Aeon

The Latin word ĉon means forever. It is derived from the Greek word αίών.

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Temporal ĉon

This means the same thing as the word eon: an eternal frame of time, eternity.

Quantitatively, eon refers to a period of time of 1,000,000,000 years. However, geologists refer to the period in which animals evolved into abundance as the Phanerozoic Eon, which only lasts 545 million years, to the present day.

Platonic ĉons

The word ĉon was used by Plato to denote the eternal world of ideas, which he conceived was "behind" the perceived world, as demonstrated in his famous cave-allegory.

Gnostic ĉons

In many Gnostic systems, the various emanations of the God, who is also known by such names as the One, the Monad, Aiwn teleos (The Perfect Ĉon), Bythos, Proarkh (Before the Beginning), H'Arkh (The Beginning), are called ĉons. This first being is also an ĉon and has an inner being within itself, known as Ennoea (Thought), Charis (Grace), or Sige (Silence). The split perfect being conceives the second ĉon, Nus (Mind), within itself. Along with the male Nus comes the female ĉon Veritas (Truth).

The ĉons often came in male/female pairs called syzygies, and were frequently numerous (20-30). Two of the most commonly listed ĉons were Jesus and Sophia. The ĉons constitute the pleroma, the "region of light". The lowest regions of the pleroma are closest to the darkness; that is, the physical world.

When an ĉon named Sophia emanates without her partner ĉon, the result is the Demiurge (or Ialdaboth), a creature that should never have come into existence. This creature does not belong to the pleroma, and the One emanates two savior ĉons, Christ and the Holy Spirit to save man from the Demiurge. Christ then took the form of the man, Jesus, in order to be able to teach man how to achieve gnosis; that is, return to the pleroma.

Valentinian ĉons

According to Tertullian's Against the Valentinians (Latin: Adversus Valentinianos) chapter VII and VIII (and we only know the details of this system from its opponents), the Gnostic Valentinius had 30 different ĉons which emanate each other in sequence. The first 8 of these (corresponding to generations one through four below) is referred to as the Ogdoad.

Ptolemaic and colorbasal ĉons

According to St. Irenaeus Against heresies (Latin: Adversus Haereses) also known as The Detection and Overthrow of Falsely So-Called Gnosis book 1, chapter 12, the followers of the Gnostics Ptolemy and Colorbasus had ĉons which differ from those of Valentinius. Logos is created when Anthropos learn to speak. The first four are called the Tetrad and the eight are called the Ogdoad.

The order of Anthropos and Ecclesia versus Logos and Zoe are somewhat debated, different sources give different accounts. Logos and Zoe are unique to this system as compared to the previous and may be an evolved version of the first, totalling 32 ĉons, but it is not clear if the first two were actually regarded ĉons.

Aeons as magical creatures

In the role-playing game Final Fantasy X, an aeon is a creature that can be summoned by certain playable characters and enemies. Aeons roughly equate to Espers, Guardian Forces, and Eidolons from earlier Final Fantasy series.

In the anime series Chrono Crusade, Aeon is the name of the devil.


AEON is also a Japanese company chain (the Asian department store giant, Jusco, is AEON's subsidary).

See also

External links

See also: Aeon, Animal, Anime, Asia, Bythos, Christ, Chrono Crusade, Computer role-playing game, Demiurge, Devil