Description
Thomas Moore Johnson (1851-1919) can rightly be said to be a great American Platonist: he was one of a number of men and women of that period who sought to promulgate the philosophy of the Platonic tradition as a spiritual and intellectual discipline. Had not the tide of rationalist and sceptical thinking run so strongly in the last one hundred years, Johnson – along with his fellow philosophers such as Hiram K Jones, William Torrey Harris and Bronson Alcott – would today be recognised as a great contributor to the cause of true philosophy in the modern west. Johnson edited two journals, The Platonist and Bibliotheca Platonica, between 1880 and 1890, as well as publishing three books in the following years.
Contents:
Iamblichus’ Exhortation to Philosophy (or Protrepticus)
Fragments from the Epistles of Iamblichus
Proclus’ Elements of Theology (or Metaphysics)
Fragments of Ammonias Saccas
Proclus on the Chaldean Oracles
Two Hymns of Synesius
Six treatises from Plotinus’ Enneads:-
On the Nature of Living Itself & on the Nature of Man I, I
On the Essence of the Soul (1) IV, i
On the Essence of the Soul (2) IV, ii
On the Descent into Body IV, viii
Intelligibles not external to Mind, and on the Good V, v
Diverse Cogitations III, ix
Original Writings:- Plato’s Basic Concepts;
Plato and his Writings;
The Platonic Theory of Education;
Plato and his Philosophy;
Three Fundamental Ideas of the Human Mind
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