Why Philosophy Comes from Egypt
In the Renaissance it was thought that Philosophy came from Egypt.
This is because the texts of the Corpus
Hermeticum were thought to be the work of Hermes Trismegistus, who,
according to some at least, was the teacher of both Moses and the Greeks. This
it turns out was incorrect. The Hermetic texts were the product of a
Hellentistic environment that post-dated the Common Era. By a delicious irony, however, it has turned out that the Renaissance was right after all. Philosophy
(in our hemisphere at least) does indeed come from Egypt and it is just such a Philosophy
as we find in the Hermetic tradition. We know this because of a text discovered
in the 19th century and deciphered in the last one called the Memphite Theology which, though the
language is poetic, is clearly a work of speculative theology and indeed the
oldest expression of what we might call speculative idealism: the idea that
mind is the root of all phenomenal reality. This is a remarkable achievement
indeed and it is only centuries of Orientalist bias that have prevented
students of Classics and Philosophy from seeing the evident truth: Egypt
articulated the first speculative theology in the western world and set the
pattern for all subsequent ones. I say this even though the theology of the
Memphite priests is still couched in imagery and metaphor sometimes of a rough
and ready sort. The content of the work is clear even if its imagery sometimes
is crude: from the hiddenness of mind comes the creative word that orders time
and space and the realm of sense. It orders the gods and emergence and decay of
all natural things. It articulates the principles of moral and civic order. In
fact, it is the principle underlying all iterations of order. This is what
makes it a theology and one of the highest order: it affirms an ‘order of
orders’ or as later authors might put it ‘a form of forms’. Each kind of order,
divine, natural, civic and moral manifests the on ultimate principle which is
mind expressed.
“There came into being as the heart and there came into being as the
tongue…” are the first words of our ‘myth’. This ‘coming into being’ is a
reference not to a temporal beginning which is not specified but to the mythic
time, the ‘once upon a time’ which is every time and no time. This is to say
there is no ‘coming into being’ at all in play though the theologians of Egypt
may have lacked any vocabulary for this. At any rate ‘there came into being’
may be taken as equivalent to ‘there is’ EXCEPT that it also refers to some
form of emanation or generation and if something happens it must be figured, at
least, as happening in time. However one resolves this point, what has ‘come
to be’ from its ground is a polarity of heart and tongue. The heart is what is inward
to itself and the tongue is what speaks or reveals the inward. We may take the
heart to signify the inward conception and the tongue to signify what is
expressed outwardly. The ground conceives itself to itself as the heart and
expresses what it conceives as the tongue. This coming to be of the heart and
tongue together is the coming to be of the ‘Atum’ or creator: the self-
generated principle of external visible reality. Now we have a remarkable
formulation: “the mighty great one is Ptah, who transmitted life to all the
gods, as well as to their ka’s”. the ka is the vital spirit. The mighty great
one, Ptah is the ground, the hidden essence of deity who guards life within
himself yet gives to the gods, of himself, the life he has. Their life is the life
of Ptah and this confirmed in the following: “…through this heart by which
Horus became Ptah and through this tongue by which Thoth became Ptah.” As Ptah
is the ground the heart is Horus and the tongue Thoth yet each is Ptah. The
‘substance’ of Ptah is one with itself in its diffusion. Ptah comes to be
thought as Horus yet remains Ptah as Horus retains the substance of what he has
been given. Ptah comes to be expression as Thoth yet remains Ptah as Thoth as
Thoth retains the substance of what he has been given. Horus and Thoth are Ptah
in the modes of thought and conception and the three together are the Atum or
self-originate.
One thing notable here is that the emanation of Ptah as Horus and
Thoth and the establishing of the Gods in their kas presumes no other. It is a
free self-production for Ptah produces himself, by no other principle or
external compulsion, as Horus and Thoth and the gods. He does not, as an artist
does, produce himself in an ‘other’ such as a material substrate. He generates
himself out of himself as the other. Unlike the Gods of Mesopotamia or Babylon
there is no mythic battle with the forces of chaos but simple emergence into
the light. Of course, the second stage of the process of the creation is the
transition to the material determinations of nature. The heart and the tongue
of Ptah are the archetypal conception of the world but it does not remain
within itself but passes over into the sensible: “….he is in every body and in
every mouth of all gods, all men, all cattle, all creeping things and
everything that lives…”. Our anonymous theologian has placed Ptah in the mouth
of all things and this is a nice touch. As Ptah speaks the inner word of his
being so do all things speak their own ‘word’ which is both their word and the
word of Ptah: they are the word of Ptah repeated or spoken again as man,
visible god or animal. Plus, the speaking of Ptah, the word in their mouths, is
also the word they themselves speak. They speak their own word as the word of
Ptah in them and this they do by being the particular thing they are. Now Ptah
as Horus and Thoth has “gained control over every other body”. He is the
principle that determines how the gods, men and cattle disport themselves. The
text tells us how this is so:”…by thinking and commanding everything he
wishes.” It is by thinking and by willing that Ptah moves the powers of nature
and there seems no violence or struggle in this. The word each being speaks of
itself is also the word of Ptah in them: one thought and one dynamism determines
each thing to its characteristic action. The world is radically the product of
thought: the original first thought or intelligible archetype. Moreover, this
first thought is immanent in the life and movement of all things and sustains
the sensible world amidst its changes.
The Memphite theologian gives us a rather crude metaphor for this.
“The Ennead of the Gods is before him in the form of lips and teeth”. The
Ennead or nine-fold of the gods are the visible powers that unfold the conception and expression of Ptah. We must remember that for
the Egyptians the Gods are not hidden but fully and freely manifest as natural
powers. It is not the nature of any god to conceal or hide from the top of the
divine hierarchy down. All is manifest in some form even the most hidden. One
would like to add that what is hidden to sense reveals itself to thought though
I am not sure the text fully supports this. However, as we have a chain that
descends from conception, to expression to the visible instruments of
expression so we descend from Ptah to Horus and Thoth to the Ennead of the
visible gods. The Memphite has considered his analogy very closely and worked
it out in detail. If one were writing a history of foundational images we would
include this one as perhaps our first. Speaking of metaphors however we now
find one that is grossly physical to express such rarefied conceptions! The
Atum or self-originate generates another. By what metaphor can we signify this
self-generation of the unoriginated? The text gives us the easiest and most
obvious one: “That is the equivalent of the semen and hands of Atum.” Not
knowing Ancient Egyptian, I would not know how far to push the word
‘equivalent’ here but it at least seems to indicate that the author is aware
that he is pushing an image to its logical conclusion. The first generates in
an act equivalent to auto-eroticism except that this act is, unlike among
humans, productive rather than sterile. What it is productive of is the divine
totality which, we might say, is self-produced (though this act is still
figured as in some sense erotic). The Ennead of Ptah however is specified as
‘the teeth and lips’ or the material cause (to use a later terminology) of his
creative action. It is through the lips and the teeth that the tongue expresses
the conceptions of the heart. This power operates through pronouncing the “name
of everything”. As a thing is named, say the Goddess Tefnut (or Thales’
water!), that thing emerges as named. We thus have the conception not only of a
material medium through which the first thought is manifest but a conception of
form by which what is manifest is manifest by kind. This procession of kinds
comes forth from the first yet also returns. The gods are a kind of sensorium
reporting back to Ptah what they perceive: “The sight of the eyes, the hearing
of the ears and the smelling the air by the nose, they report to the heart.”
Their interaction is both an outgoing and a return and the flow between them is
cyclical.
Thus, the completed conception of the universe is figured as a great
or macrocosmic body exactly as in the later Hermetic tradition. The speculative
theologians of the renaissance such as Pico or Bruno would have been pleased
with this work had they known of it. It is not only a ‘metaphysical’ or
‘scientific’ text however but also a political one. This is a very Egyptian
concept: the order of society is also the order of nature. All things human,
divine and natural flow in accordance with Maat or justice. The rising and falling
of the Nile is according to Maat. The word of the Pharaoh is Maat as are the
customs and manners of society. All are expressions of the underlying order of
things. We might say that Maat has range of meanings comparable to the Greek
word ‘Logos’ and performs the same function of an irreducible principle of
order: “Thus the Ka spirits were made and the Hemsut spirits were appointed,
they who make all provisions and all nourishment, by this speech. Thus, justice
was given to him who does what is liked and injustice to him who does what is
disliked.” Maat then is the principle of retributive justice. It is the source
of political and religious order as well: “He had formed the gods, he had made
cities, he had founded nomes, he had put the gods in their shrines, he had
established their offerings, he had founded their shrines, he had made their
bodies like that with which their hearts were satisfied.” Ptah’s speech is also
the principle behind the arts: “Thus were made all work and all crafts, the
action of the arms, the movement of the legs.” The arts and crafts, political
and civic order, religious ritual, the orderly movements of the body are all
“in conformance with this command which the heart thought which came forth
through the tongue, and which gives value to everything.” With this order Ptah,
like Yahweh in Genesis, rests satisfied for all is in accord with what he
conceives.
We may sum this up as follows. There is order and value in the world
insofar as what is, is in accordance with thought or, as Hegel might say,
insofar as the real is rational. Religion, politics, craft, nature itself and
even the human body manifest an underlying reason in which the principle of all
recognizes his own reason and in which we too can recognize our own. With
reason, understood as concrete visible order, we also have the axiological
principle or form of the good. Ptah is the founder and giver of all these
though this is much as to say that the principle of all these activities is
thought. Of course, thanks in large part to the Hebrews, we now view the
Egyptian image of divine order as tyrannous and oppressive. In so far as it
folds political order directly into nature it is, for the institutions of
Pharaonic Egypt are no more questionable than the winds and the tides. From the
perspective of Genesis and Exodus the embodiment of reason in the
immediate form of nature and society is the very bottom of the Platonic cave.
There is in this text no religion or metaphysic of protest nor even the means
to conceptualize one. This is not true of Exodus of course nor even of the Epic of Gilgamesh though the Babylonian
hero’s protest has no objective resolution. Nor would Aristotle and his
successors be satisfied with a theology built on images, as the Memphite Theology still is, to some
degree, poetry rather than rational argument. Still, this wonderful text gives
us the building blocks of a rational, speculative theology even if they have
not quite fallen into form. We can see myth in the process of becoming thought
which lends the Memphite Theology its own interest and excitement. One can tell
a proper Whiggish story about this if one thinks the victory of logos over
mythos complete: the Memphite Theology
may take its place as a foreshadowing of Hellenic metaphysics and modern rationalism.
If not, one might raise the theological problematic once again from its very
beginnings.
For now, though, we might conclude with the following reflection.
Our concern as explorers of this kind of cosmogonic poetry is not for the
literal truth of any one world picture whether Egyptian, Hebrew, Ptolemaic,
Newtonian, Relativistic or other. These are ALL images in succession and our
concern after the fact is the dialectic that produces them which might be quite
‘objective’ even if the image itself is outdated. Our concern is with the free
play of thought that produces and sustains each icon of nature. As this play
has produced images in the past so it will do in the future: we shall have new
icons accompanied by their own set of ‘self-evident facts’ known to every
child. The point of looking at the old icons is that we can see them as icons.
We cannot easily see this of our own world picture because, of course, we are
in it. “What we are in” is what is for, us, the simple, natural truth. We can
only see the world constructing function of the poetic icon in the
constructions we have ceased to inhabit or that others inhabit. It is only in
the poetic constructions of the past that we can see poetic construction in its
true perspective and that is why we must forever read texts like the Memphite Theology or the Book of Genesis or any great cosmogonic
statement.
Comments
Post a Comment