Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Sextus Empiricus: Ethics 387


present exists nor the past nor the future, time is nothing, for that which
is comprised of non-existents is itself non-existent.



  1. This argument is also used against time. If time exists either it
    is generable and destructible or ungenerable and indestructible. But it is
    not ungenerable and indestructible, at least if the past is said to exist no
    longer and the future not yet to exist. 148. But it is not generable and
    destructible either. For things that are generated must come to be from
    something existing, and things that are destroyed must be destroyed
    into something existing, according to the hypotheses of the dogmatists
    themselves. If, therefore, time is destroyed into the past, it is destroyed
    into something which does not exist; and if it is generated from the
    future, it is generated from that which does not exist, for neither the
    past nor future exist. But it is absurd to say that something is generated
    from that which does not exist or is destroyed into something which
    does not exist. Therefore, time is neither generable nor destructible.
    And if it is neither ungenerable and indestructible nor generable and
    destructible, it does not exist at all.

  2. In addition to these arguments, since everything that comes to
    be seems to be generated in time, if time comes to be, it is generated in
    time. So, it comes to be either in itself or each comes to be in another
    time. But if it comes to be in itself, the same thing will exist and will
    not exist. For since that in which something comes to be ought to exist
    prior to that which comes to be in it, time, insofar as it comes to be, is
    not yet, but insofar as it comes to be in itself, is already. 150. So, it does
    not come to be in itself. But neither does one time come to be in another
    time. For if the present comes to be in the future, the present will be
    the future, and if it comes to be in the past, it will be the past. The same
    points ought to be made about the other times [viz., past and future].
    So, one time does not come to be in another time. If time comes to be
    neither in itself nor each time in another time, then time is not generable.
    And it has already been shown that it is not ungenerable. So, since it is
    neither generable nor ungenerable, it does not exist at all, for each thing
    which exists should be either generable or ungenerable.


Ethics


Sextus PH 3.168-197 [III-48]


Ch. xxi On the Ethical Part of Philosophy



  1. There remains the ethical part of philosophy, which seems to be
    concerned with the discernment of things good and bad and indifferent.

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