Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
“… if you think about it, O king, incorporeals also exist among the corporeals.”
“What kind?” asked the king.
“Bodies that appear to be in mirrors seem incorporeal to you, do they not?”
“Yes, Tat, they do; your understanding is godlike,” said the king.
“But there are also other incorporeals: doesn't it seem to you, for example, that there are forms that appear in body even though they are incorporeal, in the bodies not only of ensouled beings but of the soulless also?”
“You put it well, Tat.”
“Thus, there are reflections of the incorporeals in corporeals and of corporeals in incorporeals – from the sensible to the intelligible cosmos, that is, and from the intelligible to the sensible. Therefore, my king, adore the statues, because they, too, possess forms from the intelligible cosmos.”
Rising, the king then said, “It is time that I attend to my guests, O prophet; tomorrow we shall theologize further.”
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