Porphyry, the chief disciple, critic, promoter, and …
Years: 301 - 301
Porphyry, the chief disciple, critic, promoter, and biographer of the late Neoplatonist philosopher Plotinus, publishes his master’s fifty-four essays posthumously in 301, arranging them in 6 sections of 9 essays each, calling them the Enneads (“The Nines”).
Influenced by Pythagorean, Peripatetic, and Stoic ideas, the Enneads defend Plato and Platonism against the criticisms of Aristotle, but in so doing embrace a number of Aristotle's own concepts.
Plotinus repeatedly demonstrates the inadequacy of Aristotle's categories and logic to account for the whole of reality—both the things known by the senses and those known by the intellect.
Plotinus agrees with the skeptics that knowledge is essential in comprehending the Platonic forms that are "beyond" the physical heavens.
He argues, however, that, as humans possess knowledge, souls must somehow acquire it by journeying to this "transcelestial" place to see the forms there.
