I'd like to imagine this is how Plato's soul remembered the equine head's timeless, unchangeable Form.
A Greek terracotta horse head from Taras (Taranto) Magna Graecia-ca. 4th c. BC
Plato's Theory of Forms/Reminiscence:
A Form is both aspatial (transcendent to space) and atemporal (transcendent to time)
Immortality of the soul grants us
anamnesis i.e re-membrance by the soul of knowledge of the perfect forms [horseness] attained in a previous existence[1]
The Form is an essence (Horseness) i.e distinct singular ideal that causes plural representations of itself (horses) in the physical world.
Forms are unchanging, physical things are in constant change. The Forms can be grasped through rational intellect not fallible senses [2]
Two ancient Greek vase fragments depicting horses:
1- a horseman riding his spirited steed
2-A laureled charioteer with his two horses after a chariot's race victory.
Plato's "Chariot Allegory":
The charioteer drives his soul-chariot pulled by black & white winged horses. Charioteer is reason trying to stir the rational/moral [white] & irrational/lustful [black] soul impulses into a harmonious, truthful end so the soul can behold the Forms.
The "Chariot Allegory" appears in Plato's dialogue Phaedrus (sections 246a–254e) where he writes about the human soul in regards to Love Eros as divine madness (1)
Human soul loses its wings & falls into the sensible world. Yet those soul-wings can be re-grown through Eros' divine madness.
Only if we gaze at physical beauty contemplatively not lustfully can we then behold the true Form of Love.
I made a Phaedrus diagram 251A-252C sections
The above black-figure amphora depicts a charioteer readying for a synoris or two-horse chariot race ca. 500 BC at the British Museum [1]
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In this fragment by German mystic Meister Eckhart (1260-c. 1328) he seeks to explain why "the divine One is a negation of negations", that is God is the fullness of being thus by defining what God is we limit what is unlimited.
The Christian mystic's vision of God can't be translated into human language. One of the ways to describe this boundless vision is by way of negation or via negativa (apophatic way) where anything we say of God must negate every attribute due to unknowability= "divine darkness"
Apophatic is the Latinized form of Greek apophatikos from apophasis "denial, negation," from apophanai "to speak off," from apo "off, away from" (see apo-) + phanai "to speak," related to pheme "voice"
**Jusepe de Ribera- Saint Francis of Paola (detail) ca. 1640 [1]
His life is not poor
He has riches beyond measure
Pointing to the moon
Gazing at the moon
This old guest follows the way
Hotei, 10th c. wandering Chinese monk venerated as “god of good fortune” with his treasure bag,he points to the moon, expressing the pure joy of nonattachment
Fugai Ekun (1568–1654) Hotei Pointing to the Moon, hanging scroll, ink on paper.
P.S The Hotei figure is executed in grey, wet strokes, with only spare use of black, which characterizes the Zen figural style known as “ghost” or “apparition” painting [1]
The above accompanying poem is the English translation of what's inscribed on the hanging scroll. [2]
Did you know Julius Caesar famous phrase before crossing the Rubicon “let the die be cast! (anerrhíphthō kúbos) was declaimed in Greek as it was written by the Greek comic playwright Menander?
In 49 BC (perhaps) on January 10,
Caesar leads his legion across the Rubicon.
Did Caesar really utter this phrase? Yes according to Suetonius, who recorded as alea iacta est ('the die is cast') & Plutarch in Greek
Caesar knew his Greek, also had a great sense for the dramatic, it was a momentous occasion & he wanted these words to pass unto history books.
Caesar might have also found inspiration in the words of Roman playwright Terence:
The Art of Judgment derives from discerning truth beyond appearances and emotions so the fool judges out of ignorance, the proud out of scorn and the wise out of character.
Daniele da Volterra-Head of a Bearded Old Man-drawing ca. 1550s [1]
In his 'Tusculanae Disputationes' (3.56), Cicero tells us to seek truth in a man's character even those living in poverty by quoting Statius Caecilius maxim:
saepe est etiam sub palliolo sordido sapientia
"There's often wisdom even underneath a tattered little cloak"