canonical hellenistic Greek

Nous νοῦς

intellect, mind — the second hypostasis in Plotinian Neoplatonism

Nous (νοῦς, “intellect” or “mind”) is the second of Plotinus’s three hypostases, the level of pure self-thinking thought that mediates between the One (which transcends thought) and Soul (which thinks discursively in time). In Plotinus, Nous is the realm of the Platonic Forms understood not as static archetypes but as the living content of a divine self-thinking activity. To know the Forms is not to contemplate objects outside the mind but to be the mind that contains them. Nous is simultaneously the knower, the known, and the act of knowing: pure intellectual self-presence without the subject-object split that characterizes discursive human thinking.

The term has a longer pre-Plotinian history (Anaxagoras as cosmic organizing principle; Plato as faculty of intellectual intuition distinct from discursive dianoia; Aristotle as the active intellect, pure actuality). Plotinus systematizes the prior usages into the second hypostasis of the Neoplatonic emanative structure. Through Plotinus the concept enters every subsequent stratum of late-antique and medieval philosophical theology: Christian (Pseudo-Dionysius’s celestial intellect), Islamic (Farabi’s al-aql al-awwal, the First Intellect), and Jewish (Philo’s Logos as the nous of God). The cross-tradition movement of the concept is one of the best-documented transmission lines in the history of philosophy.

Etymology

Greek nous: mind, intellect, understanding. No clear Indo-European cognate. Used in pre-Socratic philosophy (Anaxagoras) as the cosmic organizing principle. In Plato, the faculty of intellectual intuition as distinct from discursive reason (dianoia). In Aristotle, the active intellect as pure actuality (nous poietikos) distinguished from the passive intellect that receives intelligible forms. In Plotinus, systematized as the second hypostasis, the first emanation from the One. The Arabic translation movement renders nous as al-aql (العقل), and the Latin medieval tradition uses intellectus, distinguishing the active intellect (intellectus agens) from the passive intellect (intellectus possibilis) in continuation of Aristotle’s distinction modified through Arabic philosophy.

Usage across traditions

Tradition Figure Text Specific sense Citation
Hellenistic Plotinus Enneads V.1 Nous as second hypostasis — simultaneously knower, known, and knowing MacKenna trans. V.1.4-8
Hellenistic Iamblichus De Mysteriis Nous as the level at which theurgy operates — ritual elevation of the soul to the noetic level Clarke-Dillon-Hershbell trans. II.3
Hellenistic Corpus Hermeticum Poimandres Poimandres as the Nous of sovereignty who reveals the cosmogony Scott trans. CH I.2
Islamic mysticism T Al-Farabi Al-Aql al-Awwal (First Intellect) as the Arabic translation of Nous in Islamic Neoplatonism Walzer trans.
Islamic mysticism T Ikhwan al-Safa Rasa'il Al-Aql al-Kull (Universal Intellect) as the Ismaili version of Nous Nasr, Cosmological Doctrines pp. 42-56
Jewish mysticism T Philo On the Creation The divine Logos as the nous of God through which creation proceeds Yonge trans. §4-6
Christian mysticism T Pseudo-Dionysius Divine Names The divine Intellect as level from which the hierarchy of being descends Parker trans. ch. 7

Cross-tradition parallels marked T reflect documented historical transmission with the transmission channel named above. Parallels marked S reflect structural analogy: independent developments that converge on similar conceptual territory. The distinction is editorial not evaluative.

Hellenistic Plotinus

Enneads V.1

Nous as second hypostasis — simultaneously knower, known, and knowing

MacKenna trans. V.1.4-8

Hellenistic Iamblichus

De Mysteriis

Nous as the level at which theurgy operates — ritual elevation of the soul to the noetic level

Clarke-Dillon-Hershbell trans. II.3

Hellenistic Corpus Hermeticum

Poimandres

Poimandres as the Nous of sovereignty who reveals the cosmogony

Scott trans. CH I.2

Islamic mysticism T Al-Farabi

Al-Aql al-Awwal (First Intellect) as the Arabic translation of Nous in Islamic Neoplatonism

Walzer trans.

Islamic mysticism T Ikhwan al-Safa

Rasa'il

Al-Aql al-Kull (Universal Intellect) as the Ismaili version of Nous

Nasr, Cosmological Doctrines pp. 42-56

Jewish mysticism T Philo

On the Creation

The divine Logos as the nous of God through which creation proceeds

Yonge trans. §4-6

Christian mysticism T Pseudo-Dionysius

Divine Names

The divine Intellect as level from which the hierarchy of being descends

Parker trans. ch. 7

Contested meanings

Whether Nous in Plotinus is genuinely self-sufficient as a second principle or is better understood as identical with the One in a different mode of self-expression is debated. Pierre Hadot argues for a more unified reading of the hypostases as aspects of a single reality, with the apparent emanative structure of Enneads V.1 being a didactic device rather than an ontological commitment. The standard reading (A. H. Armstrong, R. T. Wallis) maintains the genuine distinction: Nous is a real hypostatic level distinct from both the One above it and the Soul below it.

The reception of Nous in Arabic philosophy as al-Aql involves a significant transformation: in Farabi and Ibn Sina, the Active Intellect becomes the cosmological principle from which human intellectual forms are derived, a development not present in Plotinus. Whether this is a continuation of Plotinus’s own logic or a genuinely new doctrine is the central question in the historiography of Islamic philosophy. Davidson’s comprehensive study argues for substantial novelty in the Arabic synthesis.

Primary sources

  • Plotinus, Enneads V.1.4-8 — the foundational Plotinian text on Nous.
  • Plotinus, Enneads V.9Nous and the Forms.
  • Corpus Hermeticum I (Poimandres) §2 — the Hermetic identification of divine revealer with Nous.
  • Philo, On the Creation §4 — the Jewish-Platonic Logos-as-nous synthesis.
  • Pseudo-Dionysius, Divine Names, ch. 7 — the Christian Neoplatonic Nous.

Scholarly literature

  • R. T. Wallis, Neoplatonism, pp. 57-80 — clear systematic treatment of the Plotinian hypostases.
  • Pierre Hadot, Plotinus or the Simplicity of Vision, pp. 20-40 — the unified reading of the hypostases.
  • Herbert Davidson, Alfarabi, Avicenna, and Averroes on Intellect — the Arabic reception and its philosophical novelty.
Tradition
hellenistic
Language
Greek
Script
Greek
Last revised
2026-05-02

Hekhal Editorial

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Hekhal Editorial. "Nous." Hekhal: An Open Reference for Esoteric Tradition. Last modified May 2, 2026. https://hekhal.org/lexicon/nous.