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Emanationism
Emanationism is Platonic monism, and a component in the cosmology or
cosmogony of certain religious or philosophical systems that argue that a
sentient, self-aware Supreme Being is an impossibility, that the totality of
both the empirical and ontological cosmos is the result of The One whose nature
and attribute are will(ing) which is objectively dirrected and results in lower
and lower spiritual modalities of being, and lastly matter (the physical
universe) which is the resultant of this efflux of the Absolute.
Key principles
Specifically, that complex things are created in nature is not in question
either by Creationists (Abrahamic religions, etc.), Emanationists, or nihilists
and atheists; the two matters that are in question are the locus for creation
and whether a sentient, self-aware Absolute (‘God’) is a necessity for creation.
Emanationists such as Pythagoras, Plotinus, Gotama, and others argued that
complex patterns in nature were a natural consequence of procession from the One
(Hen, Absolute).
According to Emanationism, the Absolute, its nature and its activity must be
inseparably one thing only, namely will, such that the nature and activity of
the Absolute is both one and the same (again, will) and by its very nature is
also its activity ‘to will’ and wills things to be or occur, thereby maintaining
the center of the logical system of Emanationism. In addition, agnosis, or the
lack of Subjective gnosis, is a primordial privation which must be corrected
before a metaphysical "Oneing" (Plotinus) can occur. Through this process, the
transcendent yet immanent will of individuals is made self-reflexive by
recollecting back further and further. Eventually it will reach that nature, the
Noetic (and real) self, which is antecedent to the phenomenal, corporeal self.
The ontologically trascendent yet immanent Self is seen as being one's
unactualized nature, and this nature will remain unactualized until
contemplation is brought to fruition, thereby bringing into actuality what had
been merely potential.
According to this paradigm, creation proceeds as an effulgence from the First
Principle (the Absolute or Godhead). The Supreme Light or Consciousness descends
through a series of stages, gradations, worlds or hypostases, becoming
progressively more material and embodied. In time it will turn around to return
to the One (epistrophe), retracing its steps through spiritual knowledge and
contemplation. [citation needed]
Origins
The primary classical exponent of Emanationism was Plotinus, wherein his work,
the Enneads, all things phenomenal and otherwise were an emanation from the One
(Hen). In Ennead 5.1.6, Emanationism is compared to a diffusion from the One, of
which there are three primary hypostases, the One (hen), the Intellect/will (nous),
and the Soul (psyche tou pantos). For Plotinus, emanation, or the "soul's
descent", is a result of the Indefinite Dyad, or tolma, the primordial agnosis
inherent to and within the Absolute, the Godhead.
Plotinus (a key expositor of Emanationism) in particular argued that there is no
knowledge or sentience in the Absolute, and that all things noetic and corporeal
were as well a logos or proportional phenomena of the emanation of and by the
One. In Plotinian Emanationism, there are lesser and lesser potencies of will as
procession occurs beginning from the One, through the noetic, or the soul,
finally ending in base matter, which is generally seen as utter privation.
Relationship to other belief systems
Emanationism is opposed to both Creationism (wherein the universe is created by
a sentient God who knowingly creates it) and nihilism (which posits no
underlying subjective and/or ontological nature behind phenomena). Creation
itself is merely a logos (Republic 509d-511) of the Absolute which "pours forth"
as lesser and lesser potencies of the One, proceeding from the One, to the Nous,
then to the Soul, and lastly as utter privation, matter (hyle), or, as Plotinus
called matter, "an image of an image" (cf. Plato's Allegory of the cave).
Emanationists see this paradigm for the cosmos as the model that most logically
corrects the supposed inconsistencies, paradoxes and philosophical incongruities
that are found in Creationism and nihilism. [citation needed] Though both
Plotinus and Plato as well as Neoplatonist like Iamblichus spoke of the demiurge
of the one or absolute monad amalgamating or crafting physical reality out of
chaos. The demiurge is depicted as the agent of the one or monad.
Scientific Approaches To The Meaning
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What is Life?
Philosophical views on the meaning of
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