Evil Itself and Nothingness in Proclus

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Translator

Advisor

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wydział Filozoficzny UAM

Title Alternative

Il male in sé e il nulla in Proclo

Abstract

In his reflection on the nature of evil, the Neoplatonic philosopher Proclus affirms that evil itself (to autokakon) is “also beyond the abso­lute non-being” (epekeina kai tou mēdamōs ontos). With this assumption, he intends to reinforce the thesis of the non-existence of absolute evil, conceived as totally separate from good, and contrasted with the collat­eral and parasitic existence of evil mixed with good. He thus maintains a distinction between absolute evil and relative evil, conceived with reference to the distinction between absolute non-being (i.e., nothing­ness) and relative non-being. In Proclus, the thesis of the non-existence of absolute evil is presented as a necessary consequence of the non-dualist theory of evil in the sphere of a protology that identifies the first Principle of all things in the primary Good (identical to the supra-essen­tial One), and which aims to reconcile the absolute primacy of the latter with the presence of evil in some orders of reality.

Description

Sponsor

Keywords

Proclus, Evil, Nothingness, Non-being, Neoplatonism

Citation

Napoli, V. (2020) “Evil Itself and Nothingness in Proclus”, Peitho. Examina Antiqua, 11(1), pp. 143–170. doi: 10.14746/pea.2020.1.6.

item.page.ispartofseries

ISBN

ISSN

Title Alternative

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license