Excerpt from Plotinus: On the One and Good; Being the Treatises of the Sixth Ennead, Translated From the Greek
These thinkers rejected pure unity on the ground of the plurality observed even in the Intellectual world they rejected an infinite number as not reconcilable with the facts and as defying knowledge considering the foundations of being to be genera rather than elements strictly so called, they concluded for a finite number. Of these genera some found ten, others less, others no doubt more.
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Egyptian-born Roman philosopher Plotinus and his successors in the 3rd century at Alexandria founded and developed Neoplatonism, a philosophical system, which, based on Platonism with elements of mysticism and some Judaic and Christian concepts, posits a single source from which all existence emanates and with which one mystically can unite an individual soul; The Enneads collects his writings.
Saint Thomas Aquinas combined elements of this system and other philosophy within a context of Christian thought.
People widely consider this major of the ancient world alongside Ammonius Saccas, his teacher. He influenced in late antiquity. Much of our biographical information about Plotinus comes from preface of Porphyry to his edition. His metaphysical writings inspired centuries of pagan, Islamic, and Gnostic metaphysicians and mystics.