Chapter 22

Matter derives its being from intelligibles, vi. 3.7 (44-944).Matter, descent into, is fall of the soul, i. 8.14 (51-1161).Matter, difference from form, due to that of intelligible sources, vi. 3.8 (44-946).Matter existed from all eternity, iv. 8.6 (6-130).Matter, first physical category of Plotinos, vi. 3.3 (44-937).Matter, how to see the formless, a thing of itself, i. 8.9 (51-1156).Matter (hypostatic), existence as undeniable as that of good, i. 8.15 (51-1162).Matter, if primary, would be form of the universe, iii. 6.18 (26-382).Matter, impassible, because of different senses of participation, iii. 6.9 (26-366).Matter, incorporeal (Pyth. Plato, Arist.), ii. 4.1 (12-198).Matter, incorruptible, exists only potentially, ii. 5.5 (25-348).Matter, intelligible, ii. 4.3 (12-198); ii. 5.3 (25-345); iii. 5.7 (50-1134).Matter, intelligible, entities to reach sense-matter, iii. 5.7 (50-1154).Matter, intelligible, is not potential, ii. 5.3 (25-345).Matter, intelligible, why it must be accepted, iii. 5.6, 7 (50-1133).Matter is born shapeless, receives form while turning to, ii. 4.3 (12-198).Matter is both without qualities and evil, i. 8.10 (51-1156).Matter is bottom of everything, ii. 4.5 (12-201).Matter is cause of evils, even if corporeal, i. 8.8 (51-1153).Matter is disposition to become something else, ii. 4.13 (12-214).Matter is improved by form, vi. 7.28 (38-745).Matter is incorporeal, ii. 4.9 (12-206).Matter is nonentity, i. 8.5 (51-1148).Matter is non-essential otherness, ii. 4.16 (12-218).Matter is not a body without quality, but with magnitude, vi. 1.26 (42-880).Matter is not being and cannot be anything actual, ii. 5.4 (25-347).Matter is not composite, but simple in one, ii. 4.8 (12-205).Matter is not wickedness, but neutral evil, vi. 7.28 (38-746).Matter is nothing actually, ii. 5.2 (25-343).Matter is physical category, vi. 3.3 (44-937).Matter is real potentially, ii. 5.5 (25-348).Matter is relative darkness, ii. 4.5 (12-201).Matter is secondary evil, i. 8.4 (51-1155).Matter is unchangeable because form is such, iii. 6.10 (26-368).Matter left alone as basis after Stoic categories evaporate, vi. 1.29 (42-886).Matter magnitude derived from seminal reason, iii. 6.15 (26-377).Matter may exist yet be evil, i. 8.11 (51-1158).Matter, modified, is Stoic God, vi. 12.7 (42-881).Matter must be possible because its qualities change, iii. 6.8 (26-366).Matter necessary to the world; hence good implies evil, i. 8.7 (51-1152).Matter not in intelligible world, v. 8.4 (31-557).Matter nothing real actually, ii. 5.4 (25-347).Matter of demons is not corporeal, iii. 5.7 (50-1135).Matter participates in existence, without participating it, iii. 6.14 (26-376)Matter participates in the intelligible, by appearance, iii. 6.11 (26-369).Matter, participation of, in ideas, vi. 5.8 (23-321)Matter possesses no quality, ii. 4.8 (12-205); iv. 7.3 (2-59).Matter qualified as seminal reasons,vi. 1.29Matter rationalized is body, ii. 7.3 (37-696).Matter received forms until hidden by them, v. 8.7 (31-562).Matter, relation of, to reason, illustrates that of opinion to imagination, iii. 6.15 (26-377).Matter, since cannot be destroyed, cannot be affected, iii. 6.8 (26-365).Matter things mingled, contain no perfection, iii. 2.7 (47-1053).Matter's generation, consequence of anterior principles, iv. 8.6 (6-130).Matter's primitive impotence before generation, iv. 8.6 (6-130).Mechanism of ecstasy, v. 8.11 (31-569).Medicine, v. 9.11 (5-114).Mediocre, evil men even, never abandoned by Providence, iii. 2.9 (47-1058).Mediation of soul between indivisible and divisible essence, iv. 2 (21-276).Mediation of world-souls, through it, benefits are granted to men, vi. 4.12, 30 (28-457,486).Medium cosmologically necessary, but affects sight only slightly, iv. 5.2 (29-517).Medium needed in Platonism, Aristotelianism, Stoicism, iv. 5.2 (29-516).Medium not needed in Atomism and Epicurianism, iv. 5.2 (29-516).Medium of sight, Aristotle's unnecessary iv. 5.1 (29-515).Medium, though possible, hinders organs of sight, iv. 5.1 (29-514).Medium, untroubled, is the world-soul, iv. 8.7 (6-130).Medium's absence would only destroy sympathy, iv. 5.3 (29-519).Medium's affection does not interfere with vision, iv. 5.3 (29-520).Memories not needed, unconscious prayer answered by Stars, iv. 4.42 (28-505).Memories of the past do not increase happiness, i. 5.9 (36-689).Memory, iv. (27-428).Memory and reasoning, not implied by world-soul's wisdom, iv. 4.12 (28-457).Memory and reasoning suspended by omniscient intuition, iv. 4.12 (28-457).Memory and sensation iv. 6 (41-829).Memory and sensation, Stoic doctrines of, hang together, iv. 6.1 (41-829).Memory acts through the sympathy of the soul's highest self, iv. 6.3 (41-832).Memory, actualization of the soul, iv. 3.25 (27-429).Memory belongs to divine soul, and to that derived from world-soul, iv. 3.27 (27-433).Memory belongs to imagination, iv. 3.29 (27-433).Memory belongs to the soul alone, iv. 3.26 (27-432).Memory, both kinds, implies both kinds of imagination, iv. 3.31 (27-438).Memory definition depends on whether it is animal or human, iv. 3.25 (27-429).Memory does not belong to appetite, iv. 3.28 (27-434).Memory does not belong to the power of perception, iv. 3.29 (27-435).Memory does not belongs to the stars, iv. 4.30 (28-441).Memory impossible to world-souls to whom there is no time but a single day, iv. 4.7 (28-450).Memory inapplicable to any but time limited beings, iv. 3.25 (27-428).Memory is not identical with feeling or reasoning, iv. 3.29 (27-436).Memory limited to souls that change their condition, iv. 4.6 (28-448).Memory may be reduced to sensation, iv. 3.28 (27-434).Memory needs training and education, iv. 6.3 (41-835).Memory, none in stars, because uniformly blissful, iv. 4.8 (28-452).Memory not an image but a reawakening of a faculty, iv. 6.3 (41-833).Memory not as high as unreflective identification, iv. 4.4 (28-445).Memory not, but an affection, is kept by appetite, iv. 3.28 (27-434).Memory not compulsory, iv. 4.8 (28-451).Memory not exercised by world-souls and stars' souls, iv. 4.6 (28-449).Memory not intelligible because of simultaneity, iv. 4.1 (28-441).Memory of soul in intelligible world, iv. 4.1 (28-441).Memory peculiar to soul and body, iv. 3.2 (27-430).Memory, possession of, not caused by incarnation of soul, iv. 3.26 (27-431).Memory problems depend on definition, iv. 3.25 (27-429).Memory, timeless, constitutes self-consciousness, iv. 3.25 (27-429).Memory when beyond, helped by training here below, iv. 4.5 (28-447).Memory would be hindered if soul's impressions were corporeal, iv. 7.6 (2-66).Men are kings, v. 3.4 (49-1094).Men both, we are not always as we should be, vi. 4.14 (22-308).Men escape chance by interior isolation, vi. 8.15 (39-800).Men non-virtuous, do good when not hindered by passions, iii. 1.10 (3-98).Men of three kinds, sensual, moral and spiritual, v. 9.1 (5-102).Men seek action when too weak for contemplation, iii. 8.4 (30-536).Men sense and intelligible, difference between, vi. 7.4 (38-705).Men, three in each of us, vi. 7.6 (38-708).Men, three in us, fate of them is, brutalization or divinization, vi. 7.6 (38-709).Men, three kinds of, v. 9.1 (5-102).Mercury, Jupiter and Venus, also considered astrologically, ii. 3.5 (52-1169).Metal is to statue as body to soul, iv. 7.8 (2-76).Messengers of divinities are souls incarnated, iv. 3.12, 13 (27-409); iv. 8.5 (6-127).Metaphorical is all language about the Supreme, vi. 8.13 (39-795).Method of creation, ii. 3.17 (52-1186).Method of ecstasy is to close eyes of body, i. 6.8 (1-52).Methods of dialectic differ with individuals, i. 3.1 (20-269).Methods of participation in good, i. 7.1 (54-1208).Metis or prudence (myth of), iii. 5.5 (50-1130).Microcosm, iv. 3.10 (27-406).Migrating of soul psychologically explained, vi. 4.16 (22-310).Minerva, vi. 5.7 (23-321).Minos, vi. 9.7 (9-162).Miracle, matter participates in existence, while not participating in it, iii. 6.14 (26-376).Mire, unruly, soul falls into, when plunging down, i. 8.13 (51-1160).Mirror, iv. 3.30 (27-437); iv. 5.7 (29-528).Mirror empty, reflects everything like matter, iii. 6.7 (26-363).Mirror, simile of, i. 4.10 (46-1034).Misfortune and punishment, significance of, iv. 3.16 (27-414).Misfortune, experience of, does not give senses to man, vi. 7.1 (38-697).Misfortune foreseen by God, not cause of human senses, vi. 7.1 (38-697).Misfortune none too great to be conquered by virtues, i. 4.8 (46-1031).Misfortune to the good only apparent, iii. 2.6 (47-1051).Mithra, simile of, used, iii. 2.14 (47-1064).Mixture, consequences of soul and body, i. 1.4 (53-1195).Mixture, elements are not, but arise from a common system, ii. 1.7 (40-824).Mixture explained by evaporation (Stoic), ii. 7.2 (37-694).Mixture limited to energies of the existent, iv. 7.2, 8 (2-58,68).Mixture of intelligence and necessity, i. 8.7 (51-1152).Mixture of soul and body impossible, i. 1.4 (53-1194).Mixture of soul divisible, ii. 3.9 (52-1176).Mixture of unequal qualities, ii. 7.1 (37-693).Mixture that occupies more space than elements, ii. 7.1 (37-693).Mixture, theory of, of Alexander of Aphrodisia, ii. 7.1 (37-691); iv. 7.2 (2-58).Mixture to the point of total penetration, ii. 7 (37-691).Modality, should not occupy even third rank of existence, vi. 1.30 (42-887).Model, v. 8.8 (31-564).Model for producing principle, is form, v. 8.7 (31-561).Model, image bound to it by radiation, vi. 4.10 (22-300).Model, interior, cause of appreciation of interior beauties, i. 6.4 (1-45).Model of reason, is the universal soul, iv. 3.11 (27-407).Model of the old earth, gnostic, ii. 9.5 (33-607).Model of the universe is intelligible world, vi. 7.12 (38-720).Model, previous, object's existence implies, vi. 6.10 (34-658).Model, superior, method of producing assimilation, i. 2.7 (19-267,268).Modesty is part of goodness, ii. 9.9. (33-616).Modification derived from foreign sources, i. 1.9 (53-1202).Modified matter, is Stoic God, vi. 1.27 (42-881).Molecules could not possess life and intelligence, iv. 7.2 (2-57).Monism of the Stoics breaks down just like dualism, v. 1.27 (42-883).Moon, limit of world-sphere, ii. 1.5 (40-820).Moon, sun and light universe like, v. 6.4 (24-337).Moral beauties, more delightful than sense-beauties, i. 6.4 (1-45).Moral men, v. 9.1 (5-102).Moral men become superficial, v. 9.1 (2-102).Moralization, iv. 4.17 (28-464).Moralization decides government of soul, iv. 4.17 (28-464).Mortal, either whole or part of us, iv. 7.1 (2-56).Mother, nurse, residence and other nature is matter, iii. 6.18 (26-384).Motion, how imparted to lower existences, ii. 2.2 (14-231).Motion is below the One, iii. 9.7 (13-225).Motion of fire, is straight, ii. 2.1 (14-228).Motion of soul is circular, ii. 2.1 (14-229).Motion, single, effected by body, and different ones by soul, iv. 7.4 (2-62).Motion spontaneous, of universal soul, immortalizes heaven, ii. 1.4 (40-818).Motions, conflicting, due to presence of bodies, ii. 2.2 (14-231).Motions, different, caused by soul, iv. 7.5 (2-62).Motive, essential to determination, iii. 1.1 (3-87).Motives of creation ii. 9.4 (33-605).Movement, v. 1.4 (10-180).Movement and rest, destruction also inapplicable, ii. 9.1 (33-600).Movement and stability exist because thought by intelligence, vi. 2.8 (43-904).Movement another kind of stability, vi. 2.7 (43-903).Movement cannot be reduced to any higher genus, vi. 3.21 (44-971).Movement, circular of the soul, iv. 4.16 (28-462).Movement divided in natural, artificial and voluntary, vi. 3.26 (44-980).Movement does not beget time, but indicates it, iii. 7.11 (45-1009).Movement for sense objects, vi. 3.23 (44-976).Movement, how can it be in time if changes are out of time, vi. 1.16 (42-864).Movement is a form of power, vi. 3.22 (44-973).Movement is active for, and is the cause of other forms, vi. 3.22 (44-974).Movement, is change anterior to it? vi. 3.21 (44-972).Movement measured by space because of its indetermination, iii. 7.11 (45-1011).Movement measures time, and is measured by it, iii. 7.12 (45-1011).Movement of combination, vi. 3.25 (44-978).Movement of displacement is single, vi. 3.24 (44-927).Movement, of its image time, is eternity, iii. 7, int. (45-985).Movement of the heavens, ii. 2 (14-227).Movement of the soul is attributed to the primary movement, iii. 7.12 (45-985).Movement, persistent, and its interval, are not time, but are within it, iii. 7.7 (45-999).Movement, three kinds, ii. 2.1 (14-227).Movement, under it, action and suffering may be subsumed, vi. 1.17 (42-866).Movement, why it is a category, vi. 3.20 (44-971).Multiple unity, iv. 9.1 (8-139).Multiple unity, radiation of, v. 3.15 (49-1115).Multiplicity could not be contained in the first, vi. 7.17 (38-729).Multiplicity demands organization in system, vi. 7.10 (38-716).Multiplicity of intelligences implies their natural differences, vi. 7.17 (38-730).Multitude, how it precedes from the One, v. 9.14 (5-116); vi. 7 (38-697).Multitude is distance from an unity, and is an evil, vi. 6.1 (34-643).Multitude of ideas of the good, vi. 7 (38-697).Muses, v. 8.10 (31-569); iii. 7.10 (45-1005).Music makes the musician, v. 8.1 (31-552).Musician educated by recognizing truths he already possesses, i. 3.1 (20-270).Musician, how he rises to intelligible world, i. 3.1 (20-270).Musician led up by beauty, i. 3.1 (20-270).Mutilation of Saturn typifies splitting of unity, v. 8.13 (31-573).Mysteries, v. 3.17 (49-1120).Mysteries, ancient, their spiritual truth, vi. 9.11 (9-169).Mysteries purify and lead to nakedness in sanctuary, i. 6.6 (1-50).Mystery of derivation of Second from First, v. 1.6 (10-181).Mystery rites explain secrecy of ecstasy, vi. 9.11 (9-169).Mystery teachings of hell, i. 6.6 (1-49).Myths explained by body's approach to the soul, iii. 5.10 (50-1138).Myths, object of, is to analyze and distinguish, iii. 5.10 (50-1139).Myths of ithyphallic Hermes, iii. 6.19 (26-385).Myths of Need and Abundance, iii. 6.14 (26-375).Myths, see Abundance, Need of, iii. 6.14 (26-375).Nakedness follows purification in mysteries, i. 6.6 (1-50).Names of Supreme approximations, v. 5.6 (32-584).Narcissus, i. 6.8 (1-52); v. 8.2 (31-554).Narcissus followed vain shapes, i. 6.8 (1-52).Natural characteristics, derived from categories in intelligible, v. 9.10 (5-113).Natural law, by it all prayers are answered, even of evil, iv. 4.42 (28-505).Natural movements, vi. 3.26 (44-980).Nature and elements, there is continuity between, iv. 4.14 (28-459).Nature, and origin of evils, i. 8 (51-1142).Nature as weaker contemplation, iii. 8.4 (30-535).Nature betrayed, but not affected by stars, iii. 1.6 (3-95).Nature, capable of perfection as much as we, ii. 9.5 (33-607).Nature, cause coincides with it in intelligible, vi. 7.19 (38-735).Nature contemplation in unity, iii. 8 (30-542).Nature, contrary to loves, are passions of strayed souls, iii. 5.7 (50-1135).Nature dominates in plants, but not in man, iii. 4.1 (15-233).Nature first actualization of universal soul, v. 2.1 (11-194).Nature is immovable as a fall, but not as compound of matter and form, iii. 8.2 (30-533).Nature is ultimate cause, iii. 1.1 (3-87).Nature law directs soul, ii. 3.8 (52-1173).Nature, lowest in the world-soul's wisdom, iv. 4.13 (28-458).Nature of divine intelligence, i. 8.2 (51-1143).Nature of evil, i. 8.3 (51-1144).Nature of intelligence proved, v. 9.3 (5-104).Nature of soul is intermediate, iv. 8.7 (6-130).Nature of Supreme, i. 8.2 (51-1144).Nature of universal soul, i. 8.2 (51-1144).Nature posterior to intelligence, iv. 7.8 (2-78).Nature reason is result of immovable contemplation, iii. 8.2 (30-533).Nature, relation of animal to human, i. 1.7 (53-1199).Nature sterility indicated by castration, iii. 6.19 (26-384).Nature, Stoic name for generative power in seeds, v. 9.6 (5-110).Nature, to what part belongs emotions? i. 1.1 (53-1191).Nature's mother is universal reason and father the formal reasons, iii. 8.4 (30-535).Nature's progress aided by auxiliary arts, v. 9.11 (5-114).Necessary, begetting of Second by First, v. 4.1 (7-135).Necessary things are those whose possession is unconscious, i. 4.6 (46-1027).Necessity, characteristic of intelligence, v. 3.6 (49-1100).Necessity does not include voluntariness, iv. 8.5 (6-127).Necessity, Heraclitian, iii. 1.4 (3-91).Necessity mingled with reason, iii. 3.6 (48-1080).Necessity of continuous procession to Supreme, iv. 8.5 (6-129).Necessity of existence of the First, v. 4.1 (7-134).Necessity of illumination of darkness must have been eternal, ii. 9.12 (33-623).Necessity, spindle of, Platonic, iii. 4.6 (15-242); ii. 3.9 (52-1171).Nectar, iii. 5.7 (50-1133).Nectar is memory of vision of intelligible wisdom, v. 8.10 (31-569).Need and Abundance, myth of, iii. 6.14 (26-375).Need, or Poros, iii. 5.2, 5, 6, 7, 10 (50-1125to1135).Negative necessary to a definition, v. 5.6 (32-584).Neutral evil is matter, vi. 7.28 (38-746).New things, unnoticed, their perception not forced, iv. 4.8 (28-450).New world arises out of Jupiter begotten by result of ecstasy, v. 8.12 (31-572).Night objects prove uselessness of sight medium, iv. 5.3 (29-519).Non-being is matter, cannot be anything actual, ii. 5.4 (25-347).Nonentity has intelligent life beneath being, iii. 6.6 (26-360).Nonentity is matter, i. 8.5 (51-1150).Normative element of life, is Providence, iii. 3.5 (48-1084).Noses, pug, and Roman, due to matter, v. 9.12 (5-115).Nothing is contained in One; reason why everything can issue from it, v. 2.1 (11-193).Notions, scientific, are both prior and posterior, v. 9.7 (5-110).Nowhere and everywhere is Supreme, inclination and imminence, vi. 8.16 (39-801).Number and unity proceed from the One and many beings, vi. 6.10 (34-659).Number as universal bond of universe, vi. 6.15 (34-670).Number can be said to be infinite, vi. 6.19 (34-674).Number, category, v. 1.4 (10-180).Number exists for every animal and the universal animal, vi. 6.15 (34-668).Number follows and proceeds from essence, vi. 6.9 (34-655).Number is not in quantity, vi. 1.4 (42-842).Number, posterior to, is intelligible line, vi. 6.17 (34-674).Number, what is it to infinite? vi. 6.2 (34-644).Number within is the number, constituted with our being, vi. 6.16 (34-673).Numbers, vi. 6 (34-651).Numbers and dimensions are so different as to demand different classification, vi. 2.13 (43-916).Numbers and ideas, identification of, vi. 6.9 (34-656).Numbers and magnitudes, are of different kinds of quantity, vi. 1.4 (42-843).Numbers are not quantity in themselves, vi. 1.4 (42-842).Numbers form part of the intelligible world, vi. 6.4 (34-647).Numbers, intelligible, are identical with thought, v. 5.4 (32-582).Numbers intelligible, difficulties connected with, vi. 6.16 (34-671).Numbers must exist in the primary essence, vi. 6.8 (34-654).Numbers participated in by objects, vi. 6.14 (34-667).Numbers, principle is unity's form, v. 5.5 (32-583).Numbers, Pythagorean, intelligible discussed, vi. 6.5 (34-649).Numbers, quantitative, v. 5.4 (32-583).Numbers, regulated generation of everything, vi. 6.15 (34-670).Numbers, soul as v. 1.5 (10-187); vi. 5.9 (23-324).Numbers split the unity into plurality, vi. 6.9 (34-656).Numbers, two kinds, essential and unitary, vi. 6.9 (34-657).Numbers, veritable, are intelligible entities, vi. 6.14 (34-668).Numenian name of Divinity, Essence and Being, v. 9.3 (5-104); v. 8.5 (31-560); vi. 6.9 (34-656).Numerals, veritable, of the man in himself, are essential, vi. 6.16 (34-672).Nurse, mother, residence and other nature is matter, iii. 6.19 (26-384).Object itself did not grasp intellect, i. 1.9 (53-1201).Objective justice and beauty to which we are united, v. 1.11 (10-190).Objective world subsists even when we are distracted, v. 1.12 (10-191).Objects existence implies a previous model, vi. 6.10 (34-658).Objects outside have unitary existence, vi. 6.12 (34-662).Objects participate in numbers, vi. 6.14 (34-667).Obstacle to divinity is failure to abstract from Him, vi. 8.21 (39-811).Obstacle to the soul is evil, i. 8.12 (51-1159).Obstacles lacking to creator, because of his universality, v. 8.7 (31-562).Omnipresence explained by possession of all things, without being possessed by them, v. 5.9 (32-589).One, v. 4; v. 4.2 (7-134,136).One and Good, vi. 9 (1-47).One and many, like circle, is intelligence, iii. 8.8 (30-543).

Matter derives its being from intelligibles, vi. 3.7 (44-944).

Matter, descent into, is fall of the soul, i. 8.14 (51-1161).

Matter, difference from form, due to that of intelligible sources, vi. 3.8 (44-946).

Matter existed from all eternity, iv. 8.6 (6-130).

Matter, first physical category of Plotinos, vi. 3.3 (44-937).

Matter, how to see the formless, a thing of itself, i. 8.9 (51-1156).

Matter (hypostatic), existence as undeniable as that of good, i. 8.15 (51-1162).

Matter, if primary, would be form of the universe, iii. 6.18 (26-382).

Matter, impassible, because of different senses of participation, iii. 6.9 (26-366).

Matter, incorporeal (Pyth. Plato, Arist.), ii. 4.1 (12-198).

Matter, incorruptible, exists only potentially, ii. 5.5 (25-348).

Matter, intelligible, ii. 4.3 (12-198); ii. 5.3 (25-345); iii. 5.7 (50-1134).

Matter, intelligible, entities to reach sense-matter, iii. 5.7 (50-1154).

Matter, intelligible, is not potential, ii. 5.3 (25-345).

Matter, intelligible, why it must be accepted, iii. 5.6, 7 (50-1133).

Matter is born shapeless, receives form while turning to, ii. 4.3 (12-198).

Matter is both without qualities and evil, i. 8.10 (51-1156).

Matter is bottom of everything, ii. 4.5 (12-201).

Matter is cause of evils, even if corporeal, i. 8.8 (51-1153).

Matter is disposition to become something else, ii. 4.13 (12-214).

Matter is improved by form, vi. 7.28 (38-745).

Matter is incorporeal, ii. 4.9 (12-206).

Matter is nonentity, i. 8.5 (51-1148).

Matter is non-essential otherness, ii. 4.16 (12-218).

Matter is not a body without quality, but with magnitude, vi. 1.26 (42-880).

Matter is not being and cannot be anything actual, ii. 5.4 (25-347).

Matter is not composite, but simple in one, ii. 4.8 (12-205).

Matter is not wickedness, but neutral evil, vi. 7.28 (38-746).

Matter is nothing actually, ii. 5.2 (25-343).

Matter is physical category, vi. 3.3 (44-937).

Matter is real potentially, ii. 5.5 (25-348).

Matter is relative darkness, ii. 4.5 (12-201).

Matter is secondary evil, i. 8.4 (51-1155).

Matter is unchangeable because form is such, iii. 6.10 (26-368).

Matter left alone as basis after Stoic categories evaporate, vi. 1.29 (42-886).

Matter magnitude derived from seminal reason, iii. 6.15 (26-377).

Matter may exist yet be evil, i. 8.11 (51-1158).

Matter, modified, is Stoic God, vi. 12.7 (42-881).

Matter must be possible because its qualities change, iii. 6.8 (26-366).

Matter necessary to the world; hence good implies evil, i. 8.7 (51-1152).

Matter not in intelligible world, v. 8.4 (31-557).

Matter nothing real actually, ii. 5.4 (25-347).

Matter of demons is not corporeal, iii. 5.7 (50-1135).

Matter participates in existence, without participating it, iii. 6.14 (26-376)

Matter participates in the intelligible, by appearance, iii. 6.11 (26-369).

Matter, participation of, in ideas, vi. 5.8 (23-321)

Matter possesses no quality, ii. 4.8 (12-205); iv. 7.3 (2-59).

Matter qualified as seminal reasons,vi. 1.29

Matter rationalized is body, ii. 7.3 (37-696).

Matter received forms until hidden by them, v. 8.7 (31-562).

Matter, relation of, to reason, illustrates that of opinion to imagination, iii. 6.15 (26-377).

Matter, since cannot be destroyed, cannot be affected, iii. 6.8 (26-365).

Matter things mingled, contain no perfection, iii. 2.7 (47-1053).

Matter's generation, consequence of anterior principles, iv. 8.6 (6-130).

Matter's primitive impotence before generation, iv. 8.6 (6-130).

Mechanism of ecstasy, v. 8.11 (31-569).

Medicine, v. 9.11 (5-114).

Mediocre, evil men even, never abandoned by Providence, iii. 2.9 (47-1058).

Mediation of soul between indivisible and divisible essence, iv. 2 (21-276).

Mediation of world-souls, through it, benefits are granted to men, vi. 4.12, 30 (28-457,486).

Medium cosmologically necessary, but affects sight only slightly, iv. 5.2 (29-517).

Medium needed in Platonism, Aristotelianism, Stoicism, iv. 5.2 (29-516).

Medium not needed in Atomism and Epicurianism, iv. 5.2 (29-516).

Medium of sight, Aristotle's unnecessary iv. 5.1 (29-515).

Medium, though possible, hinders organs of sight, iv. 5.1 (29-514).

Medium, untroubled, is the world-soul, iv. 8.7 (6-130).

Medium's absence would only destroy sympathy, iv. 5.3 (29-519).

Medium's affection does not interfere with vision, iv. 5.3 (29-520).

Memories not needed, unconscious prayer answered by Stars, iv. 4.42 (28-505).

Memories of the past do not increase happiness, i. 5.9 (36-689).

Memory, iv. (27-428).

Memory and reasoning, not implied by world-soul's wisdom, iv. 4.12 (28-457).

Memory and reasoning suspended by omniscient intuition, iv. 4.12 (28-457).

Memory and sensation iv. 6 (41-829).

Memory and sensation, Stoic doctrines of, hang together, iv. 6.1 (41-829).

Memory acts through the sympathy of the soul's highest self, iv. 6.3 (41-832).

Memory, actualization of the soul, iv. 3.25 (27-429).

Memory belongs to divine soul, and to that derived from world-soul, iv. 3.27 (27-433).

Memory belongs to imagination, iv. 3.29 (27-433).

Memory belongs to the soul alone, iv. 3.26 (27-432).

Memory, both kinds, implies both kinds of imagination, iv. 3.31 (27-438).

Memory definition depends on whether it is animal or human, iv. 3.25 (27-429).

Memory does not belong to appetite, iv. 3.28 (27-434).

Memory does not belong to the power of perception, iv. 3.29 (27-435).

Memory does not belongs to the stars, iv. 4.30 (28-441).

Memory impossible to world-souls to whom there is no time but a single day, iv. 4.7 (28-450).

Memory inapplicable to any but time limited beings, iv. 3.25 (27-428).

Memory is not identical with feeling or reasoning, iv. 3.29 (27-436).

Memory limited to souls that change their condition, iv. 4.6 (28-448).

Memory may be reduced to sensation, iv. 3.28 (27-434).

Memory needs training and education, iv. 6.3 (41-835).

Memory, none in stars, because uniformly blissful, iv. 4.8 (28-452).

Memory not an image but a reawakening of a faculty, iv. 6.3 (41-833).

Memory not as high as unreflective identification, iv. 4.4 (28-445).

Memory not, but an affection, is kept by appetite, iv. 3.28 (27-434).

Memory not compulsory, iv. 4.8 (28-451).

Memory not exercised by world-souls and stars' souls, iv. 4.6 (28-449).

Memory not intelligible because of simultaneity, iv. 4.1 (28-441).

Memory of soul in intelligible world, iv. 4.1 (28-441).

Memory peculiar to soul and body, iv. 3.2 (27-430).

Memory, possession of, not caused by incarnation of soul, iv. 3.26 (27-431).

Memory problems depend on definition, iv. 3.25 (27-429).

Memory, timeless, constitutes self-consciousness, iv. 3.25 (27-429).

Memory when beyond, helped by training here below, iv. 4.5 (28-447).

Memory would be hindered if soul's impressions were corporeal, iv. 7.6 (2-66).

Men are kings, v. 3.4 (49-1094).

Men both, we are not always as we should be, vi. 4.14 (22-308).

Men escape chance by interior isolation, vi. 8.15 (39-800).

Men non-virtuous, do good when not hindered by passions, iii. 1.10 (3-98).

Men of three kinds, sensual, moral and spiritual, v. 9.1 (5-102).

Men seek action when too weak for contemplation, iii. 8.4 (30-536).

Men sense and intelligible, difference between, vi. 7.4 (38-705).

Men, three in each of us, vi. 7.6 (38-708).

Men, three in us, fate of them is, brutalization or divinization, vi. 7.6 (38-709).

Men, three kinds of, v. 9.1 (5-102).

Mercury, Jupiter and Venus, also considered astrologically, ii. 3.5 (52-1169).

Metal is to statue as body to soul, iv. 7.8 (2-76).

Messengers of divinities are souls incarnated, iv. 3.12, 13 (27-409); iv. 8.5 (6-127).

Metaphorical is all language about the Supreme, vi. 8.13 (39-795).

Method of creation, ii. 3.17 (52-1186).

Method of ecstasy is to close eyes of body, i. 6.8 (1-52).

Methods of dialectic differ with individuals, i. 3.1 (20-269).

Methods of participation in good, i. 7.1 (54-1208).

Metis or prudence (myth of), iii. 5.5 (50-1130).

Microcosm, iv. 3.10 (27-406).

Migrating of soul psychologically explained, vi. 4.16 (22-310).

Minerva, vi. 5.7 (23-321).

Minos, vi. 9.7 (9-162).

Miracle, matter participates in existence, while not participating in it, iii. 6.14 (26-376).

Mire, unruly, soul falls into, when plunging down, i. 8.13 (51-1160).

Mirror, iv. 3.30 (27-437); iv. 5.7 (29-528).

Mirror empty, reflects everything like matter, iii. 6.7 (26-363).

Mirror, simile of, i. 4.10 (46-1034).

Misfortune and punishment, significance of, iv. 3.16 (27-414).

Misfortune, experience of, does not give senses to man, vi. 7.1 (38-697).

Misfortune foreseen by God, not cause of human senses, vi. 7.1 (38-697).

Misfortune none too great to be conquered by virtues, i. 4.8 (46-1031).

Misfortune to the good only apparent, iii. 2.6 (47-1051).

Mithra, simile of, used, iii. 2.14 (47-1064).

Mixture, consequences of soul and body, i. 1.4 (53-1195).

Mixture, elements are not, but arise from a common system, ii. 1.7 (40-824).

Mixture explained by evaporation (Stoic), ii. 7.2 (37-694).

Mixture limited to energies of the existent, iv. 7.2, 8 (2-58,68).

Mixture of intelligence and necessity, i. 8.7 (51-1152).

Mixture of soul and body impossible, i. 1.4 (53-1194).

Mixture of soul divisible, ii. 3.9 (52-1176).

Mixture of unequal qualities, ii. 7.1 (37-693).

Mixture that occupies more space than elements, ii. 7.1 (37-693).

Mixture, theory of, of Alexander of Aphrodisia, ii. 7.1 (37-691); iv. 7.2 (2-58).

Mixture to the point of total penetration, ii. 7 (37-691).

Modality, should not occupy even third rank of existence, vi. 1.30 (42-887).

Model, v. 8.8 (31-564).

Model for producing principle, is form, v. 8.7 (31-561).

Model, image bound to it by radiation, vi. 4.10 (22-300).

Model, interior, cause of appreciation of interior beauties, i. 6.4 (1-45).

Model of reason, is the universal soul, iv. 3.11 (27-407).

Model of the old earth, gnostic, ii. 9.5 (33-607).

Model of the universe is intelligible world, vi. 7.12 (38-720).

Model, previous, object's existence implies, vi. 6.10 (34-658).

Model, superior, method of producing assimilation, i. 2.7 (19-267,268).

Modesty is part of goodness, ii. 9.9. (33-616).

Modification derived from foreign sources, i. 1.9 (53-1202).

Modified matter, is Stoic God, vi. 1.27 (42-881).

Molecules could not possess life and intelligence, iv. 7.2 (2-57).

Monism of the Stoics breaks down just like dualism, v. 1.27 (42-883).

Moon, limit of world-sphere, ii. 1.5 (40-820).

Moon, sun and light universe like, v. 6.4 (24-337).

Moral beauties, more delightful than sense-beauties, i. 6.4 (1-45).

Moral men, v. 9.1 (5-102).

Moral men become superficial, v. 9.1 (2-102).

Moralization, iv. 4.17 (28-464).

Moralization decides government of soul, iv. 4.17 (28-464).

Mortal, either whole or part of us, iv. 7.1 (2-56).

Mother, nurse, residence and other nature is matter, iii. 6.18 (26-384).

Motion, how imparted to lower existences, ii. 2.2 (14-231).

Motion is below the One, iii. 9.7 (13-225).

Motion of fire, is straight, ii. 2.1 (14-228).

Motion of soul is circular, ii. 2.1 (14-229).

Motion, single, effected by body, and different ones by soul, iv. 7.4 (2-62).

Motion spontaneous, of universal soul, immortalizes heaven, ii. 1.4 (40-818).

Motions, conflicting, due to presence of bodies, ii. 2.2 (14-231).

Motions, different, caused by soul, iv. 7.5 (2-62).

Motive, essential to determination, iii. 1.1 (3-87).

Motives of creation ii. 9.4 (33-605).

Movement, v. 1.4 (10-180).

Movement and rest, destruction also inapplicable, ii. 9.1 (33-600).

Movement and stability exist because thought by intelligence, vi. 2.8 (43-904).

Movement another kind of stability, vi. 2.7 (43-903).

Movement cannot be reduced to any higher genus, vi. 3.21 (44-971).

Movement, circular of the soul, iv. 4.16 (28-462).

Movement divided in natural, artificial and voluntary, vi. 3.26 (44-980).

Movement does not beget time, but indicates it, iii. 7.11 (45-1009).

Movement for sense objects, vi. 3.23 (44-976).

Movement, how can it be in time if changes are out of time, vi. 1.16 (42-864).

Movement is a form of power, vi. 3.22 (44-973).

Movement is active for, and is the cause of other forms, vi. 3.22 (44-974).

Movement, is change anterior to it? vi. 3.21 (44-972).

Movement measured by space because of its indetermination, iii. 7.11 (45-1011).

Movement measures time, and is measured by it, iii. 7.12 (45-1011).

Movement of combination, vi. 3.25 (44-978).

Movement of displacement is single, vi. 3.24 (44-927).

Movement, of its image time, is eternity, iii. 7, int. (45-985).

Movement of the heavens, ii. 2 (14-227).

Movement of the soul is attributed to the primary movement, iii. 7.12 (45-985).

Movement, persistent, and its interval, are not time, but are within it, iii. 7.7 (45-999).

Movement, three kinds, ii. 2.1 (14-227).

Movement, under it, action and suffering may be subsumed, vi. 1.17 (42-866).

Movement, why it is a category, vi. 3.20 (44-971).

Multiple unity, iv. 9.1 (8-139).

Multiple unity, radiation of, v. 3.15 (49-1115).

Multiplicity could not be contained in the first, vi. 7.17 (38-729).

Multiplicity demands organization in system, vi. 7.10 (38-716).

Multiplicity of intelligences implies their natural differences, vi. 7.17 (38-730).

Multitude, how it precedes from the One, v. 9.14 (5-116); vi. 7 (38-697).

Multitude is distance from an unity, and is an evil, vi. 6.1 (34-643).

Multitude of ideas of the good, vi. 7 (38-697).

Muses, v. 8.10 (31-569); iii. 7.10 (45-1005).

Music makes the musician, v. 8.1 (31-552).

Musician educated by recognizing truths he already possesses, i. 3.1 (20-270).

Musician, how he rises to intelligible world, i. 3.1 (20-270).

Musician led up by beauty, i. 3.1 (20-270).

Mutilation of Saturn typifies splitting of unity, v. 8.13 (31-573).

Mysteries, v. 3.17 (49-1120).

Mysteries, ancient, their spiritual truth, vi. 9.11 (9-169).

Mysteries purify and lead to nakedness in sanctuary, i. 6.6 (1-50).

Mystery of derivation of Second from First, v. 1.6 (10-181).

Mystery rites explain secrecy of ecstasy, vi. 9.11 (9-169).

Mystery teachings of hell, i. 6.6 (1-49).

Myths explained by body's approach to the soul, iii. 5.10 (50-1138).

Myths, object of, is to analyze and distinguish, iii. 5.10 (50-1139).

Myths of ithyphallic Hermes, iii. 6.19 (26-385).

Myths of Need and Abundance, iii. 6.14 (26-375).

Myths, see Abundance, Need of, iii. 6.14 (26-375).

Nakedness follows purification in mysteries, i. 6.6 (1-50).

Names of Supreme approximations, v. 5.6 (32-584).

Narcissus, i. 6.8 (1-52); v. 8.2 (31-554).

Narcissus followed vain shapes, i. 6.8 (1-52).

Natural characteristics, derived from categories in intelligible, v. 9.10 (5-113).

Natural law, by it all prayers are answered, even of evil, iv. 4.42 (28-505).

Natural movements, vi. 3.26 (44-980).

Nature and elements, there is continuity between, iv. 4.14 (28-459).

Nature, and origin of evils, i. 8 (51-1142).

Nature as weaker contemplation, iii. 8.4 (30-535).

Nature betrayed, but not affected by stars, iii. 1.6 (3-95).

Nature, capable of perfection as much as we, ii. 9.5 (33-607).

Nature, cause coincides with it in intelligible, vi. 7.19 (38-735).

Nature contemplation in unity, iii. 8 (30-542).

Nature, contrary to loves, are passions of strayed souls, iii. 5.7 (50-1135).

Nature dominates in plants, but not in man, iii. 4.1 (15-233).

Nature first actualization of universal soul, v. 2.1 (11-194).

Nature is immovable as a fall, but not as compound of matter and form, iii. 8.2 (30-533).

Nature is ultimate cause, iii. 1.1 (3-87).

Nature law directs soul, ii. 3.8 (52-1173).

Nature, lowest in the world-soul's wisdom, iv. 4.13 (28-458).

Nature of divine intelligence, i. 8.2 (51-1143).

Nature of evil, i. 8.3 (51-1144).

Nature of intelligence proved, v. 9.3 (5-104).

Nature of soul is intermediate, iv. 8.7 (6-130).

Nature of Supreme, i. 8.2 (51-1144).

Nature of universal soul, i. 8.2 (51-1144).

Nature posterior to intelligence, iv. 7.8 (2-78).

Nature reason is result of immovable contemplation, iii. 8.2 (30-533).

Nature, relation of animal to human, i. 1.7 (53-1199).

Nature sterility indicated by castration, iii. 6.19 (26-384).

Nature, Stoic name for generative power in seeds, v. 9.6 (5-110).

Nature, to what part belongs emotions? i. 1.1 (53-1191).

Nature's mother is universal reason and father the formal reasons, iii. 8.4 (30-535).

Nature's progress aided by auxiliary arts, v. 9.11 (5-114).

Necessary, begetting of Second by First, v. 4.1 (7-135).

Necessary things are those whose possession is unconscious, i. 4.6 (46-1027).

Necessity, characteristic of intelligence, v. 3.6 (49-1100).

Necessity does not include voluntariness, iv. 8.5 (6-127).

Necessity, Heraclitian, iii. 1.4 (3-91).

Necessity mingled with reason, iii. 3.6 (48-1080).

Necessity of continuous procession to Supreme, iv. 8.5 (6-129).

Necessity of existence of the First, v. 4.1 (7-134).

Necessity of illumination of darkness must have been eternal, ii. 9.12 (33-623).

Necessity, spindle of, Platonic, iii. 4.6 (15-242); ii. 3.9 (52-1171).

Nectar, iii. 5.7 (50-1133).

Nectar is memory of vision of intelligible wisdom, v. 8.10 (31-569).

Need and Abundance, myth of, iii. 6.14 (26-375).

Need, or Poros, iii. 5.2, 5, 6, 7, 10 (50-1125to1135).

Negative necessary to a definition, v. 5.6 (32-584).

Neutral evil is matter, vi. 7.28 (38-746).

New things, unnoticed, their perception not forced, iv. 4.8 (28-450).

New world arises out of Jupiter begotten by result of ecstasy, v. 8.12 (31-572).

Night objects prove uselessness of sight medium, iv. 5.3 (29-519).

Non-being is matter, cannot be anything actual, ii. 5.4 (25-347).

Nonentity has intelligent life beneath being, iii. 6.6 (26-360).

Nonentity is matter, i. 8.5 (51-1150).

Normative element of life, is Providence, iii. 3.5 (48-1084).

Noses, pug, and Roman, due to matter, v. 9.12 (5-115).

Nothing is contained in One; reason why everything can issue from it, v. 2.1 (11-193).

Notions, scientific, are both prior and posterior, v. 9.7 (5-110).

Nowhere and everywhere is Supreme, inclination and imminence, vi. 8.16 (39-801).

Number and unity proceed from the One and many beings, vi. 6.10 (34-659).

Number as universal bond of universe, vi. 6.15 (34-670).

Number can be said to be infinite, vi. 6.19 (34-674).

Number, category, v. 1.4 (10-180).

Number exists for every animal and the universal animal, vi. 6.15 (34-668).

Number follows and proceeds from essence, vi. 6.9 (34-655).

Number is not in quantity, vi. 1.4 (42-842).

Number, posterior to, is intelligible line, vi. 6.17 (34-674).

Number, what is it to infinite? vi. 6.2 (34-644).

Number within is the number, constituted with our being, vi. 6.16 (34-673).

Numbers, vi. 6 (34-651).

Numbers and dimensions are so different as to demand different classification, vi. 2.13 (43-916).

Numbers and ideas, identification of, vi. 6.9 (34-656).

Numbers and magnitudes, are of different kinds of quantity, vi. 1.4 (42-843).

Numbers are not quantity in themselves, vi. 1.4 (42-842).

Numbers form part of the intelligible world, vi. 6.4 (34-647).

Numbers, intelligible, are identical with thought, v. 5.4 (32-582).

Numbers intelligible, difficulties connected with, vi. 6.16 (34-671).

Numbers must exist in the primary essence, vi. 6.8 (34-654).

Numbers participated in by objects, vi. 6.14 (34-667).

Numbers, principle is unity's form, v. 5.5 (32-583).

Numbers, Pythagorean, intelligible discussed, vi. 6.5 (34-649).

Numbers, quantitative, v. 5.4 (32-583).

Numbers, regulated generation of everything, vi. 6.15 (34-670).

Numbers, soul as v. 1.5 (10-187); vi. 5.9 (23-324).

Numbers split the unity into plurality, vi. 6.9 (34-656).

Numbers, two kinds, essential and unitary, vi. 6.9 (34-657).

Numbers, veritable, are intelligible entities, vi. 6.14 (34-668).

Numenian name of Divinity, Essence and Being, v. 9.3 (5-104); v. 8.5 (31-560); vi. 6.9 (34-656).

Numerals, veritable, of the man in himself, are essential, vi. 6.16 (34-672).

Nurse, mother, residence and other nature is matter, iii. 6.19 (26-384).

Object itself did not grasp intellect, i. 1.9 (53-1201).

Objective justice and beauty to which we are united, v. 1.11 (10-190).

Objective world subsists even when we are distracted, v. 1.12 (10-191).

Objects existence implies a previous model, vi. 6.10 (34-658).

Objects outside have unitary existence, vi. 6.12 (34-662).

Objects participate in numbers, vi. 6.14 (34-667).

Obstacle to divinity is failure to abstract from Him, vi. 8.21 (39-811).

Obstacle to the soul is evil, i. 8.12 (51-1159).

Obstacles lacking to creator, because of his universality, v. 8.7 (31-562).

Omnipresence explained by possession of all things, without being possessed by them, v. 5.9 (32-589).

One, v. 4; v. 4.2 (7-134,136).

One and Good, vi. 9 (1-47).

One and many, like circle, is intelligence, iii. 8.8 (30-543).


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