This is a highly original monograph that explores the ways in which the concept of transmigration represents the fundamental meaning of Pythagorean thought. The mythical narrative of transmigration tells the story of myriad wandering souls, each migrating from body to body along a path of recurrence amid the becoming of the All. In this highly original study, James Luchte explores the ways in which the concept of transmigration is a central motif in Pythagoras' philosophy, representing its fundamental meaning. Luchte argues that the many strands of the tale of transmigration come together in the Pythagorean philosophical movement, revealing a unity in which, for Pythagoreans, existence and eschatology are separated only by forgetfulness. Such an interpretation that seeks to retrieve the unity of Pythagorean thought goes against the grain of a long-standing tradition of interpretation that projects upon Pythagoras the segregation of 'mysticism' and 'science'. Luchte lays out an alternative interpretation of Pythagorean philosophy as magical in the sense that it orchestrates a holistic harmonization of theoria and praxis and through this reading discloses the radical character of Pythagorean philosophy.
Author(s): James Luchte
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 215
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 9
Introduction: The Poetic Topos of the Doctrine of Transmigration......Page 10
1 Genealogy of the Doctrine of Transmigration......Page 23
2 Beyond Mysticism and Science: Symbolism and Philosophical Magic......Page 47
3 The Emergence of Mystic Cults and the Immortal Soul......Page 63
4 Philolaus and the Character of Pythagorean Harmony......Page 77
5 The Alleged Critique of Pythagoras by Parmenides......Page 90
6 Between the Earth and the Sky: On the Pythagorean Divine......Page 99
7 The Pythagorean Bios and the Doctrine of Transmigration......Page 112
8 The Platonic Rupture: Writing and Difference......Page 139
9 Plotinus: The Ascent of the Soul toward the One......Page 168
10 Plotinus as Neoplatonic Mystic: Letter to Flaccus......Page 178
Epilog: The Fate of the Doctrine of Transmigration......Page 183
Notes......Page 187
References and Further Reading......Page 205
C......Page 210
G......Page 211
M......Page 212
P......Page 213
W......Page 214
Z......Page 215