Jeff Russell
[Main Blog Post] Understanding Spengler's Decline of the West Bit 3: The Soul Image
Page Summary
Active Entries
- 1: A Request: Help with Dream Interpretation
- 2: [Open Post] Heathen Open Post
- 3: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on A Short History of Ethics
- 4: Ask Me (Just About) Anything
- 5: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Blessing: the Art and the Practice
- 6: Divination Offering - Rune or Ogham Reading Through the End of the Year
- 7: [Main Blog Post] Looking Back on 2024 and Forward to 2025
- 8: [Main Blog Post] How the Cost of Freight Has Shaped the World
- 9: [Main Blog Post] [Heathen Rosary] Draft "Hail Holy Forebears"
- 10: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on Shadow Tech
Style Credit
- Base style: Patsy by
- Theme: Clay Deco by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
Re: Neoplatonism
Date: 2023-05-24 06:43 pm (UTC)This is precisely the kind of murky waters based on largely personal judgment calls I was alluding to above. Spengler would say "look at how this guy approaches religion/philosophy! It's the same as Orthodox! They're all Magians! He's fooling himself that he's carrying on the Apollonian tradition!"
Someone who believes in the traditional view of more-or-less unbroken continuity of the "West" from (at least) Homer through to today, would say "Look, the guy's a Platonist. Does anyone think Plato wasn't Apollonian? We have an unbroken tradition of teachers teaching pupils, all of them coming back to Plato's works, all of them saying they care about the same stuff. How is this not continuity?"
As I got from JMG, I'm inclined to resolve the binary of "pseudomorphosis or continuity" with a third term to make a ternary, maybe something like "transmission" or "inheritance." I think Spengler's point that folks from different cultures really are different has a lot of truth to it, but I also think it's kind of silly to say that if Plato and a modern Neoplatonist could meet and talk readily they would have nothing in common about what they actually believed. Instead, I think that there would be threads of continuity, but also novel insights and applications. Sure, some of those would lead to disagreements, and each might walk away thinking he has the better understanding, but there would likely be enough common ground to say "we're talking about two different takes on the 'same' thing."