Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Pyrrho not an idiot

"Pyrrho ignored all the apparent dangers of the world because he questioned whether they really were dangers, ‘avoiding nothing and taking no precautions, facing everything as it came, wagons, precipices, dogs’. Luckily he was always accompanied by friends who could not quite manage the same enviable lack of concern and so took care of him, pulling him out of the way of oncoming traffic and so on. They must have had a hard job of it, because ‘often . . . he would leave his home and, telling no one, would go roaming about with whomsoever he chanced to meet’. PYRRHO Two centuries after Pyrrho’s death, one of his defenders tossed aside these tales and claimed that ‘although he practised philosophy on the principles of suspension of judgement, he did not act carelessly in the details of everyday life’. This must be right. Pyrrho may have been magnificently imperturbable—Epicurus was said to have admired him on this account, and another fan marvelled at the way he had apparently ‘unloosed the shackles of every deception and persuasion’. But he was surely not an idiot. He apparently lived to be nearly ninety, which would have been unlikely if the stories of his recklessness had been true."

"The Dream of Reason: A History of Western Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance )by Anthony Gottlieb https://a.co/91FYRH

1 comment:

  1. Part of my personal philosophy is about being skeptical. Without a proper understanding of our surroundings, it is impossible to understand the meaning of life. After all, why not look around the cave for something useful before trying to escape, as Aristotle would say.

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