最終更新日:2022/12/24
For [Georg Wilhelm Friedrich] Hegel, ancient skepticism preserved the essence of the skeptical principle, and the tropes express this principle. In the earlier ten tropes, there is, according to Hegel, a lack of abstraction that becomes obvious in the fact that their diversity could be grasped under more general points of view. […] Sextus [Empiricus] explains that the first four tropes are based on the judging subject; these deal with the differences among animals, the differences among human beings, the differences that distinguish the various senses, and, finally, circumstantial differences.
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元となった例文
For
[Georg
Wilhelm
Friedrich]
Hegel,
ancient
skepticism
preserved
the
essence
of
the
skeptical
principle,
and
the
tropes
express
this
principle.
In
the
earlier
ten
tropes,
there
is,
according
to
Hegel,
a
lack
of
abstraction
that
becomes
obvious
in
the
fact
that
their
diversity
could
be
grasped
under
more
general
points
of
view.
[…]
Sextus
[Empiricus]
explains
that
the
first
four
tropes
are
based
on
the
judging
subject;
these
deal
with
the
differences
among
animals,
the
differences
among
human
beings,
the
differences
that
distinguish
the
various
senses,
and,
finally,
circumstantial
differences.