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Title: By: Nigel RamozLeslie


1
Skepticism
  • By Nigel Ramoz-Leslie
  • History 315 Civilization and Depravity

2
Introduction
  • Skepticism emerged as a belief of no doctrine
    and constituted suspending judgment on
    everything (Oxford Reference)
  • Skepticism examines differences of physis and
    nomos through diametrical opposites (they do x,
    y, and z, we dont)
  • Skepticism tries to provide understanding of
    other cultures by applying principles of
    rationality to certain practices
  • The way that the practices are depicted often
    perpetuates societal stigmas reinforcing negative
    perceptions
  • Theory fades as it becomes problematic to the
    beliefs of the us culture

3
Origins of Skepticism
  • Scythians have importance over their national
    traditions and punish those that introduce
    alien customs (Hdt. IV80)
  • Egyptian methods of calendar cycles are better
    than the Greek (Hdt II4)
  • The practice of dowry prostitution is viewed as
    ingenious (Hdt. I 196)
  • Most material in the Sourcebook comes after 100
    C.E. (the exceptions being Plato, Cicero, and
    Philo Judaeus)

4
Cultural Understanding
  • How do you know that nationes hold that belief?
    M. Tullius Cicero, 60.1)
  • Pattern of The Massagatae hold their wives in
    common, while the Greeks do not (Aenesidemus of
    Cnossus, 59)
  • Diogenes went around in a sleeveless tunic,
    while we dress normally (Sextus Empiricus, 64.1)
  • Having sex with a woman in public, though
    shameful among us, is deemed not shameful among
    some Indians (Sextus Empiricus, 64.2)

5
Rationality within the irrational
  • Men became negligent of piety due to the
    scarcity of fruit (Theophrastus of Eresus, 67)
  • During great crises-war, plague, or drought-
    Phoencians used to sacrifice one of their most
    beloved (Porphyrius of Tyre, 68.1)
  • They eat this type of food I.e. meat out of
    necessity (Porphyrius of Tyre, 68.2)
  • He had in view the interests of agriculture and
    wished to check the bad practice of the rabble
    (Porphyrius of Tyre, 68.3)
  • Indeed a law from reason commands them (Philo
    Judaeus of Alexandria, 61)

6
Perpetual Depravity
  • Other cultures are more abnormal than any
    abnormality, and more bestial than any
    bestiality (Porphyrius of Tyre, 68.3)
  • This the stumbling Pythagoreans believe in
    error (Sextus Empiricus, 64.3)
  • I cannot despise the foolishness of the rabble
    and the ignorant (M. Tullius Cicero 60.2)
  • The implications of a normal culture assume a
    complex of superiority of practices and beliefs
    (Sextus Empiricus, 64.1)

7
Damnanai
  • The result of their living there was that the
    Ethiopians learned Egyptian manners and became
    more civilized (Hdt. II30)
  • Hercules, persuaded their descendants to replace
    these unholy sacrifices (Ambrosius Theodosius
    Macrobius 66)
  • In Syria they used to sacrifice a maiden
    annually to Athena, but now they sacrifice a
    deer (Porphyrius of Tyre, 68.1)

8
Criticisms of the Us
  • Zeus, addressed Hera, his sister and his wife
    (Sextus Empiricus, 64.2)
  • Hermes is the greatest thief, they cause it not
    to be considered unjust, for how could a god be
    evil? (Sextus Empiricus, 64.2)
  • It seems abnormal that they themselves do these
    things, yet penalize the barbaroi for acting
    without piety (Plutarchus of Chaeronaea, 63)
  • In our capital city they slaughter a human being
    during the feast of Zeus Latiarius (Porphyrius
    of Tyre, 68.1)

9
Ideas to remember
  • Skepticism tries to escape common misconceptions
    about other cultures and attempts to view all
    beliefs equally
  • The effect of this cultural relativism is that
    audiences conceptions of depravity remain the
    same or become worse
  • Criticism of the beliefs of the majority has the
    opposite effect desired and causes these sorts of
    ideas to be far and few between

10
Bibliography
  • Herodotus of Halicarnassus. 2003. The Histories.
    A. Selincourt, translator. Penguin Classics.
  • Gisela Striker "Sceptics" The Oxford Classical
    Dictionary. Ed. Simon Hornblower and Anthony
    Spawforth. Oxford University Press 2003. Oxford
    Reference Online. Oxford University Press.
    Whitman College. 29 October 2008
    http//www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?su
    bviewMainentryt111.e5733
  • Sourcebook 59(Aenesidemus of Cnossus), 60.1 and
    60.2(M. Tullius Cicero), 61(Philo Judaeus of
    Alexandria), 63(Plutarchus of Chaeronaea), 64.1,
    64.2, and 64.3(Sextus Empiricus), 66(Ambrosius
    Theodosius Macrobius) 67(Theophrastus of Eresus),
    68.1, 68.2, and 68.3(Porphyrius of Tyre)
  • Wordpress. "Digital Karate." Available from
    http//www.digitalkarate.net/wordpress/wp-content/
    uploads/2007/08/skeptical-cat-is-fraught-with-skep
    ticism.jpg. Internet accessed 29 October 2008.
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