Neoplatonism: The Philosophy of Emanation and the Soul's Return to the One
Plotinus (204–270 CE), the founder of **Neoplatonism**, whose *Enneads* — edited by his student Porphyry — became one of the most influential philosophical works in the history of Western **esoteric philosophy**. Somewhere between the philosophy of Plato and the rise of Christianity, a philosopher from Egypt sat down to write — or rather, to dictate, for his eyesight was failing — the most systematic and spiritually ambitious account of the structure of reality that the ancient world produced. His name was Plotinus . His work is the Enneads . And the tradition that flows from him — Neoplatonism — shaped the metaphysical imagination of the Western world for more than a thousand years. Neoplatonism is not a museum piece. It is a living philosophical tradition that underlies medieval Christian mysticism, Islamic Sufi thought, Jewish Kabbalah, the Renaissance revival of magic and Hermeticism , and much of what contemporary esoteric philosophy takes for granted: the idea that the ...