Philo of Alexandria’s Dream Classification
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Sofía Torallas Tovar
Abstract
The Stoic three-fold classification of dreams provided Philo with a structure upon which he built his treatise on Dreams. This treatise was meant to comment on the dreams appearing in the book of Genesis, in the strict order of their appearance in the Scripture. The classification as presented by him added a gradation which classifies dreams by their phenomenology and the clarity of the message they convey. While dreams sent by God are perfectly clear, those which have the soul as a source are obscure enough to require the intervention of a skilled interpreter. The obscurity or clarity of dreams depended on the perfection acquired by the soul of the dreamer. At this point a second three-fold classification complements the one on dreams: the classification of types of lives or types of souls, which involves a gradation of the soul in its progress towards perfection, using as examples the characters appearing in the Scriptures, mainly the Patriarchs.
© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Contents
- Dreams
- Introduction
- Dreams From Homer to Plato
- Plato and Divination
- The Afterlife of a Dream and the Ritual System of the Epidaurian Asklepieion
- Dreams in Cicero’s De Divinatione
- Philo of Alexandria’s Dream Classification
- The Stuff of Dream
- Narrative and Divination: Artemidorus and Aelius Aristides
- Dangerous Dreaming: The Christian Transformation of Dream Incubation
- The gods of the others
- The others’ god(s)
- Can we understand how the Persians perceived ‘other’ gods / ‘the gods of others’?
- The Jews and their God of Wine
- Caesar on religio
- Paulus in Philippi: Ethik und Theologie
- Miscellaneous
- Cicero’s Theology and the Concept of Fate
- Supplemental Persuasive Analogies in PGM V.70–95
- Habilitation, Ruf und Inflation
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Contents
- Dreams
- Introduction
- Dreams From Homer to Plato
- Plato and Divination
- The Afterlife of a Dream and the Ritual System of the Epidaurian Asklepieion
- Dreams in Cicero’s De Divinatione
- Philo of Alexandria’s Dream Classification
- The Stuff of Dream
- Narrative and Divination: Artemidorus and Aelius Aristides
- Dangerous Dreaming: The Christian Transformation of Dream Incubation
- The gods of the others
- The others’ god(s)
- Can we understand how the Persians perceived ‘other’ gods / ‘the gods of others’?
- The Jews and their God of Wine
- Caesar on religio
- Paulus in Philippi: Ethik und Theologie
- Miscellaneous
- Cicero’s Theology and the Concept of Fate
- Supplemental Persuasive Analogies in PGM V.70–95
- Habilitation, Ruf und Inflation