The Wisdom of Hypatia: Ancient Spiritual Practices for a More Meaningful Life (67 page)

BOOK: The Wisdom of Hypatia: Ancient Spiritual Practices for a More Meaningful Life
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Pythagoreanism:
The philosophy of Pythagoras (c.570 – c.495 BCE) and his followers. Pythagoreanism significantly influenced Plato and later Platonists and Neoplatonists.

Self:
In Jungian psychology, the Self (with a capital “S”) refers to the totality of the archetypes, the central core of the unconscious mind; the God-image in an individual’s psyche. See Ch. 9.

Shadow:
In Jungian psychology, the unconscious complex formed of all the rejected, disowned, and unwanted aspects and potentials of the psyche. See Ch. 9.

Shaman:
In the broadest sense, practitioners who interact with the spirit world to heal individuals and ensure a harmonious relation between their community and nature.

Soul:
In ancient philosophy, “soul” translates Greek
psychê
, which refers to the animating power in any animate thing. More colloquially, “soul” refers to the psychical aspect of human nature (both conscious and unconscious).

Stoicism:
Teaches how we may live with serenity, freedom, and autonomy while actively contributing to the world. This is accomplished by understanding where our true freedom lies and by using it with wisdom. The Second Degree of Wisdom.

324 glossary

Sufism:
A mystical or esoteric sect of Islam focused on purification of the soul and its unification with God. Some scholars argue that Sufi practices predate Islam.

Symbol:
In Neoplatonism, anything in the lineage of a god, which therefore participates in the Idea or Form of the god and can be used to connect with the deity or its daimons. In Jungian psychology, a symbol is an expression of something that is not otherwise expressible, in particular, that cannot be completely defined or expressed in words. Symbols may activate the archetypes and complexes with which they are associated, and thus are important means of relating to them.

Tetractys:
A sacred symbol in Pythagoreanism and Neoplatonism, which is a triangular arrangement of ten dots (rows of 1, 2, 3, and 4 dots, from top to bottom) with many symbolic interpretations (see Chs. 8, 10–12).

Theurgy:
Spiritual practices and rites intended to facilitate communication and ultimately union with divinity. See Chas. 10–12.

Triadic Principle:
Three aspects of each plane of reality in the Neoplatonic cosmos, namely Abiding, Proceeding, and Returning. See Ch. 8.

Tripartite Soul:
Platonic three-part of division of the soul into (1) the appetite or desiring part (the “belly”), (2) the will or spirited part (the “heart”), and (3) the mind or reasoning part (the

“head”).

Union:
Spiritual unification with a divinity or with The One, the last stage of the Ascent, equivalent to Deification.

Virtue:
The ancient Greek work commonly translated “virtue” (
aretê
) refers to the
excellence
of anything, the ways in which that thing is authentically what it is, its authentic being. Neoplatonism reinterprets the four “cardinal virtues” (wisdom, self-control, fortitude, justice) on each level of spiritual ascent (ch. 11).

World Body:
See Cosmic Body.

World Mind:
See Cosmic Nous.

World Nous:
See Cosmic Nous.

World Soul:
See Cosmic Soul.

Bibliography

Abbreviations

CO

Chaldean Oracles
(see Majercik)

DL

Diogenes Laertius,
Lives

ED

Epictetus,
Discourses

EH

Epictetus,
Handbook
(also called
Manual
and
Encheridion
)

HC

Hierocles,
Comm. on Pythag. Gold. Verse
s
(see Dacier, Hierocles, and Schibli) LM

Epicurus,
Letter to Menoeceus
(see Bailey, Oates, or DL X.122–135)

LS

Long & Sedley,
Hellenistic Philosophers

LSJ

Liddell, Scott, & Jones,
Greek Lexicon

MA

Marcus Aurelius,
Meditations

OF

Epicurus’ fragment in Oates

P7

Plato,
Seventh Letter
(in
Collected Dialogues
)

PD

Epicurus,
Principal Doctrines
(see Bailey, Oates, or DL X.139–154)

PE

Plotinus,
Enneads
(see
Plotinus
, Armstrong trans.)

PG

Plotinus,
Compl. Works
(Guthrie translation)

PLP Porphyry,
Launching Points

PS

Plato,
Symposium
(in
Collected Dialogues
)

RH

Reale,
Systems of Hellenistic Age

SD

Synesius,
On Dreams

325

326 bibliography

SL

Seneca,
Letters to Lucilius
(
Ad Lucilium Epistolae
)

VS

Epicurus,
Vatican Sentences
(see Bailey or Oates)

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———.
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———.
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The Discourses of Epictetus, with the Encheridion and Fragments
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———.
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———.
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———.
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bibliography 329

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