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The hyperuranion[1] or topos hyperuranios[2] (Ancient Greek: ὑπερουράνιον τόπον,[3][4] accusative of ὑπερουράνιος τόπος, "place beyond heaven"), which is also called Platonic realm, is a place in heaven where all ideas of real things are collected together.[5] As a perfect realm of Forms,[3] the hyperuranion is within Plato's view that the idea of a phenomenon is beyond the realm of real phenomena and that everything we experience in our lives is merely a copy of a perfect model.[6] It is described as higher than the gods since their divinity depended on the knowledge of the hyperuranion beings.[4]

"But the region above the heaven (ὑπερουράνιον τόπον) was never worthily sung by any earthly poet, nor will it ever be ... For the colorless, formless, and intangible truly existing essence, with which all true knowledge is concerned, holds this region and is visible only to the mind, the pilot of the soul." (Plato, Phaedrus)[3][7]

The hyperuranion doctrine is also a later medieval concept that claims God within the Empyrean exists outside of heaven and controls it as the prime mover from there for heaven even to be a part of the moved.[1] The French alchemist Jean d'Espagnet rejected the idea of hyperuranion in his work Enchiridion, where he maintained that nature is not divided into conceptual categories but exists in unity.[8]

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References

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from Grokipedia
The Hyperuranion, derived from the Greek ὑπερουράνιον τόπον meaning "place above the heavens," is a transcendent metaphysical realm conceptualized by the ancient Greek philosopher Plato in his dialogue Phaedrus. It represents the eternal abode of the Forms or Ideas, which are perfect, unchanging, and immaterial archetypes that constitute true reality and serve as the objects of genuine knowledge, distinct from the imperfect, sensible world perceived by the senses.[1][2] In Phaedrus (247c–e), Plato vividly describes the Hyperuranion through the myth of the soul's charioteer: it is a colorless, formless, and intangible domain, visible solely to the intellect or "pilot of the soul," where divine intelligences and worthy souls ascend to behold absolute essences such as Justice, Temperance, and Knowledge in their pure, non-generative forms.[1] Unlike the physical heavens, this realm transcends space and time, nourishing the souls that glimpse it through feasting upon truth and enabling recollection (anamnesis) of pre-existent truths.[2] Souls, depicted as winged chariots guided by gods, vary in their ability to access it; philosophers and lovers, having seen it most clearly in prior cycles, are drawn back through eros and dialectic.[1] Central to Plato's idealism, the Hyperuranion underscores the theory of Forms as the ultimate reality, where human philosophy strives—though imperfectly—to apprehend these universals beyond sensory illusion.[3] This concept influenced subsequent Neoplatonism, Christian theology (e.g., in Augustine's adaptations), and Western metaphysics, emphasizing the soul's ascent from opinion (doxa) to wisdom (episteme).[2]

Terminology

Etymology

The term Hyperuranion derives from the ancient Greek adjective ὑπερουράνιον (hyperouranion), a compound word formed by combining ὑπέρ (hyper), meaning "beyond" or "above," with οὐρανός (ouranos), meaning "heaven," "sky," or "celestial vault." This etymological structure yields a literal translation of "beyond the heavens" or "supercelestial," emphasizing a realm transcending the visible cosmos. Plato introduced the term in his dialogue Phaedrus, composed circa 370 BCE, where it appears in the accusative singular neuter form ὑπερουράνιον as part of the phrase τὸν ὑπερουράνιον τόπον ("the place beyond heaven"), with τόπος (topos) denoting "place" or "region."[4] Morphologically, ὑπερουράνιον is the substantivized neuter form of the adjective ὑπερουράνιος (hyperouranios), an innovation in Platonic terminology that marks its entry into the philosophical lexicon without prior attestation in earlier Greek literature.

Translations and Interpretations

In English translations of Plato's Phaedrus, the term Hyperuranion (ὑπερουράνιον τόπος) has been rendered in diverse ways to capture its transcendent quality. Benjamin Jowett's influential 19th-century version describes it as "the place above the heavens," emphasizing a spatial elevation beyond the visible cosmos.[1] In contrast, Harold N. Fowler's 1914 Loeb Classical Library edition opts for "the region above the heaven," highlighting its indistinct, supra-celestial expanse as a domain of colorless, formless essence accessible only to intellect.[5] Modern renderings, such as those by Christopher Rowe, often transliterate it as "Hyperuranion" while glossing it as the "supercelestial place" or "place beyond heaven" to preserve its philosophical nuance without implying strict locality. In other European languages, the term adapts similarly while retaining its Greek roots. Latin translations, beginning with Marsilio Ficino's 15th-century edition, employ hyperuranium to denote the "above-heavenly" realm, influencing medieval and Renaissance interpretations of Platonic metaphysics. French scholarship uses hyperouranien, as seen in Émile Chambry's 1938 Budé edition, which translates the passage as the "lieu hyperouranien" to evoke a non-material domain of pure ideas. German versions, such as Friedrich Schleiermacher's early 19th-century rendering, favor das Überhimmliche or überhimm lischer Ort, underscoring its "super-heavenly" or "transcendent beyond the skies" character in key editions like Otto Apelt's. Scholarly interpretations of Hyperuranion often debate whether it denotes a literal spatial location or a metaphorical symbol of transcendence. Early modern readings, influenced by Neoplatonism, tended toward literal spatiality, portraying it as a cosmological layer above the physical heavens, but 20th-century critics like Paul Friedländer critiqued such views as overly concrete, arguing for an allegorical framework where it represents the non-sensible realm of Forms. Christopher Rowe, in his 1986 commentary, advances this allegorical emphasis, asserting that Hyperuranion is non-physical and non-spatial, serving as a poetic device to articulate the soul's access to eternal truths beyond empirical reality, rather than a geographic entity. This evolution reflects broader shifts in Platonic studies toward demythologizing the term while preserving its role in denoting intellectual ascent.

Plato's Conception

Description in the Phaedrus

In Plato's Phaedrus, the Hyperuranion is introduced as a transcendent realm beyond the physical heavens, described in a visionary passage where Socrates recounts the soul's journey. This supercelestial place houses the "colourless, formless, intangible essence, visible only to mind, the pilot of the soul," where true knowledge resides and nourishes the intellect (nous) apart from the dim perceptions of the physical senses.[6] Unlike the visible world, it eludes poetic description by earthly poets, as no one has sung or will sing of it worthily, emphasizing its ineffable nature accessible solely through intellectual contemplation.[6] The dialogue employs the metaphor of the soul as a charioteer guiding a pair of winged horses—one noble and one unruly—attempting an ascent to this realm during the cosmic revolution of the spheres. Philosophers, whose souls retain stronger wings through philosophical recollection (anamnesis), manage partial glimpses of the Hyperuranion, beholding absolute realities like justice, temperance, and knowledge in their pure forms, while less disciplined souls remain earthbound, weighed down by base desires and unable to rise.[6] This ascent symbolizes the soul's struggle to transcend sensory illusions and reconnect with eternal truths. The gods, in contrast, inhabit the Hyperuranion effortlessly, their divine chariots gliding smoothly to its outer bounds, where they contemplate unadulterated truth without hindrance, feasting on reality and replenishing their essence in perpetual bliss.[6] Human souls, however, face agony in their laborious efforts, highlighting the divine-human divide in accessing this domain of pure being. Plato further illustrates access to the Hyperuranion through the imagery of pre-birth vision, where all souls, in their original state, followed the gods and witnessed the beatific forms in unencumbered purity before incarnation.[6] Upon entering the body—a "living tomb"—souls largely forget these sights due to earthly corruption, but the wise retain partial memory, experiencing rapture at earthly reminders of beauty and truth, which spurs philosophical inquiry. This recollection aligns the Hyperuranion with Plato's broader Theory of Forms as the locus of unchanging ideals.[6]

Relation to the Theory of Forms

In Plato's metaphysics, the Hyperuranion serves as the transcendent realm housing the archetypal Forms, or eide, which are eternal, perfect, and immutable entities that constitute the highest level of reality. These Forms, such as Beauty, Justice, and Goodness, exist independently of the physical world, which Plato describes as a realm of mere shadows or imperfect imitations thereof. Unlike the sensible objects subject to change and decay, the Forms in the Hyperuranion embody unchanging truth and essence, accessible only through intellectual contemplation rather than sensory perception.[7] Epistemologically, the Hyperuranion plays a central role in distinguishing true knowledge (episteme) from mere opinion (doxa). Knowledge arises from the soul's ascent to the Forms via philosophical dialectic, allowing one to grasp their pure, non-sensory nature, whereas opinions stem from interactions with physical copies that only imperfectly resemble the originals. This intellectual journey enables philosophers to achieve wisdom by directly apprehending the Forms, transcending the illusions of the material world.[8] Ontologically, the Forms residing in the Hyperuranion occupy the pinnacle of a hierarchical structure of being, where they represent the ultimate reality from which all existent things derive their qualities through participation or imitation. Physical objects and phenomena are deficient copies that "partake" in these Forms but lack their perfection and stability, thus explaining the variability and imperfection observed in the sensible realm. The Form of the Good, in particular, illuminates all other Forms, much like the sun sustains visibility in the physical world.[7] The doctrine of recollection (anamnesis) further ties the Hyperuranion to human cognition, positing that souls encounter the Forms prior to embodiment in a prenatal state within this realm. Learning, therefore, is not acquisition of new information but remembrance of these pre-existent truths, triggered by sensory experiences that serve as reminders of their ideal counterparts. This mechanism resolves the paradox of inquiry by affirming that all genuine knowledge is innate and recoverable through rational effort.[8]

Context in Platonic Dialogues

The Republic

In Plato's Republic, the term Hyperuranion from the Phaedrus is not used, but the dialogue implicitly evokes a similar transcendent intelligible realm through a series of allegories and analogies that describe the philosopher's ascent from the sensible world to the eternal Forms, particularly the Form of the Good as its pinnacle. This realm represents the ultimate reality, accessible only through dialectical reasoning, and serves as the foundation for true knowledge and just governance. Scholars interpret these passages as aligning with the Hyperuranion as the locus of unchanging truths, contrasting with the shadowy, mutable world of appearances.[9] The Sun analogy in Book VI illustrates the Form of the Good as the central illuminator of the intelligible realm, akin to the sun's role in the visible world. Just as the sun not only makes objects visible but also sustains their generation, growth, and nourishment, the Good provides the intelligible Forms with their being, essence, and knowability, enabling philosophers to grasp truth. This analogy positions the Good as the highest entity in the intelligible order, surpassing even the other Forms in power and dignity, and underscores the realm's role as the source of all rational insight.[10] Complementing the Sun analogy, the Divided Line in Republic VI (509d–511e) delineates the epistemological path to the intelligible realm by dividing reality into four unequal segments: the lowest for images and shadows (eikasia), the next for physical objects (pistis), then mathematical reasoning (dianoia), and the highest for direct intuition of the Forms (noesis). The uppermost segment corresponds to the unmediated apprehension of the Forms in their transcendent abode, where the philosopher employs dialectic to contemplate the Good itself, achieving pure understanding beyond hypothesis or assumption. This structure emphasizes the realm as the domain of noetic knowledge, distinct from sensory perception.[10] The Allegory of the Cave in Book VII further symbolizes the ascent to this intelligible realm as an arduous journey from illusion to enlightenment. Prisoners chained in a cave mistake shadows cast by firelight for reality, but the philosopher's release and painful emergence into sunlight represent the transition from the sensible world to beholding the Forms, including the Good, in the open air above—evoking a transcendent expanse. Upon returning to the cave, the enlightened one struggles to convey this vision, highlighting the isolation of those who access the realm.[9] For Plato, the education of philosopher-kings culminates in this vision of the intelligible realm, equipping them to rule justly by applying knowledge of the Forms to the political order. Their dialectical training, spanning mathematics, astronomy, and harmonics, prepares them to "see the Good" and imitate its harmony in the ideal city, ensuring governance aligns with eternal justice rather than opinion or power. This ascent not only transforms the individual soul but also manifests the transcendent order in human affairs, as the philosopher-kings descend reluctantly to guide the polity toward the Good.[11]

The Phaedo

In Plato's Phaedo, a transcendent pure realm is described as the soul's true home where disembodied souls reside after death, analogous to the Hyperuranion of the Phaedrus in its role as the abode of the eternal Forms, aligning with the philosopher's pursuit of separation from the bodily senses. Pure souls, untainted by physical attachments, are drawn to this invisible domain of eternal being, which serves as their natural abode alongside the divine (Phaedo 80b–81a).[12][13] This affinity underscores the soul's immortality, as it preexists the body and returns to its origin upon liberation, free from the cycles of reincarnation that bind lesser souls to the material world (Phaedo 79d–80c, 81e–82b).[12] The dialogue's myth of the afterlife further illustrates this by depicting judgment as a process that directs virtuous souls upward to higher realms of bliss and purity, evoking the transcendence of the Hyperuranion over earthly illusions. Those who have lived philosophically, cultivating justice and wisdom, ascend to dwell with the gods in this upper region, unencumbered by bodily desires (Phaedo 81a–c, 113d–114c).[12] In contrast, wicked souls descend to Tartarus, a place of torment and impurity, highlighting the pure realm as the domain of true, unchanging reality opposed to the deceptive, cyclic existence on earth (Phaedo 113e–114b).[12] Central to accessing this realm is the purification process, wherein philosophers engage in the "practice of dying" by detaching the soul from sensory pleasures and focusing on intellectual contemplation of the Forms. This discipline ensures the soul's readiness to inhabit the pure realm, as bodily contamination hinders its ascent (Phaedo 82c–83e).[12] Through such purification, the soul aligns with the broader theory of Forms, glimpsing eternal truths like equality and beauty that originate in this transcendent space (Phaedo 75c–76d).[12][13]

Later Developments

Neoplatonism

In Neoplatonism, Plotinus reinterprets Plato's Hyperuranion as the realm of Nous, or Intellect, the second hypostasis emanating from the transcendent One, where the Forms exist not as separate entities but in a unified, living multiplicity that eternally contemplates itself.[14] In Ennead V.1, Plotinus describes this emanation as a necessary overflow from the One's infinite fullness, positioning Nous as the intelligible sphere that encompasses all Forms in harmonious unity, serving as the archetype for the sensible world.[14] This conception transforms the Hyperuranion from a static Platonic locale into a dynamic intellectual principle, essential for the soul's ascent through contemplation of beauty and the good, as explored in Ennead III.5 on love, where erotic desire propels the soul toward this divine realm.[15] Porphyry, Plotinus's disciple and editor of the Enneads, largely upholds this framework, emphasizing the soul's return to the Hyperuranion—identified with Nous—through philosophical purification and virtues that align the individual intellect with the divine Intellect.[16] He elaborates on contemplative practices to achieve union, viewing the Hyperuranion as a level of paradigmatic existence where the soul attains intellectual happiness by participating in the Forms' eternal activity.[16] Iamblichus further develops these ideas by introducing theurgy, ritual practices that invoke divine powers to facilitate the soul's ascent, portraying the Hyperuranion as an inaccessible realm of pure contemplation requiring external divine illumination beyond mere rational effort.[17] For Iamblichus, the soul's embodied nature demands theurgic mediation to bridge the gap to this divine level, integrating symbolic rites with intellectual pursuit.[17] Neoplatonism marks a shift from Plato's dialogic explorations to a more systematic and mystical metaphysics, where the Hyperuranion becomes part of an emanative hierarchy emphasizing ecstatic union over dialectical inquiry.[14] This evolution incorporates Pythagorean numerology, portraying the Forms within Nous as structured by mathematical principles like harmony and proportion, reflecting the cosmos's ordered emanation from unity.[14] From the 3rd to 6th centuries CE, the Neoplatonic Academy, through figures like Porphyry, Iamblichus, Proclus, and Damascius, synthesized these concepts into a comprehensive ontology, refining the Hyperuranion's role in the soul's theurgic and contemplative return to the divine.[18] This pagan metaphysical framework profoundly influenced early Christian adaptations, providing theological models for transcendent realms and spiritual ascent in thinkers like Origen and Pseudo-Dionysius.[18]

Medieval Philosophy

In medieval Christian theology, Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (late 5th to early 6th century) adapted Platonic notions of a transcendent realm into a Christian framework, linking the Hyperuranion-like domain to a transcendent domain of divine unity as the highest, immaterial sphere beyond the created cosmos, where divine light emanates through celestial hierarchies of angels.[19] In his Celestial Hierarchy, Pseudo-Dionysius describes God as utterly transcendent, "beyond all" and unknowable directly, with this domain serving as the locus of pure divine unity from which hierarchical orders of beings receive and transmit illuminations downward to humanity, thus transforming the pagan Hyperuranion into a theocentric structure emphasizing apophatic theology and mediated participation in the divine. This conception profoundly influenced medieval thinkers, providing a model for reconciling Platonic transcendence with Christian cosmology, where the highest celestial realm represents the boundary between the uncreated God and the created order.[20] Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), in his Summa Theologica, critiqued and reformulated the Platonic Hyperuranion by rejecting its strict separation as an independent realm of subsistent Forms, instead positing that the eternal ideas exist as divine exemplars within God's mind, ensuring their dependence on the divine essence without compromising God's simplicity or creative freedom. Aquinas viewed Plato's separated Forms in the Hyperuranion as akin to Avicenna's notion of a shared intellectual substance but ultimately untenable, as they would imply multiplicity in the divine intellect or limit God's omnipotence; instead, he integrated Aristotelian hylomorphism with Augustinian illumination, where creatures participate in divine ideas through God's eternal knowledge rather than a distinct supracelestial domain.[21] This approach allowed Aquinas to affirm the reality of universals without positing a Platonic "third realm," emphasizing that all perfections flow from God's singular, simple act of understanding.[22] In Islamic philosophy, Avicenna (Ibn Sina, 980–1037) offered parallels to the Hyperuranion through his doctrine of the active intellect, the lowest emanated intelligence in a celestial hierarchy flowing from the Necessary Existent (God), which serves as the source of universal forms and enables human abstraction of intelligibles from particulars.[23] Unlike Plato's static, separate realm, Avicenna's active intellect dynamically emanates forms to the sublunary world, bridging the divine One and multiplicity via a Neoplatonic chain of intellects, where it acts as the "giver of forms" that actualizes potential knowledge in the human soul through conjunction. This framework echoes the Hyperuranion's role as a repository of ideal realities but subordinates it to emanationist metaphysics, rejecting subsistent Platonic Forms in favor of essences realized in matter under divine necessity.[24] During the 12th and 13th centuries, scholastic debates on integrating Aristotelian naturalism with Platonic idealism often centered on the Hyperuranion's implications for universals and divine causation, with thinkers like Aquinas critiquing divided realms as incompatible with a unified creation ex nihilo.[21] These discussions, influenced by translations of Aristotle and Avicenna, shifted focus from a transcendent Platonic storehouse to immanent divine ideas, fostering a synthesis that prioritized theological monism over dualistic separations.[25]
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