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Philosophical skepticism (UK spelling, scepticism) is the philosophical school of thought in which one critically examines whether the knowledge and perceptions one has are true, and whether or not one can ever be said to have true knowledge.
This article does not deal with scientific skepticism, which is a practical position in which one does not accept the veracity of claims until solid evidence is produced in accordance with the scientific method. For the sake of brevity, skepticism in the remainder of this article refers exclusively to philosophical skepticism.
1 History of skepticism
1.1 In the ancient west
The Western tradition of systematic skepticism goes back at least as far as Pyrrho of Elis. His adult life saw the conquest of his native Greece by Alexander the Great, whom he accompanied eastward as far as India, where he encountered non-Hellenic philosophy. He had originally espoused Stoicism but was troubled by the disputes that could be found against his own philosophy and within all philosophical schools of his day, including his own. According to a later account of his life, he became overwhelmed by his inability to determine rationally which school was correct. Upon admitting this to himself, he finally achieved the inner peace that he had been seeking.
Ironically, from a Stoic point of view, Pyrrho found peace by admitting to ignorance and seeming to abandon reason. However, this was not the ignorance of children or farm animals: it was a knowledgeable ignorance, arrived at through the application of reason. As one of their tools, Pyrrhonists made useful distinctions between "being" and "appearing" and between the identity and the sensing of a phenomenon.
Pyrrho and his school were not actually "skeptics" in the later sense of the word. They had the goal of αταραξια ( ataraxia - peace of mind); once they achieved this, inquiry would halt. For them, it sufficed to know that one did not know. It would have upset this peace of mind to wonder whether or not there was anything at all to know, or, even worse, to search in case something not yet considered could be known. Later thinkers took up Pyrrho's path and extended it into fully-fledged skepticism. In the 'New Academy' Arcesilas (c. 315-241 B.C.) and Carneades (c. 213-129 B.C.) developed more theoretical perspectives. Sextus Empiricus (c. A.D. 200), the main authority for Greek skepticism, developed the position further, incorporating aspects of empiricism into the basis for asserting knowledge.
1.2 In the ancient east
Buddhism offerss a wellspring of skepticism that is little known in much of the West. However, it differs substantially from western philosophical skepticism in several ways:
- BuddhaBuddha ( Sanskrit, Pali, others: literally Awakened One Enlightened One from the Sanskrit: "√budh", to awaken can refer to the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama or to anyone who has attained the same depth and quality of enlightenment. Buddhism touched the earth on the point of his enlightenment. He did so in order to use the earth as witness to his enlightenment. In this way, Buddhism does not claim that we don't have knowledge, and it doesn't claim that we can't have knowledge.
- Buddhism places less emphasis on truth and knowledge than western philosophical skepticism, and more emphasis on enlightenment as a goal. ("Enlightenment" is a buddhist technical term, and does not equate to truth and knowledge).
- However, Buddhism (certainly in its manifestation of Nagarjuna'sNgrjuna (c. 150 250 CE) was an Indian philosopher, the founder of the Madhyamaka (Middle Path) school of Buddhism, and arguably the most influential Indian Buddhist thinker after the Gautama Buddha himself. His writings were the basis for the formation of texts that form the core of MadhyamakaMadhyamaka is a Buddhist philosophical tradition that asserts that all phenomena are empty of "self-nature" or "essence" ( Sanskrit: Svabhva , that they have no intrinsic, independent reality apart from the causes and conditions from which they arise.) does say that truth and existence exist solely within the conventions (or contexts) that assert them to exist. This does not mean that collaborative games (such as scientific contributions to technology) do not have pay-offs, but just that they are no more or less inherently true than the views and ideas of (for example) the AzandeThe Azande (plural, Bazande are a people of north central Africa. Their number is estimated by various sources at between 1 and 4 million. They live primarily in the northern part of Democratic Republic of the Congo, in southwestern Sudan, and in the sout, who are known for their Magical thinkingMagical thinking is a term used by historians of religion to describe one kind of non-scientific causal reasoning. Scholars like James George Frazer and Bronislaw K. Malinowski emphasized that magic is more like science than religion, and that societies w.
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