[349] Frag. cited by Wallace, p. 258. [↑]

[350] Rev. Baden Powell, Hist. of Nat. Philos. 1834, p. 79. [↑]

[351] De Oratore, iii, 17; De Finibus, ii, 12, 13. [↑]

[352] See Saisset, Le Scepticisme, 1865, pp. 22–27, for a careful discussion of dates. [↑]

[353] His own claim was to be of the “methodical” school. Hypotyp. i, 34. [↑]

[354] See his doctrine expounded by Owen, Evenings with the Skeptics, i, 332 sq. [↑]

[355] Cp. Owen, p. 349. [↑]

[356] These seem to be derived from Carneades. Cp. Ueberweg, i, 217. [↑]

[357] “The general character of the Greek Skeptics from Sokrates to Sextos is quite unexceptionable” (Owen, Evenings, i, 352). [↑]

[358] Polybius, bk. vi, ch. lvi. Cp. bk. xvi, Frag. 5 (12), where he speaks impatiently of the miracle-stories told of certain cults, and, repeating his opinion that some such stories are useful for preserving piety among the people, protests that they should be kept within bounds. [↑]