Proclus on the Athena of the Odyssey
(Paging boccaderlupo to the red courtesy phone, please...)
Lastly, after essential heroes, an order of souls follows, who proximately govern the affairs of men, and are daemoniacal according to habitude or alliance, but not essentially. These souls likewise are the perpetual attendants of the Gods, but they have not an essence wholly superior to man. Of this kind, as we are informed by Proclus in his MS. Scholia on the Cratylus, are the Nymphs that sympathize with waters, Pans with the feet of goats and the like. They also differ from those powers that are essentially of a daemoniacal characteristic in this, that they assume a variety of shapes (each of the others immutably preserving one form) are subject to various passions, and are the causes of every kind of deception to mankind. Proclus likewise observes, that the Minerva which so often appeared to Ulysses and Telemachus belonged to this order of souls. [Thomas Taylor, Theology of Plato VII xlv]
I have long assumed that the Athena of the Odyssey was simply a daemon. Proclus, in fact, considered Her to be a hero (e.g. the category of an ascended human—dæmon-like but not inherently dæmonic), evidently since She would often change form. I'm not sure I'd go so far—in my experience, dæmons, since they speak to the imagination and the imagination isn't fixed, shift form as regularly as doing so would perpetuate communication—but it's interesting to see how the tail end of the philosophical tradition considered it.
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That is, they are drawing the conclusion that since essential daemons are always true, they never change shape (even though we may be deceived by our own minds in perceiving them). Hence, since Homer clearly says that the Athena of the Odyssey is the one doing the shapeshifting, they conclude that she is daemon-like rather than essentially daemonic and hence of the same category as ascended men, nymphs, satyrs, and the like.
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Thank you for this, I find it quite helpful. When speaking of "gods" casually in various discussion areas, lately I've been deferring to this Procelan type categorization method. On the notion of personal gods that can relate to humans (and vice versa) this is what I said in a discussion on someone reporting a very personal experience with Odin:
"Well, the deities we can form personal relationships with are those close enough to the human level for that to be possible. Meaning these beings are more like ascended heroes, saints, demigods, guardian spirits, and intelligent nature spirits, as opposed to super-high-level cosmic powers. I refer to the Neoplatonic celestial hierarchy (Christian theology draws from this too), which posits that there are many upon many levels of being and beings who inhabit each respective level. I believe there's a similar kind of cosmic vastness in Eastern cosmologies too. So "gods" in this context are simply beings that are more intelligent/wise, powerful, and longer-lived than humans, but not omnipotent or omniscient entities."
I think this is a very helpful way of looking at these matters.