Although Harpocration was a student of Atticus, his philosophical views show some similarity to those of the
Pythagoreanizing Platonist
Numenius of Apamea. Like Numenius, he assumes three gods or three aspects of divinity, namely one aspect for the supreme, inactive god and two aspects for the creator god (
Demiurge), whom he considers to be double or divided into two aspects. On the other hand, in the controversial question of the
Eternity of the world, like Atticus, Harpocration represents the opinion rejected by Numenius that the creation of the world described in the
Timaeus is to be understood as a real process in time, and therefore not purely metaphorical. Like Atticus, he considers the world as something created to be potentially transitory, but imperishable by the will of the Demiurge. Like Numenius, he also regards every incarnation of the soul as an evil, because he sees the body as the source of evil in the soul. He attributes immortality not only to human souls, but also to those of animals. ==Legacy==