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Chapter 5.—That These Three are Several in Themselves, and Mutually All in All.
8. But in these three, when the
mind knows itself and loves itself, there remains a trinity: mind,
love, knowledge; and this trinity is not confounded together by any
commingling: although they are each severally in themselves and
mutually all in all, or each severally in each two, or each two in
each. Therefore all are in all. For certainly the mind is in
itself, since it is called mind in respect to itself: although it
is said to be knowing, or known, or knowable, relatively to its own
knowledge; and although also as 129loving, and loved, or lovable,
it is referred to love, by which it loves itself. And knowledge,
although it is referred to the mind that knows or is known,
nevertheless is also predicated both as known and knowing in
respect to itself: for the knowledge by which the mind knows itself
is not unknown to itself. And although love is referred to the mind
that loves, whose love it is; nevertheless it is also love in
respect to itself, so as to exist also in itself: since love too is
loved, yet cannot be loved with anything except with love, that is
with itself. So these things are severally in themselves. But so
are they in each other; because both the mind that loves is
in love, and love is in the knowledge of him that loves, and
knowledge is in the mind that knows. And each severally is
in like manner in each two, because the mind which knows and loves
itself, is in its own love and knowledge: and the love of the mind
that loves and knows itself, is in the mind and in its knowledge:
and the knowledge of the mind that knows and loves itself is in the
mind and in its love, because it loves itself that knows, and knows
itself that loves. And hence also each two is in each severally,
since the mind which knows and loves itself, is together with its
own knowledge in love, and together with its own love in knowledge;
and love too itself and knowledge are together in the mind, which
loves and knows itself. But in what way all are in all, we have
already shown above; since the mind loves itself as a whole, and
knows itself as a whole, and knows its own love wholly, and loves
its own knowledge wholly, when these three things are perfect in
respect to themselves. Therefore these three things are
marvellously inseparable from each other, and yet each of them is
severally a substance, and all together are one substance or
essence, whilst they are mutually predicated relatively.706706 [Augustin here illustrates, by the ternary of mind,
love, and knowledge, what the Greek Trinitarians denominate
the περιχώρησις of the divine essence. By the figure of a circulation,
they describe the eternal inbeing and indwelling of one person in
another. This is founded on John
xiv. 10, 11; xvii. 21, 23. “Believest
thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me? I pray that
they all may be one, as thou Father art in Me, and I in Thee.”
Athanasius (Oratio, iii. 21) remarks that Christ here prays
that the disciples “may imitate the trinitarian unity of
essence, in their unity of affection.” Had it been
possible for the disciples to be in the essence of the Father as
the Son is, he would have prayed that they all may be “one in
Thee,” instead of “one in Us.”
The Platonists, also, employed this
figure of circulatory movement, to explain the self-reflecting and
self-communing nature of the human mind. “It is not possible for
us to know what our souls are, but only by their κινήσεις
κυκλικαὶ, their circular and
reflex motions and converse with themselves, which only can steal
from them their own secrets.” J. Smith: Immortality of the
Soul, Ch. ii.
Augustin’s
illustration, however, is imperfect, because “the three things”
which circulate are not “each of them severally a
substance.” Only one of them, namely, the mind, is a
substance.—W.G.T.S.]
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