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Glossary›The One

Glossary

The One

The supreme, undivided reality from which all existence emanates—a foundational concept in Neoplatonism, Vedanta, and mystical traditions worldwide.

What is The One?

The One (Greek: to hen) refers to the ultimate, transcendent source of all reality—an absolute unity beyond being, thought, and multiplicity. In philosophical and mystical traditions, The One represents the highest principle: indivisible, ineffable, and prior to all distinctions. It is not a god in the personalized sense, nor is it “being” as commonly understood, but rather the ground from which being itself arises. The One is characterized by radical simplicity—it has no parts, no attributes, and no limitation. All that exists flows from The One through a process of emanation, while The One itself remains unchanged and perfect.

Origins & Lineage

The concept of The One reaches its most systematic articulation in the Enneads of Plotinus (c. 204–270 CE), the founder of Neoplatonism. Writing in Alexandria and later Rome, Plotinus synthesized Platonic philosophy with elements from Aristotelian and Stoic thought. In the Enneads, particularly Ennead VI.9, Plotinus describes The One as utterly transcendent—beyond essence, beyond intellect, and knowable only through mystical union rather than rational comprehension.

However, the philosophical lineage precedes Plotinus. Plato’s Parmenides (circa 370 BCE) presents dialectical arguments about “the One” and “the many,” while the Republic positions the Form of the Good as supreme among Forms. Parmenides of Elea (5th century BCE) earlier argued that true reality must be One, unchanging, and indivisible. These Greek currents found parallel expression in Eastern philosophy: the Upanishads (circa 800–200 BCE) describe Brahman as the non-dual absolute reality, while Advaita Vedanta, systematized by Adi Shankara (c. 788–820 CE), teaches that Atman (individual consciousness) and Brahman are identical—a pure, undivided One. Sufi mystics in Islam would later employ similar language, with Ibn Arabi (1165–1240) describing al-Ahadiyya (the Absolute Oneness) as the divine essence beyond all names and attributes.

Plotinus’s immediate successors—Porphyry, Iamblichus, and Proclus—elaborated and debated his system. Through these later Neoplatonists, the doctrine of The One profoundly influenced Christian theology, particularly through Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (late 5th to early 6th century) and later medieval mystics including Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328).

How It’s Practiced

Engagement with The One is fundamentally contemplative rather than ritual. In the Neoplatonic tradition, the practitioner seeks henosis—mystical union with The One—through a disciplined process of intellectual and spiritual ascent. Plotinus described this as a withdrawal from sensory experience and discursive thought, moving through progressive stages: from ethical purification, to contemplation of intelligible Forms, to a final leap beyond intellect itself into direct, non-conceptual contact with The One.

This practice resembles apophatic or negative theology, where the seeker strips away all concepts and images that limit the infinite. Practitioners may engage in prolonged silent meditation, contemplative reading of philosophical or sacred texts, and examination of consciousness itself. In Advaita Vedanta, the practice of neti neti (“not this, not this”) similarly guides seekers to negate all finite identifications until only the infinite, undivided Self remains.

Contemporary practitioners often combine study of primary texts with sitting meditation, philosophical inquiry (similar to Socratic dialogue), and periods of silence or retreat. Unlike devotional practices centered on a personal deity, work with The One emphasizes radical investigation into the nature of reality and identity.

The One Today

Contemporary seekers encounter The One primarily through three channels: academic philosophy departments teaching ancient and medieval philosophy; contemplative communities rooted in Advaita Vedanta or Christian mysticism; and integrative spiritual programs that draw from multiple traditions. University courses on Plotinus and Neoplatonism provide rigorous textual study, while meditation centers—particularly those teaching non-dual awareness practices—offer experiential approaches.

Retreat centers such as the Vedanta Societies (established in the West since the 1890s) teach direct inquiry into non-dual reality. Online platforms now offer courses on Neoplatonism, translations of the Enneads, and guided contemplations. Teachers like Rupert Spira and Francis Lucille, working in the Advaita tradition, present teachings consistent with the principle of The One, though using contemporary language. Academic conferences on late antiquity and Platonism continue to refine scholarly understanding, while contemplative philosophers attempt to bridge ancient wisdom with modern phenomenology and consciousness studies.

Common Misconceptions

The One is frequently confused with pantheism—the belief that God and the universe are identical. However, in classical Neoplatonism, The One transcends the cosmos; the universe emanates from The One but does not exhaust or define it. The One is not simply “everything” added together.

Another misconception treats The One as an impersonal void or nothingness. While The One is beyond personal attributes, it is the ultimate source of all goodness, beauty, and being—more accurately described as超-being rather than non-being. It is not empty but rather too full to be contained by concepts.

The One is also not equivalent to monism in the sense that individual things are illusory. In Plotinus’s system, the material world has genuine (if derivative) reality; multiplicity flows necessarily from unity. The task is not to deny multiplicity but to recognize its source.

Finally, union with The One is not ego-inflation or grandiosity. Authentic henosis involves the dissolution of the separate self, not its apotheosis. Plotinus emphasized that the experience is characterized by humility, simplicity, and the recognition that the personal “I” is not The One but can participate in it.

How to Begin

A serious introduction begins with primary texts in accessible translation. Lloyd Gerson’s The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus (1996) provides scholarly context, while Stephen MacKenna’s translation of the Enneads (revised by B.S. Page) remains widely read despite archaic language. A.H. Armstrong’s Loeb Classical Library edition offers facing Greek and English. For Vedantic parallels, read the Upanishads (Eknath Easwaran’s translation) and I Am That by Nisargadatta Maharaj.

Practical engagement requires contemplative discipline. Begin with daily periods of silent sitting—twenty to thirty minutes—combined with philosophical inquiry: “What is aware of this moment?” or “What remains when all objects of consciousness are set aside?” Seek teachers or communities rooted in these lineages; the Vedanta Society offers talks and classes, while university extension programs sometimes offer courses on Neoplatonism.

Understand that this path demands patience. The literature describes years or decades of preparation. Approach the texts slowly, read secondary scholarship for context, and balance intellectual study with direct contemplative practice. The goal is not acquiring knowledge about The One, but preparing the ground for recognition of what has always been present.

Related terms

neoplatonismadvaita vedantanon dualityhenosisbrahmanapophatic theology
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