‘Porphyry, An Anti-Christian Plotinian Platonist’
The International Academic Forum (IAFOR) (
2017)
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Abstract
Porphyry, the Phoenician polymath, having studied with Plotinus when he was thirty
years old, was a well-known Hellenic philosopher, an opponent of Christianity, and
was born in Tyre, in the Roman Empire. We know of his anti-Christian ideology and
of his defence of traditional Roman religions, by means of a fragment of his Adversus
Christianos. This work incurred controversy among early Christians. His Adversus
Christianos has been served as a critique of Christianity and a defence of the worship
of the traditional gods, so it is inevitable that his texts involved Biblical culture and
religious Hellenism. Augustine, in his De Civitate Dei 10. 28, reproves Porphyry for
wasting so much time in learning the theurgic arts and rites. This paper does not
inquire into whether Porphyry’s philosophical monistic theology is shown in Plotinus’
Enneads, but focuses on his anti-Christian thought through the fragments that we have,
particularly Augustine’s De Civitate Dei.