Attached Paper In-person November Annual Meeting 2026

From Animating Statues to Animating the Universe: Plotinus on the Intelligible as Living Sacred Space

Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

Plotinus actively engages with the notion of sacred space and mystical initiation (Enn. 1.6.7–9). He presents the individual soul as a self-sculpted statue in the temple of the One. He returns to the temple/statue imagery to explicate its ontological syntax: the One as the god inside the temple; Intellect as the first statue in the temple’s precinct; the intelligible as living temple, Soul as constructing images of gods in the sensible world; finally, the individual soul as a sculptor and a statue. The series of references presents the intelligible itself as a self-animated divine complex. For Plotinus, animation is the top-down process of emanation which results in self-animation. Because animation is embedded in the ontological fabric of the universe itself, theurgy and ritual animation of statues are, for Plotinus, ontologically superfluous.