Steve Greenleaf

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Besides direct experience, the Empiric will acquire knowledge through “history”—what has been written down by others. Here the Empirics make a start on discussion of the credibility of testimony, or what was called by later historians the “signs of true histories.” Agreement among authorities is important, but not everything repeated by many writers is to be believed (for example, things written under the influence of dogmatic misconceptions):
The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal
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