396 By this Plotinos means the essence, or intelligible form, vi. 7.2.
397 See vi. 7.3–6.
398 See iii. 6.4.
399 In his Banquet, p. 186–188; Cary, 14, 15.
400 See v. 9.11.
401 See i. 2.1.
402 See vi. 7.5.
403 See iii. 6.4.
404 Categ. ii. 8.3, 7, 8, 13, 14.
405 See i. 1.2.
406 Arist. Categ. ii. 8.8–13.
407 Met. v. 14.
408 Met. vii. 12.
409 Met. v. 14.
410 Categ. ii. 8.
411 Arist. Categ. iii. 10.
412 See vi. 1.17.
413 Met. v. 10.
414 Categ. iii. 11.
415 Categ. iii. 14.
416 Categ. ii. 7.
417 By a pun, this "change" is used as synonymous with the "alteration" used further on.
418 Arist. de Gen. i. 4.
419 Alteration is change in the category of quality, Arist. de Gen. i. 4; Physics, vii. 2.
420 Arist. Metaph. ix. 6; xi. 9.
421 Met. xi. 9.
422 See ii. 5.1, 2.
423 See ii. 5.2.
424 See ii. 5.2.
425 Categ. iii. 14.
426 Arist. Met. xi. 9.
427 See ii. 7.
428 Arist. de Gen. i. 5.
429 Arist. de Gen. i. 10.
430 Here we have Numenius's innate motion of the intelligible, fr. 30.21.
431 See vi. 1.15–22.
432 Namely, time, vi. 1.13; place, vi. 1.14; possession, vi. 1.23; location, vi. 1.24.
433 For relation, see vi. 1.6–9.
434 For Aristotle says that an accident is something which exists in an object without being one of the distinctive characteristics of its essence.
435 In this book Plotinos studies time and eternity comparatively; first considering Plato's views in the Timaeus, and then the views of Pythagoras (1), Epicurus (9), the Stoics (7), and Aristotle (4, 8, 12).
436 The bracketed numbers are those of the Teubner edition; the unbracketed, those of the Didot edition.
437 See ii. 9.6.
438 As thought Plato, in his Timaeus, p. 37, Cary, 14.
439 Stobaeus. Ecl. Phys. i. 248.
440 A category, see vi. 2.7.
441 See vi. 2.7.
442 Or, with Mueller, "therefore, in a permanent future."
443 De Caelo, i. 9.
444 That is, with this divinity that intelligible existence is.
445 Arist. Met. iii. 2.
446 In the Timaeus, p. 29, Cary 10.
447 Stob. Ecl. Physic. ix. 40.
448 Porphyry, Principles, 32, end.
449 Especially Archytas, Simplicius, Comm. in Phys. Aristot. 165; Stob. Ecl. Physic. Heeren, 248–250.
450 Stobaeus, 254.
451 See Stobaeus, 250.
452 Aristotle, Physica, iv. 12.
453 Mueller: "Whether this may be predicated of the totality of the movement."
454 See vi. 6.4–10.
455 As Aristotle, Phys. iv. 11, claimed.
456 In Physica, iii. 7.
457 Stobaeus, Ecl. Phys. ix. 40.
458 When collectively considered as "A-pollo," following Numenius, 42, 67, Plotinos, v. 5.6.
459 See ii. 9.3.
460 See iii. 7.1, Introd.
461 See iii. 6.16, 17.
462 Porphyry, Principles, 32.
463 In the Timaeus, p. 38, Cary, 14.
464 In his Timaeus, p. 39, Cary, 14, 15.
465 As by Antiphanes and Critolaus, Stobaeus, Eclog. Phys. ix. 40, p. 252, Heeren.
466 See iii. 7.2.
467 As thought Aristotle, de Mem. et Remin. ii. 12.
468 See iv. 9.