Sextus Empiricus and Greek Scepticism by Mary Mills Patrick
page 31 of 196 (15%)
page 31 of 196 (15%)
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up of all the wisdom of the Sceptical School. The style of these
books is fluent, and the Greek reminds one of Plutarch and Thucydides, and although Sextus does not claim originality, but presents in all cases the arguments of the Sceptic, yet the illustrations and the form in which the arguments are presented, often bear the marks of his own thought, and are characterized here and there by a wealth of humor that has not been sufficiently noticed in the critical works on Sextus. Of all the authors who have reviewed Sextus, Brochard is the only one who seems to have understood and appreciated his humorous side. We shall now proceed to the consideration of the general position and aim of Pyrrhonism. [1] Diog. IX. 12, 116. CHAPTER II. _The Position and Aim of Pyrrhonism_. The first volume of the _Pyrrhonean Hypotyposes_ gives the most complete statement found in any of the works of Sextus Empiricus of the teachings of Pyrrhonism and its relation to other schools of philosophy. The chief source of the subject-matter presented is a work of the same name by Aenesidemus,[1] either directly used by Sextus, or through the writings of those who followed |
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