May 25, 2026
The soul that has once seen the light does not wish to exchange its vision for anything." — Plotinus, Enneads, I.6
Plotinus wrote the Enneads in third-century Rome, a city collapsing under plague, political chaos, and near-constant military crisis. He taught that the deepest part of you — what he called the soul — was never actually caught up in any of that disorder. His argument was specific: you have an inner capacity for clear seeing that external circumstances simply cannot touch. That idea is still useful today because most of what we call unfreedom is about letting outside noise determine what we think is real and worth pursuing.
Reflection
Think about a moment when you felt certain about something, then let other people's opinions talk you out of it. What would you have decided if you had trusted what you saw first?