Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Pyrrho 293


They pronounced the dogmatists to be simple-minded. For that which
is concluded on the basis of an hypothesis has the status of an assumption,
not an investigation. By means of this sort of argument, one may even
argue about impossibilities.



  1. As for those who think that one ought not to try to judge the truth
    on the basis of the circumstances or to legislate on the basis of what is
    natural, they say that such men make themselves the measure of all things
    and did not notice that every appearance appears in accordance with
    reciprocal circumstances and [our] disposition. Therefore, everything
    ought to be said to be true or everything false. For if [only] some things
    are true, by what means should they be distinguished? One will not
    distinguish sensibles by sense-perception, since they are all equally appar-
    ent to it; nor with one's intellect, for the same reason. But besides these,
    there is no power available for deciding. Therefore, they say that whoever
    is to make a firm assertion about a sensible or intelligible object, ought
    to first establish what opinions there are on the matter. For some have
    abolished one view and some another. 93. But [the truth] must be judged
    either by means of a sensible or an intelligible and each of these is
    disputed. So one cannot decide on the opinions concerning sensibles or
    intelligibles; and if, because of the conflict among thoughts, one ought
    to put no trust in any of them, the measure by means of which all things
    are to be [known] with precision will be destroyed. Therefore, all [claims]
    will be held to be equal. Further, they say, whoever investigates along with
    us that which appears, is either trustworthy or not. If he is trustworthy, he
    will have nothing to say to the man to whom the matter appears opposite.
    For just as he himself is to be trusted who says the appearance [is one
    way], so is the other man who says the opposite. If he is untrustworthy,
    he will not be trusted when he reports on the appearance.

  2. One ought not to suppose that that which persuades us is true.
    For the same thing does not persuade everyone nor does it persuade the
    same people constantly. Persuasiveness sometimes arises on the basis of
    externals, the reputation of the speaker or his intellectual eminence or
    wiliness, or on the basis of his familiarity or charm. Further they abolish
    the criterion with this sort of argument. Either the criterion has been
    judged or it has not. If it has not been judged, then it is untrustworthy
    and it errs with respect to the true and the false. If it has been judged,
    it [the criterion] will become one of the particulars being judged, so that
    the same thing would [have to] judge and be judged, and that which has
    served as a criterion will have to be judged by something else, which
    itself will have to be judged by yet another and so on to infinity.

  3. In addition to this, the criterion is subject to disagreement, some
    saying that man is the criterion, some saying that the senses are, others

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