Eros
[EH-ros]
Greek: Ἔρως — primordial god of love and creative force in Greek mythology; in Platonic and Hermetic usage, the cosmic principle of attraction drawing all things toward the Good, the True, and the Beautiful
In Platonic and Hermetic philosophy, Eros is not romantic love or sexual desire — it is the cosmic principle of longing that draws the soul upward toward its divine source.
Plato's Symposium (specifically Diotima's speech, reported by Socrates) presents the definitive classical treatment: Eros is neither mortal nor immortal but a daemon — an intermediary between human and divine. It is the force that makes the beautiful recognizable as beautiful, the true as true, and the good as good. It is the soul's native orientation toward the Pleroma, even when the soul has forgotten what it is oriented toward.
Eros as Epistemology
The Platonic tradition does something radical with Eros: it makes love into a way of knowing. The ascent described in the Symposium — from beautiful bodies to beautiful souls to beautiful practices to the form of Beauty itself — is not an aesthetic journey. It is an epistemological one. Each step is a recognition. The soul does not learn what is beautiful; it remembers what beauty is, because beauty is what the soul was before it descended into matter.
This is exactly what the Hermetic tradition encodes in the Corpus Hermeticum, Book VI: the soul that has received the vision of divine beauty "is drawn upward by the love of that beauty." The drawing-upward is Eros. The recognition is gnosis. They are not separate operations.
Eros and Bhakti
The Indian tradition's bhakti — the path of devotional love — and the Platonic-Hermetic concept of Eros are structurally identical: both describe love not as an emotion but as a cognitive faculty. Both hold that the heart, when purified and oriented through love, becomes capable of a knowing that the analytical mind cannot achieve. Both place this love-knowing above intellectual knowledge in the hierarchy of liberation technologies.
Carl Jung identified Eros as a fundamental psychological principle — the connecting, relating, binding function — and contrasted it with Logos (the discriminating, separating, ordering function). In Jungian terms, the fully individuated person integrates both: the Logos that discerns and the Eros that unifies. The seeker who has developed Logos (jnana, gnosis, discernment) but neglected Eros remains fragmented — knowing about unity without experiencing it.
The Gnostic Eros
In the Nag Hammadi texts, Eros occasionally appears as a divine name or principle associated with the Pleroma. The Gospel of Philip treats love as the highest sacrament — not sentiment but the active recognition of the divine in another, which is simultaneously a recognition of the divine in oneself. Sophia's longing to return to the Light, as described in the Pistis Sophia, is Eros in its cosmological form: the primal pull of the descended spark toward its source.