The Via Negativa and the Aura of Words

Raoul Mortley

Bond University , Australia
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1640-6449


Abstract

The negative capacity is essential to creative thinking; we find it in the transcendentalism of the Judaeo-Christian tradition, though the Neoplatonist explanation of unknowing goes far further than simply pointing to the beyond; the idea of aura provides some understanding of how a word retains its influence even when negated; words or names are crucial in the move upwards in the mystical journey, and in the Neoplatonist and Christian tradition names or words are said to be fundamental, despite the via negativa; the linguistic ontology of Platonism underpins the existence of the names: but we do not have to believe in the ontic status of names for their aura to operate as we meditate over them.

Keywords:

aura, via negativa, unknowing (agnosia), privation, abstraction, names (onomata), Plotinus, Plato, Proclus, Damascius, Gregory of Nyssa, Pseudo-Dionysius

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Laird, M., Gregory of Nyssa and the Grasp of Faith (Oxford Early Christian Studies; Oxford – New York: Oxford University Press 2004). (Crossref)

Mortley, R., From Word to Silence. I. The Rise and Fall of Logos. II. The way of negation, Christian and Greek (Theophaneia 30–31; Bonn: Hanstein 1986).

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Published
2023-10-03


Mortley, R. (2023). The Via Negativa and the Aura of Words. Verbum Vitae, 41(3), 587–599. https://doi.org/10.31743/vv.16318

Raoul Mortley  raoulmortley@gmail.com
Bond University

Raoul Mortley holds a BA Hons from the University of Sydney, an MA from Monash University, a D 3rd Cycle and a D Litt from the University of Strasbourg. His present position is Adjunct Professor at Bond University. He writes in the area of Patristic philosophy and general philosophy. His main work has been focussed on the synthesis of Greek philosophy and Christianity, and the rich themes in the history of western culture deriving from this.

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1640-6449



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