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  1. “Did Descartes Read Sextus’s Outlines of Pyrrhonism?” A “Sceptical” Response.Paul O’Mahoney - forthcoming - The European Legacy:1-9.
    This article has been invited by The European Legacy editors as a response to Ayumu Tamura’s “Did Descartes Read Sextus’s Outlines of Pyrrhonism?” which continues the promising lines of enquiry he...
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  • Prophecy and scepticism in the sixteenth and seventeenth century.Richard H. Popkin - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 4 (1):1 – 20.
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  • The prehistory of modern scepticism: Sextus empiricus in fifteenth-century italy.Gian Mario Cao - 2001 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 64 (1):229-280.
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  • Some other words on Skepticism and Christianism.Rodrigo Pinto de Brito - 2015 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 14:27-37.
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  • Disciplining Skepticism through Kant's Critique, Fichte's Idealism, and Hegel's Negations.Meghant Sudan - 2021 - In Vicente Raga Rosaleny (ed.), Doubt and Disbelief in Modern European Thought. Springer. pp. 247-272.
    This chapter considers the encounter of skepticism with the Kantian and post-Kantian philosophical enterprise and focuses on the intriguing feature whereby it is assimilated into this enterprise. In this period, skepticism becomes interchangeable with its other, which helps understand the proliferation of many kinds of views under its name and which forms the background for transforming skepticism into an anonymous, routine practice of raising objections and counter-objections to one’s own view. German philosophers of this era counterpose skepticism to dogmatism and (...)
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  • Mathematical skepticism: the debate between Hobbes and Wallis.Luciano Floridi - 2004 - In Maia Neto, José Raimundo & Richard H. Popkin (eds.), Skepticism in Renaissance and post-Renaissance thought: new interpretations. Humanity Books.
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