gods were co actors in creation Philo had inferred from the expression Let us make man of the Book of Genesis that God had used other beings as assistants in the creation of man and he explains in this way why man is capable of vice as well as virtue ascribing the origin of the latter to God of the former to his helpers in the work of creation 16 The earliest Gnostic sects ascribe the work of creation to angels some of them using the same passage in Genesis 17 So Irenaeus tells 18 of the system of Simon Magus 19 of the system of Menander 20 of the system of Saturninus in which the number of these angels is reckoned as seven and 21 of the system of Carpocrates In the report of the system of Basilides 22 we are told that our world was made by the angels who occupy the lowest heaven but special mention is made of their chief who is said to have been the God of the Jews to have led that people out of the land of Egypt and to have given them their law The prophecies are ascribed not to the chief but to the other world making angels The Latin translation confirmed by Hippolytus of Rome 23 makes Irenaeus state that according to Cerinthus who shows Ebionite influence creation was made by a power quite separate from the Supreme God and ignorant of him Theodoret 24 who here copies Irenaeus turns this into the plural number powers and so Epiphanius of Salamis 25 represents Cerinthus as agreeing with Carpocrates in the doctrine that the world was made by angels Yaldabaoth Edit Main article Yaldabaoth A lion faced serpentine deity found on a Gnostic gem in Bernard de Montfaucon s L antiquite expliquee et representee en figures may be a depiction of the Demiurge In the Archontic Sethian and Ophite systems which have many affinities with the doctrine of Valentinus the making of the world is ascribed to a company of seven archons whose names are given but still more prominent is their chief Yaldabaoth also known as Yaltabaoth or Ialdabaoth In the Apocryphon of John c AD 120 180 the demiurge arrogantly declares that he has made the world by himself Now the archon ruler who is weak has three names The first name is Yaltabaoth the second is Saklas fool and the third is Samael blind god And he is impious in his arrogance which is in him For he said I am God and there is no other God beside me for he is ignorant of his strength the place from which he had come 26 He is Demiurge and maker of man but as a ray of light from above enters the body of man and gives him a soul Yaldabaoth is filled with envy he tries to limit man s knowledge by forbidding him the fruit of knowledge in paradise At the consummation of all things all light will return to the Pleroma But Yaldabaoth the Demiurge with the material world will be cast into the lower depths 27 Yaldabaoth is frequently called the Lion faced leontoeides and is said to have the body of a serpent The demiurge is also 28 described as having a fiery nature applying the words of Moses to him the Lord our God is a burning and consuming fire Hippolytus claims that Simon used a similar description 29 In Pistis Sophia Yaldabaoth has already sunk from his high estate and resides in Chaos where with his forty nine demons he tortures wicked souls in boiling rivers of pitch and with other punishments pp 257 382 He is an archon with the face of a lion half flame and half darkness In the Nag Hammadi text On the Origin of the World the three sons of Yaldabaoth are listed as Yao Eloai and Astaphaios 30 Under the name of Nebro rebel Yaldabaoth is called an angel in the apocryphal Gospel of Judas He is first mentioned in The Cosmos Chaos and the Underworld as one of the twelve angels to come into being to rule over chaos and the underworld He comes from heaven and it is said his face flashed with fire and his appearance was defiled with blood Nebro creates six angels in addition to the angel Saklas to be his assistants These six in turn create another twelve angels with each one receiving a portion in the heavens Names Edit Main article Yaldabaoth Etymology Drawing of the lion headed figure found at the Mithraeum of C Valerius Heracles and sons dedicated 190 CE at Ostia Antica Italy CIMRM 312 The etymology of the name Yaldabaoth has been subject to many speculative theories Until 1974 etymologies deriving from the unattested Aramaic בהותא romanized bahutha supposedly meaning chaos represented the majority view Following an analysis by the Jewish historian of religion Gershom Scholem published in 1974 31 this etymology no longer enjoyed any notable support His analysis showed the unattested Aramaic term to have been fabulated and attested only in a single corrupted text from 1859 with its claimed translation having been transposed from the reading of an earlier etymology whose explanation seemingly equated darkness and chaos when translating an unattested supposed plural form of Hebrew בוהו romanized bōhu 31 32 Samael literally means Blind God or God of the Blind in Hebrew סמאל This being is considered not only blind or ignorant of its own origins but may in addition be evil its name is also found in Judaism as the Angel of Death and in Christian demonology This link to Judeo Christian tradition leads to a further comparison with Satan Another alternative title for the demiurge is Saklas Aramaic for fool In the Apocryphon of John Yaldabaoth is also known as both Sakla and Samael 33 The angelic name Ariel Hebrew the lion of God 34 has also been used to refer to the Demiurge and is called his perfect name 35 in some Gnostic lore Ariel has been called an ancient or original name for Ialdabaoth 36 The name has also been inscribed on amulets as Ariel Ialdabaoth 37 38 and the figure of the archon inscribed with Aariel 39 Marcion Edit According to Marcion the title God was given to the Demiurge who was to be sharply distinguished from the higher Good God The former was dikaios severely just the latter agathos or loving kind the former was the god of this world 40 the God of the Old Testament the latter the true God of the New Testament Christ in reality is the Son of the Good God The true believer in Christ entered into God s kingdom the unbeliever remained forever the slave of the Demiurge 27 Valentinus Edit It is in the system of Valentinus that the name Demiurgos is used which occurs nowhere in Irenaeus except in connection with the Valentinian system we may reasonably conclude that it was Valentinus who adopted from Platonism the use of this word When it is employed by other Gnostics either it is not used in a technical sense or its use has been borrowed from Valentinus But it is only the name that can be said to be specially Valentinian the personage intended by it corresponds more or less closely with the Yaldabaoth of the Ophites the great Archon of Basilides the Elohim of Justinus etc The Valentinian theory elaborates that from Achamoth he katō sophia or lower wisdom three kinds of substance take their origin the spiritual pneumatikoi the animal psychikoi and the material hylikoi The Demiurge belongs to the second kind as he was the offspring of a union of Achamoth with matter 27 41 And as Achamoth herself was only the daughter of Sophia the last of the thirty Aeons the Demiurge was distant by many emanations from the Propator or Supreme God 27 In creating this world out of Chaos the Demiurge was unconsciously influenced for good and the universe to the surprise even of its Maker became almost perfect The Demiurge regretted even its slight imperfection and as he thought himself the Supreme God he attempted to remedy this by sending a Messiah To this Messiah however was actually united with Jesus the Saviour Who redeemed men These are either hylikoi or pneumatikoi 27 The first or material men will return to the grossness of matter and finally be consumed by fire the second or animal men together with the Demiurge will enter a middle state neither Pleroma nor hyle the purely spiritual men will be completely freed from the influence of the Demiurge and together with the Saviour and Achamoth his spouse will enter the Pleroma divested of body hyle and soul psyche 27 42 In this most common form of Gnosticism the Demiurge had an inferior though not intrinsically evil function in the universe as the head of the animal or psychic world 27 The devil Edit Opinions on the devil and his relationship to the Demiurge varied The Ophites held that he and his demons constantly oppose and thwart the human race as it was on their account the devil was cast down into this world 43 According to one variant of the Valentinian system the Demiurge is also the maker out of the appropriate substance of an order of spiritual beings the devil the prince of this world and his angels But the devil as being a spirit of wickedness is able to recognise the higher spiritual world of which his maker the Demiurge who is only animal has no real knowledge The devil resides in this lower world of which he is the prince the Demiurge in the heavens his mother Sophia in the middle region above the heavens and below the Pleroma 44 The Valentinian Heracleon 45 interpreted the devil as the principle of evil that of hyle matter As he writes in his commentary on John 4 21 The mountain represents the Devil or his world since the Devil was one part of the whole of matter but the world is the total mountain of evil a deserted dwelling place of beasts to which all who lived before the law and all Gentiles render worship But Jerusalem represents the creation or the Creator whom the Jews worship You then who are spiritual should worship neither the creation nor the Craftsman but the Father of Truth This vilification of the creator was held to be inimical to Christianity by the early fathers of the church In refuting the beliefs of the gnostics Irenaeus stated that Plato is proved to be more religious than these men for he allowed that the same God was both just and good having power over all things and himself executing judgment 46 Cathars Edit Catharism apparently inherited their idea of Satan as the creator of the evil world from Gnosticism Quispel who writes There is a direct link between ancient Gnosticism and Catharism The Cathars held that the creator of the world Satanael had usurped the name of God but that he had subsequently been unmasked and told that he was not really God 47 Neoplatonism and Gnosticism EditMain article Neoplatonism and Gnosticism Wikisource has original text related to this article Against the Gnostics or Against Those that Affirm the Creator of the Cosmos and the Cosmos Itself to be Evil Gnosticism attributed falsehood or evil to the concept of the Demiurge or creator though in some Gnostic traditions the creator is from a fallen ignorant or lesser rather than evil perspective such as that of Valentinius Plotinus Edit The Neoplatonic philosopher Plotinus addressed within his works Gnosticism s conception of the Demiurge which he saw as un Hellenic and blasphemous to the Demiurge or creator of Plato Plotinus along with his teacher Ammonius Saccas was the founder of Neoplatonism 48 In the ninth tractate of the second of his Enneads Plotinus criticizes his opponents for their appropriation of ideas from Plato From Plato come their punishments their rivers of the underworld and the changing from body to body as for the plurality they assert in the Intellectual Realm the Authentic Existent the Intellectual Principle the Second Creator and the Soul all this is taken over from the Timaeus Ennead 2 9 vi emphasis added from A H Armstrong s introduction to Ennead 2 9 Of note here is the remark concerning the second hypostasis or Creator and third hypostasis or World Soul Plotinus criticizes his opponents for all the novelties through which they seek to establish a philosophy of their own which he declares have been picked up outside of the truth 49 they attempt to conceal rather than admit their indebtedness to ancient philosophy which they have corrupted by their extraneous and misguided embellishments Thus their understanding of the Demiurge is similarly flawed in comparison to Plato s original intentions Whereas Plato s Demiurge is good wishing good on his creation Gnosticism contends that the Demiurge is not only the originator of evil but is evil as well Hence the title of Plotinus refutation Against Those That Affirm the Creator of the Kosmos and the Kosmos Itself to be Evil generally quoted as Against the Gnostics Plotinus argues of the disconnect or great barrier that is created between the nous or mind s noumenon see Heraclitus and the material world phenomenon by believing the material world is evil The majority of scholars tend 50 to understand Plotinus opponents as being a Gnostic sect certainly specifically Sethian several such groups were present in Alexandria and elsewhere about the Mediterranean during Plotinus lifetime Plotinus specifically points to the Gnostic doctrine of Sophia and her emission of the Demiurge Though the former understanding certainly enjoys the greatest popularity the identification of Plotinus opponents as Gnostic is not without some contention Christos Evangeliou has contended 51 that Plotinus opponents might be better described as simply Christian Gnostics arguing that several of Plotinus criticisms are as applicable to orthodox Christian doctrine as well Also considering the evidence from the time Evangeliou thought the definition of the term Gnostics was unclear Of note here is that while Plotinus student Porphyry names Christianity specifically in Porphyry s own works and Plotinus is to have been a known associate of the Christian Origen none of Plotinus works mention Christ or Christianity whereas Plotinus specifically addresses his target in the Enneads as the Gnostics A H Armstrong identified the so called Gnostics that Plotinus was attacking as Jewish and Pagan in his introduction to the tract in his translation of the Enneads Armstrong alluding to Gnosticism being a Hellenic philosophical heresy of sorts which later engaged Christianity and Neoplatonism 52 53 John D Turner professor of religious studies at the University of Nebraska and famed translator and editor of the Nag Hammadi library stated 54 that the text Plotinus and his students read was Sethian Gnosticism which predates Christianity It appears that Plotinus attempted to clarify how the philosophers of the academy had not arrived at the same conclusions such as dystheism or misotheism for the creator God as an answer to the problem of evil as the targets of his criticism Emil Cioran also wrote his Le mauvais demiurge The Evil Demiurge published in 1969 influenced by Gnosticism and Schopenhauerian interpretation of Platonic ontology as well as that of Plotinus See also Edit Religion portalAlbinus philosopher Azazil Emil Cioran Devil in Christianity Gnosticism Mara demon Problem of the creator of God Ptah Ptahil Simulated reality Tenth intellect Isma ilism UrizenReferences EditNotes Edit Fontenrose Joseph 1974 Python A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origin Biblo amp Tannen Publishers p 226 ISBN 978 0 8196 0285 5 Sallis John 1999 Chorology On Beginning in Plato s Timaeus Indiana University Press p 86 ISBN 0 253 21308 8 Keightley Thomas 1838 The mythology of ancient Greece and Italy Oxford University p 44 theogony timaeus Kahn Charles 2001 Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans Indianapolis Hacket Publishing pp 124 ISBN 978 0 872205758 a b Karamanolis George 2006 Plato and Aristotle in Agreement Platonists on Aristotle from Antiochus to Porphyry Oxford University Press p 240 ISBN 0 19 926456 2 The ordering principle is twofold there is a principle known as the Demiurge and there is the Soul of the All the appellation Zeus is sometimes applied to the Demiurge and sometimes to the principle conducting the universe citation needed Wear Sarah Dillon John 2013 Dionysius the Areopagite and the Neoplatonist Tradition Despoiling the Hellenes Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 15 ISBN 9780754603856 Wallis Richard T Bregman Jay eds 1992 Neoplatonism and Gnosticism International Society for Neoplatonic Studies SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1337 1 Matter is therefore a non existent Plotinus Ennead 2 Tractate 4 Section 16 Schopenhauer wrote of this Neoplatonist philosopher With Plotinus there even appears probably for the first time in Western philosophy idealism that had long been current in the East even at that time for it taught Enneads iii lib vii c 10 that the soul has made the world by stepping from eternity into time with the explanation For there is for this universe no other place than the soul or mind neque est alter hujus universi locus quam anima indeed the ideality of time is expressed in the words We should not accept time outside the soul or mind oportet autem nequaquam extra animam tempus accipere Parerga and Paralipomena Volume I Fragments for the History of Philosophy 7 Similarly Professor Ludwig Noire wrote For the first time in Western philosophy we find idealism proper in Plotinus Enneads iii 7 10 where he says The only space or place of the world is the soul and Time must not be assumed to exist outside the soul 5 It is worth noting however that like Plato but unlike Schopenhauer and other modern philosophers Plotinus does not worry about whether or how we can get beyond our ideas in order to know external objects Numenius of Apamea was reported to have asked What else is Plato than Moses speaking Greek Fr 8 Des Places Droge Arthur J 1987 Justin Martyr and the Restoration of Philosophy Church History 56 3 303 319 doi 10 2307 3166060 JSTOR 3166060 S2CID 162623811 See Theurgy Iamblichus and henosis Archived 2010 01 09 at the Wayback Machine Gilhus Ingvild Saelid 1 October 1984 The gnostic demiurge An agnostic trickster Religion 14 4 301 311 doi 10 1016 S0048 721X 84 80010 X verse 1 It is on this account that Moses says at the creation of man alone that God said Let us make man which expression shows an assumption of other beings to himself as assistants in order that God the governor of all things might have all the blameless intentions and actions of man when he does right attributed to him and that his other assistants might bear the imputation of his contrary actions Philo On the Creation XXIV www earlyjewishwritings com Justin Martyr Dialogue with Trypho c 67 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 23 1 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 23 5 Irenaeus i 24 1 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 25 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 24 4 Hippolytus Refutation of All Heresies vii 33 Theodoret Haer Fab ii 3 Epiphanius Panarion 28 Apocryphon of John translation by Frederik Wisse in The Nag Hammadi Library Accessed online at gnosis org a b c d e f g One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Demiurge Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Hipp Ref vi 32 p 191 Hipp Ref vi 9 Marvin Meyer and James M Robinson The Nag Hammadi Scriptures The International Edition HarperOne 2007 pp 2 3 ISBN 0 06 052378 6 a b Scholem Gershom 1974 Jaldabaoth Reconsidered Melanges d histoire des religions offerts a Henri Charles Puech Paris College de France Presses Universitaires de France 405 421 via Academia edu Black Matthew 1983 An Aramaic Etymology for Jaldabaoth The New Testament and Gnosis Essays in honour of Robert McL Wilson London and New York Bloomsbury Academic pp 69 72 doi 10 5040 9781474266277 ch 005 ISBN 978 1 4742 6627 7 Marvin Meyer and James M Robinson The Nag Hammadi Scriptures The International Edition HarperOne 2007 ISBN 0 06 052378 6 Scholem Gershom 1965 Jewish Gnosticism Merkabah Mysticism and Talmudic Tradition Jewish Theological Seminary of America p 72 Robert McLachlan Wilson 1976 Nag Hammadi and gnosis Papers read at the First International Congress of Coptology BRILL pp 21 23 Therefore his esoteric name is Jaldabaoth whereas the perfect call him Ariel because he has the appearance of a lion Gustav Davidson 1994 A dictionary of angels including the fallen angels Scrollhouse p 54 David M Gwynn 2010 Religious Diversity in Late Antiquity BRILL p 448 Campbell Bonner 1949 An Amulet of the Ophite Gnostics The American School of Classical Studies at Athens Hesperia Supplements Vol 8 43 46 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Gilles Quispel R van den Broek Maarten Jozef Vermaseren 1981 Studies in gnosticism and hellenistic religions BRILL pp 40 41 2 Corinthians 4 4 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 5 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 6 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 30 8 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses i 5 4 Heracleon Frag 20 Irenaeus Adversus Haereses iii 25 Quispel Gilles and Van Oort Johannes 2008 p 143 John D Turner Neoplatonism For in sum a part of their doctrine comes from Plato all the novelties through which they seek to establish a philosophy of their own have been picked up outside of the truth Plotinus Against the Gnostics Ennead II 9 6 Plotinus Arthur Hilary Armstrong trans 1966 Plotinus Enneads II Loeb Classical Library ed Harvard University Press From this point to the end of ch 12 Plotinus is attacking a Gnostic myth known to us best at present in the form it took in the system of Valentinus The Mother Sophia Achamoth produced as a result of the complicated sequence of events which followed the fall of the higher Sophia and her offspring the Demiurge the inferier and ignorant maker of the material universe are Valentinian figures cp Irenaeus Adversus haereses 1 4 and 5 Valentinius had been in Rome and there is nothing improbable in the presence of Valentinians there in the time of Plotinus But the evidence in the Life ch 16 suggests that the Gnostics in Plotinus s circle belonged rather to the older group called Sethians or Archontics related to the Ophites or Barbelognostics they probably called themselves simply Gnostics Gnostic sects borrowed freely from each other and it is likely that Valentinius took some of his ideas about Sophia from older Gnostic sources and that his ideas in turn influenced other Gnostics Evangeliou Plotinus s Anti Gnostic Polemic and Porphyry s Against the Christians in Wallis amp Bregman p 111 From Introduction to Against the Gnostics Plotinus Enneads as translated by A H Armstrong pp 220 222 The treatise as it stands in the Enneads is a most powerful protest on behalf of Hellenic philosophy against the un Hellenic heresy as it was from the Platonist as well as the orthodox Christian point of view of Gnosticism There were Gnostics among Plotinus s own friends whom he had not succeeded in converting Enneads ch 10 of this treatise and he and his pupils devoted considerable time and energy to anti Gnostic controversy Life of Plotinus ch 16 He obviously considered Gnosticism an extremely dangerous influence likely to pervert the minds even of members of his own circle It is impossible to attempt to give an account of Gnosticism here By far the best discussion of what the particular group of Gnostics Plotinus knew believed is M Puech s admirable contribution to Entretiens Hardt V Les Sources de Plotin But it is important for the understanding of this treatise to be clear about the reasons why Plotinus disliked them so intensely and thought their influence so harmful Armstrong pp 220 22 Short statement of the doctrine of the three hypostasis the One Intellect and Soul there cannot be more or fewer than these three Criticism of the attempts to multiply the hypostasis and especially of the idea of two intellects one which thinks and that other which thinks that it thinks ch 1 The true doctrine of Soul ch 2 The law of necessary procession and the eternity of the universe ch 3 Attack on the Gnostic doctrine of the making of the universe by a fallen soul and on their despising of the universe and the heavenly bodies chs 4 5 The senseless jargon of the Gnostics their plagiarism from and perversion of Plato and their insolent arrogance ch 6 The true doctrine about Universal Soul and the goodness of the universe which it forms and rules chs 7 8 Refutation of objections from the inequalities and injustices of human life ch 9 Ridiculous arrogance of the Gnostics who refuse to acknowledge the hierarchy of created gods and spirits and say that they alone are sons of God and superior to the heavens ch 9 The absurdities of the Gnostic doctrine of the fall of Wisdom Sophia and of the generation and activities of the Demiurge maker of the visible universe chs 10 12 False and melodramatic Gnostic teaching about the cosmic spheres and their influence ch 13 The blasphemous falsity of the Gnostic claim to control the higher powers by magic and the absurdity of their claim to cure diseases by casting out demons ch 14 The false other worldliness of the Gnostics leads to immorality ch 15 The true Platonic other worldliness which love and venerates the material universe in all its goodness and beauty as the most perfect possible image of the intelligible contracted at length with the false Gnostic other worldliness which hates and despises the material universe and its beauties chs 16 18 Turner Gnosticism and Platonism in Wallis amp Bregman Sources Edit This article incorporates text from the entry Demiurgus inA Dictionary of Christian Biography Literature Sects and Doctrinesby William Smith and Henry Wace 1877 a publication now in the public domain External links Edit Look up demiurge in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dark Mirrors of Heaven Gnostic Cosmogony Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Demiurge Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Reydams Schils G 1999 Demiurge and Providence Stoic and Platonist Readings of Plato s Timaeus Monotheismes et Philosophie Vol 2 doi 10 1484 M MON EB 5 112278 ISBN 978 2 503 50656 2 Mohr Richard D 1985 Plato s Theology Reconsidered What the Demiurge Does History of Philosophy Quarterly 2 2 131 144 JSTOR 27743717 Pagels Elaine H October 1976 The Demiurge and his Archons A Gnostic View of the Bishop and Presbyters Harvard Theological Review 69 3 4 301 324 doi 10 1017 S0017816000017491 S2CID 162393673 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demiurge amp oldid 1153127306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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