Image for PLOTINUS Ennead II.5 On What Is Potentially and What Actually

PLOTINUS Ennead II.5 On What Is Potentially and What Actually (First edition.)

Part of the The Enneads of Plotinus with philosophical commentaries series
See all formats and editions

The term dunamis (potentiality) entered into the philosophical vocabulary with Plato, but it was with Aristotle that it acquired, together with energeia (actuality), the strong technical meaning that the two terms have maintained, with variations, throughout subsequent philosophical tradition. 
 
The significance of the notions of actuality and potentiality in Plotinus’ thought can hardly be overstated. Throughout the Enneads, they are crucial to understanding the specific causality of intelligible realities and the relation of participation between intelligible and sensible realms. 
 
In Ennead II.5, Plotinus for the first time provides a systematic clarification of his peculiar use of these terms, through a sustained revision of Aristotle’s own elaboration of the topic and of his terminology. The treatise discusses the different meanings of potentiality and actuality as well as the way each of them applies or does not apply to the sensible realm, to the intelligible realm, and to matter. 
 
While the structure of the text unfolds in a coherent and cohesive manner, Plotinus’ writing in this treatise is dense and at times dry in its technicality. The detailed commentary guides the reader step by step, making an otherwise particularly difficult text accessible.  

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£32.72
Product Details
Parmenides Publishing
1930972903 / 9781930972902
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
186.4
31/07/2015
English
212 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%