Logismoi

The term logismoi — rendered variously as ‘thoughts,’ ‘evil thoughts,’ or ‘thought-impulses’ — occupies a pivotal position in the depth-psychological anthropology of the Philokalic tradition, and it is precisely this position that makes the corpus’s treatment so instructive for comparative psychology. The term designates not merely discrete cognitive events but semi-autonomous mental movements, often understood as demonically inspired intrusions into the nous, that constitute the primary battleground of the interior life. Evagrius Ponticus stands as the systematic architect of this psychology: his Praktikos constructs an elaborate taxonomy of eight logismoi, each associated with a demonic agency and a corresponding passion, anticipating — as the Bamberger introduction explicitly notes — Freudian analytical categories by over a millennium. Sorabji’s Emotion and Peace of Mind situates logismoi within the broader Stoic-to-Christian genealogy of ‘first movements,’ tracing how Origen’s conflation of kinēmata with logismoi introduced productive ambiguity about voluntariness and assent. Coniaris, writing in a pastoral register, translates the tradition for a modern Orthodox readership, emphasizing the egemonikon’s capacity to refuse logismoi a ‘landing space.’ The key tension runs between demonological and psychological interpretations: are logismoi external assaults or interior eruptions? The corpus holds both positions in productive suspension, making logismoi one of the most generative concepts for cross-tradition dialogue with depth psychology.

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the most useful and significant things about their operations that the monk could understand is one of the most remarkable features of Evagrius’ study of the logismoi. It puts him in the line of great practical-descriptive psychologists and relates him, in this respect, to the work of Freud.

This passage makes the foundational claim that Evagrius’s systematic analysis of logismoi constitutes a proto-psychological achievement comparable in method to Freudian depth psychology.

Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, 2009thesis

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The mind (nous) has a control switch (egemonikon) which controls the thoughts (logismoi). The egemonikon (intellect or nous) is the helmsman of the soul.

This passage presents logismoi as the regulated content of the nous, governed by the egemonikon, framing the entire psychology of spiritual vigilance around their management.

Coniaris, Anthony M., Philokalia: The Bible of Orthodox Spirituality, 1998thesis

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new logismoi will come to tempt us with pride by telling us how spiritual we have become! The intellect (egemonikon) cannot protect itself from harmful thoughts. It needs the power of pure prayer.

This passage demonstrates the reflexive danger of logismoi — even spiritual progress becomes material for further temptation — and prescribes the remedies required to neutralize their force.

Coniaris, Anthony M., Philokalia: The Bible of Orthodox Spirituality, 1998thesis

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We must take care to recognize the different types of demons and note the special times of their activity … so that when these various evil thoughts set their own proper forces to work we are in a position to address effective words against them.

Evagrius prescribes a discriminative, typological engagement with evil thoughts, anticipating the therapeutic value of naming and confronting autonomous psychic contents.

Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, 2009supporting

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There is something wrong down inside us. A monster threatens to destroy us. That monster consists of the passions which are described in detail by the Fathers of the Philokalia.

Coniaris contextualizes logismoi within the broader Philokalic map of the passions, using the image of a loose cannon to dramatize their destructive interior force.

Coniaris, Anthony M., Philokalia: The Bible of Orthodox Spirituality, 1998supporting

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How many of us sleep our life through? We call it daydreaming or being imaginative. But in all truth it is slumber; reality becomes a dream, while dreams acquire cogency.

This passage invokes the watchfulness tradition as the practical context within which the discipline of guarding against logismoi is set, without naming the term directly.

Coniaris, Anthony M., Philokalia: The Bible of Orthodox Spirituality, 1998aside

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GUARD OF THE HEART, OF THE INTELLECT (phylaki kardias, nou): see Watchfulness.

The Philokalia glossary entry cross-references the guard of the intellect with watchfulness, situating the anti-logismoi practice within the larger technical vocabulary of Hesychast anthropology.

Palmer, G. E. H. and Sherrard, Philip and Ware, Kallistos (trs.), The Philokalia, Volume 4, 1995aside

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