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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg126.perseus-eng3" type="translation" xml:lang="eng"><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="28"><p rend="indent">And what is this, Sulla? Do not ask about these things, for I am going to give a full explanation myself. Most people rightly hold man to be composite but wrongly hold him to be composed of only two parts. The reason is that they suppose mind to be somehow part of soul, thus erring no less than those who believe soul to be part of body, for in the same degree as soul is superior to body so is mind better and more divine than soul. The result of soul [and body commingled is the irrational or the affective factor, whereas of mind and soul] the conjunction produces reason; and of these the former is source of pleasure and pain, the latter of virtue and vice.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Virtute Morali</title>, 441 D 442 A, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 D-E. The ultimate source of Plutarch’s conception of the relation of mind, soul, and body is such passages of Plato as <title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 30 B, 41-42, 90 A; Laws, 961 D-E, <title rend="italic">Phaedrus</title>, 247 C (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> ThÈvenaz, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="fre">L’Ame du monde <gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>chez Plutarque</title>, pp. 70-73). Plutarch himself ascribes the twofold division, soul and body, to <foreign xml:lang="grc">οἱ πολλοί</foreign> and so cannot intend a reference to any philosophical school; by those who make soul a <foreign xml:lang="grc">μόριον τοῦ σώματος</foreign> he might mean Stoics (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Stoicorum Repugnantiis</title>, 1052 F ff., <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Communibus Notitiis</title>, 1083 C ff.) but might equally well mean Epicureans or materialists generally. Against Adler’s argument (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="deu">Diss. Phil. Vind.</title> x, pp. 171-172) that the first of the two notions rejected is Platonic and the second Stoic, so that Plutarch’s source must have been Posidonius, <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Pohlenz, <title rend="italic">Phil. Woch.</title> xxxii (1912), p. 653, and R. M. Jones, <title rend="italic">The Platonism of Plutarch</title>, p. 55.</note> <pb xml:id="v12.p.199"/> In the composition of these three factors earth furnishes the body, the moon the soul, and the sun furnishes mind [to man] for the purpose of his generation<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 B, where motion and generation are linked by Mind in the sun and generation and destruction by Nature in the moon.</note> even as it furnishes light to the moon herself. As to the death we die, one death reduces man from three factors to two and another reduces him from two to one<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For a <q>mortal soul</q> or <q>mortal part</q> of the soul <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Plato, <title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 42 D, 61 C, 69 C-D.</note>; and the former takes place in the [earth] that belongs to Demeter [[wherefore <q>to make an end</q> is called] <q>to render [one’s life] to her</q> and Athenians used in olden times to call the dead <q>Demetrians</q>],<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), p. 151.</note> [the latter] in the moon that belongs to Phersephone, and associated with the former is Hermes the terrestrial, with the latter Hermes the celestial.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Iside</title>, 367 D-E. Hermes appears in the myth of Persephone as early as <title rend="italic">Homeric Hymn II</title>, 377 ff. and is connected with Hecate in the fragment of Theopompus in Porphyry, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Abstinentia</title>, ii. 16. <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> also <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Quaest. Graec.</title> 296 F and Halliday’s note <foreign xml:lang="lat">ad. loc.</foreign> </note> While the goddess here<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">i.e.</foreign> on earth, Demeter, which is why Plutarch refers to her with <foreign xml:lang="grc">αὕτη</foreign>, though she is the former of the two mentioned.</note> dissociates the soul from the body swiftly and violently, Phersephone gently and by slow degrees detaches the mind from the soul and has therefore been called <q>single-born</q> because the best part of man is <q>born single</q> when separated off [by] her.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="grc">μονογενής</foreign>, which appears as an epithet of Hecate and Persephone (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><bibl><author>Hesiod</author>, <title rend="italic">Theogony</title>, 426</bibl>; <title rend="italic">Orphic Hymns</title>, xxix. 1-2 [Abel]; Apollonius Rhodius, iii. 847), means <q>unique</q>: <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 31 B and 92 C, to which Plutarch refers in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Defectu Oraculorum</title>, 423 A and C, where he interprets the word to mean <q>only born.</q> Here, however, he probably takes the final element in an active sense such as it has in <foreign xml:lang="grc">Καλλιγένεια</foreign>, an epithet of Demeter, the moon, and the earth.</note> Each of the two separations naturally occurs in this <pb xml:id="v12.p.201"/> fashion: All soul, whether without mind or with it,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">This may mean only <q>whether the soul has been obedient to reason in life or has not but <foreign xml:lang="grc">ὅλη κατέδυ εἰς σῶμα</foreign>,</q> as <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 D-E puts it; but at 945 B <foreign xml:lang="lat">s.v.</foreign> Plutarch speaks of souls which <foreign xml:lang="grc">ἄνευ νοῦ</foreign> assume bodies and live on earth, and by avow here he may intend to refer to the separation of such souls from their bodies. He cannot mean, as Raingeard supposes, souls whose minds have immediately passed to the sun, for he has just said that the separation of mind from soul takes place at the second death on the moon and neither here nor in 944 F <foreign xml:lang="lat">s.v.</foreign> does he allow for any exception in the sense of the doctrine of the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Hermetic Tractate</title>, x. 16, where <foreign xml:lang="grc">νοῦς</foreign> is separated from <foreign xml:lang="grc">ψυχή</foreign> at the moment when the soul leaves the body (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Scott, <title rend="italic">Hermetica</title>, ii, p. 265). In <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 D 592 D Plutarch makes <foreign xml:lang="grc">νοῦς</foreign> and <foreign xml:lang="grc">φυχή</foreign> not really two different substances as here in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Facie</title> but considers <foreign xml:lang="grc">φυχή</foreign> to be a degeneration of <foreign xml:lang="grc">νοῦς</foreign>.</note> when it has issued from the body<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Sera Numinis Vindicta</title>, 563 E: <foreign xml:lang="grc">ἐπεὶ γὰρ ἐξέπεσε τὸ φρονοῦν τοῦ σώματος . . .</foreign></note> is destined to wander [in] the region between earth and moon but not for an equal time. Unjust and licentious souls pay penalties for their offences; but the good souls must in the gentlest part of the air, which they call <q>the meads of Hades,</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For the location of Hades <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Iside</title>, 382 E and the etymology in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Latenter Vivendo</title>, 1130 A (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl>Plato, <title rend="italic">Gorgias</title>, 493 B</bibl> and <bibl><title rend="italic">Phaedo</title>, 80 D</bibl>); for the identification of Hades with the dark air <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl>[Plutarch], <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Vita et Poesi Homeri</title>, § 97</bibl>; <bibl>Philodemus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Pietate</title>, c. 13</bibl> (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Dox. Graeci</title>, p. 547 b); <bibl>Cornutus, c. 5 and c. 35</bibl>; <bibl>Heraclitus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Quaestiones Homericae</title>, § 41</bibl>. Reference to a mead (<foreign xml:lang="grc">λειμών)</foreign>) or meads in the underworld is common: <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl n="Hom. Od. 11.539"><title rend="italic">Odyssey</title>, xi. 539</bibl>, <bibl n="Hom. Od. 11.573">573</bibl> and <bibl n="Hom. Od. 24.13">xxiv. 13-14</bibl>; Kern, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Orphicorum Fragmenta</title>, 32 f 6 and 222; <bibl>Plato, <title rend="italic">Gorgias,</title> 524 A</bibl>, <bibl><title rend="italic">Republic</title>, 614 E</bibl> and <bibl>616 B</bibl>. The Neo-Platonists argued that the <foreign xml:lang="grc">λειμών</foreign> in these Platonic passages is meant to be located in the atmosphere under the moon: <bibl>Proclus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">In Rem Publicam</title>, ii, pp. 132. 20-133</bibl>. 15 (Kroll); Olympiodorus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">In Gorgiam</title>, p. 237. 10-13 (Norvin); Hermias, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">In Phaedrum</title>, p. 161. 3-9 (Couvreur).</note> pass a certain set time sufficient to purge and blow away [the] pollutions contracted from the body as from an evil odour.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Antro Nymph.</title> §§ 11-12 (p. 64. 24-25 [Nauck]); Proclus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">In Timaeum</title>, iii, p. 331. 6-9 (Diehl); and in general on the pollution of the soul by association with the body Plato, <title rend="italic">Phaedo</title>, 81 B-C. Plutarch in a different context uses the words: <foreign xml:lang="grc"><gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>ὅταν ἀτμοὶ πονηροί <gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>ταῖς τῆς φυχῆς <gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>ἀνακραθῶσι περιόδοις</foreign> (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Tuenda Sanitate</title>, 129 C).</note> [Then], as if brought home from banishment abroad, they savour joy most like that of initiates, which attended by glad expectation is mingled with confusion <pb xml:id="v12.p.203"/> and excitement.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For life on earth as the soul’s exile from its proper home <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Exilio</title>, 607 C-E; and for the comparison with initiates and what follows in this vein a few lines below <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> fragment VI (vii, p. 23. 4-17 [Bernardakis]).</note> For many, even as they are in the act of clinging to the moon, she thrusts off and sweeps away; and some of those souls too that are on the moon they see turning upside down as if sinking again into the deep.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 C, and Plato’s <title rend="italic">Phaedrus</title>, 248 A-B, especially <foreign xml:lang="grc">αἱ δὲ δὴ ἄλλαι γλιχόμεναι μὲν ἅπασαι τοῦ ἄνω ἕπονται, ἀδυνατοῦσαι δέ, ὑποβρύχιαι συμπεριφέρονται κτλ.</foreign> </note> Those that have got up, however, and have found a firm footing first go about like victors crowned with wreaths of feathers called wreaths of steadfastness,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For life as an athletic contest and the soul as athlete <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Sera Numinis Vindicta</title>, 561 A, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 593 D-E and 593 F 594 A. The conception is Platonic (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">Republic</title>, 621 C-D, <title rend="italic">Phaedrus</title>, 256 B); and it is irrelevant to cite oriental notions of life as a combat and immortality as a triumph as Soury does (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="fre">La Dèmonologie de Plutarque</title>, p. 189, n. 1) after Cumont. Soury follows Raingeard in misconstruing <foreign xml:lang="grc">στεφάνοις <gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>λεγομένοις</foreign> and supposing that <foreign xml:lang="grc">πτερῶν εὐσταθείας</foreign> is an <q>expression mystique</q> (<foreign xml:lang="lat">Op. cit.</foreign> pp. 189 and 191-192). <foreign xml:lang="grc">εὐσταθείας</foreign> does not depend upon <foreign xml:lang="grc">πτερῶν</foreign> or vice versa; and Plutarch has simply woven the <q>feathers of the soul,</q> which appear throughout the myth of the Phaedrus, into a wreath that is given to the souls of the good for their steadfastness, just as the Victorious souls in <title rend="italic">Phaedrus</title>, 256 B become <foreign xml:lang="grc">ὑπόπτεροι</foreign> because in life they were <foreign xml:lang="grc">ἐγκρατεῖς αὑτῶν καὶ κόσμιοι</foreign>.</note> because in life they had made the irrational or affective element of the soul orderly and tolerably tractable to reason<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 592 A, and Plato’s <title rend="italic">Phaedrus</title>, 247 B (n.b. <foreign xml:lang="grc">εὐήνια ὄντα ῥᾳδίως πορεύεται</foreign>).</note>; secondly, in appearance resembling a ray of light but in respect of their nature, which in the upper region is buoyant as it is here in ours, resembling the ether about the moon,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="grc">αἰθήρ</foreign> for Plato was simply the uppermost and purest air (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl><title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 58 D</bibl>, <bibl><title rend="italic">Phaedo</title>, 109 B</bibl> and 111 B); but here the word is probably used under Stoic influence, for which see note d on 928 D and note g on 922 B <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign> and <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl>[Plato], <title rend="italic">Axiochus</title>, 366 A</bibl> (<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἡ ψυχὴ συναλγούσα τὸν οὐράνιον ποθεῖ καὶ σύμφυλον αἰθέρα</foreign>). These last sentences of chapter 28 show several definitely Stoic traits, especially the conception of <q>tension,</q> nourishment of the soul by the exhalations, and the use of the quotation from Heraclitus. It has long been customary to compare with this passage <bibl><author>Cicero</author>, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Tusc. Disp.</title> i. 19, 43</bibl>, and <bibl>Sextus Empiricus, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Adv. Math.</title> ix. 71-73</bibl> (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Heinze, <title rend="italic">Xenokrates</title>, pp. 126-128; K. Reinhardt, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="deu">Kosmos und Sympathie</title>, pp. 308-313 and p. 323; R. M. Jones, <title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xxvii [1932], pp. 113 ff.).</note> they get from it both tension and strength <pb xml:id="v12.p.205"/> as edged instruments get a temper,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For the Stoic doctrine of <foreign xml:lang="grc">τόνος</foreign> <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Stoicorum Repugnantiis</title>, 1054 A-B, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Communibus Notitiis</title>, 1085 C-D, and <title rend="italic">S. V. F.</title> ii, frags. 447 and 448. The metaphor of <q>tempering</q> was also commonly used by the Stoics in connection with the soul: <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">S. V. F.</title> ii, frags. 804-806.</note> for what laxness and diffuseness they still have is strengthened and becomes firm and translucent. In consequence they are nourished by any exhalation that reaches them, and Heraclitus was right in saying: <q>Souls employ the sense of smell in Hades.</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Frag. 98 (i, p. 173. 3 [Diels-Kranz]). For the nourishment of disembodied souls <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> the passages of Cicero and Sextus cited in note e, p. 203. Here the argument of Lamprias in 940 c-d <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign> is incorporated into the myth, which thereby appears to substantiate the argument.</note> </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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