Participants in the rites were supposed to be rewarded with some form of eternal life or reincarnation. Do you think such a mystical worldview is not characteristic of Aristotle's more mundane view? As the note below indicates, Ari had an ambiguous attitude toward such spiritualistic beliefs. For him, the Soul was not a separate thing that could animate several bodies, or walk around as a ghost. As I understand, his "Soul" was more like our modern notion of "Life" : an activity, not a thing. :smile:Do you have any evidence to suggest that Aristotle went through the Eleusinian Mystery ceremonies? — I like sushi
Do you think such a mystical worldview is not characteristic of Aristotle's more mundane view? — Gnomon
Do you have any evidence to suggest that Aristotle went through the Eleusinian Mystery ceremonies? — I like sushi
He discusses the Mysteries and also (from memory) their relationship to the ancient proto-Indo-European mystery cults that spread across the ancient world with the original Aryan peoples. — Wayfarer
I get the impression that you would prefer to find evidence that Aristotle was not a mystic. Is that because you think of him as the original empirical scientist? :smile:Do you think such a mystical worldview is not characteristic of Aristotle's more mundane view? — Gnomon
Possibly. I am curious if anyone knows of any evidence. — I like sushi
In Athens, he probably experienced the Eleusinian Mysteries as he wrote when describing the sights one viewed at the Mysteries, "to experience is to learn" (παθεĩν μαθεĩν
FWIW here's what artificial intelligence says :↪I like sushi
Well, according to Wikipedia, authority on all knowledge :D --
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristotle — Moliere
That said, yeah - pretending that his name is somehow an indication of quality is erroneous at best, prejudiced at worst. — AmadeusD
I am interested in what Aristotle thought about this and whether he took part. — I like sushi
but this doe snot define the purpose of the mysteries. — I like sushi
I have strong reasons to believe it would be a waste of time reading that. I have heard him before and cannot imagine sifting through a couple of hundred pages is worthy of my time in the hope of finding one nugget of information. — I like sushi
By all means, tell me if he mentions Aristotle at all? — I like sushi
Yes. But it sounds like you're not particularly apt to accept something from this writer. Which is fair. — AmadeusD
Aristotle, Fragmenta, ed. Valentini Rose, fr. 15. See also Regis Laurent, An
Introduction to Aristotle’s Metaphysics of Time (Paris: Villegagnons-Plaisance
Editions, 2015), 122: “The initiatory rites push conceptual knowledge into the
background in favour of iconic visions that lead citizens to suspend their
judgments in favour of revelations that need no explanation."
There has to be more to the Mysteries of Eleusis, the longest running and most prominent spiritual tradition in Ancient Greece.2 Unfortunately it was shrouded in secrecy from the very beginning, leaving nothing but hints and clues about what really took place within the holy precinct. Aristotle once said the initiates came to Eleusis not to learn something, but to experience something.
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