The IMS-FORTH & ACHS Neoplatonic Lectures - Lecture by John Finamore (12-11-2024)
With the kind support of the A. S. Onassis Foundation, the research project “Between Athens & Alexandria. Platonism, 3rd-7th c. CE” (2022-2024), in collaboration with the Alexandria Center for Hellenistic Studies of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, organise a monthly lecture series on late antique Neoplatonism. The meetings take place on Zoom at 7.00 pm (Athens time). The Fall 2024 lectures focus on Proclus’ (412-485) Commentaries on Plato. All welcome! Οn Tuesday Nov. 12, at 19:00 Professor Emeritus John Finamore (University of Iowa) gave a lecture on «How Souls Communicate in Hades (Proclus, in Remp. II.163.18-168.26)». Abstract In the Myth of Er in the Republic, Plato describes various aspects of the soul’s afterlife. At 614e3-615a4, he writes that souls who have gathered on the plain of judgment are then divided into those who lived morally good lives and so rise into a place of reward and those who have not who descend into the realm of punishment. On the souls’ return to the plain after their time above or below, they greet one another and tell each other of their experiences. Some 700 years later, Proclus in his commentary on the Republic tries to answer some issues that this short passage must have raised for some philosophers in antiquity. The problem is simple enough: how can souls who do not have bodies or organs of sense communicate in this way? Proclus lays out his response in several stages. He agrees, of course, that souls in the underworld do not have corporeal bodies. However, they do have ethereal vehicles, and these vehicles, he says, are more closely adapted to the souls and therefore less likely to introduce errors in the souls. Thus, the seeing and hearing in Hades is actually clearer and more directly known than those that occur when we are imprisoned in our bodies. These vehicles retain the images received when we were embodied, and thus we can recognize other souls and communicate with them. As for hearing and speaking, the vehicles are actually better at these tasks than the organs in our bodies. How Proclus reaches these conclusions is not immediately clear from the Republic commentary, but with the aid of other works, especially the Timaeus commentary, we will be able to see how Proclus can make the case for disembodied souls speaking and hearing in the underworld.

The IMS-FORTH & ACHS Neoplatonic Lectures - Lecture by Luc Brisson (12-12-2024)

John Finamore | Neoplatonism, Iamblichus, and the Ascent Ritual | Paideia Institute Online Lecture

Sarah Paine - Why Putin and Xi can't escape geography

The IMS-FORTH & ACHS Neoplatonic Lectures - Lecture by Lloyd Gerson (30-5-2024)

Clara Mattei: capitalism is not natural - it’s enforced

The French Do Not Care About Work

How liberals monetized trauma | Catherine Liu on Marx, Trump, and identity politics

Richard Feynman - The World from another point of view

I taught an octopus piano (It took 6 months)

Harold Bloom - "Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human"

The Nature of Reality: A Dialogue Between a Buddhist Scholar and a Theoretical Physicist

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

Being and Logos - Introduction to Middle-Platonism - 1 of X - The Shadow of Plato

1177 BC: The vanishing of the first globalized world | Eric Cline: Full Interview

The More You Study Consciousness, the Weirder It Gets | The Ezra Klein Show

The Ancient Neo-Platonist Attack on Gnosticism - Plotinus Against the Gnostics

Conan O’Brien Delivers the Commencement Address | Harvard Commencement 2026

John Dillon - Iamblichus' 'Higher' Interpretation of Aristotle's Categories

