BIBLIOGRAPHY
The following abbreviations have been used in the cita-
tion of ancient sources:
Ac. I: Cicero, Academica posteriora, I
Ac. II: Cicero, Academica priora, II
AM: Sextus, Adversus mathematicos
Div.: Cicero, De divinatione
DL: Diogenes Laërtius, Vitae philosophorum
Fin.: Cicero, De finibus bonorum et malorum
NA: Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae
ND: Cicero, De natura deorum
Or.: Cicero, De oratore
PE: Eusebius, Praeparatio evangelica
PH: Sextus, Pyrrhoniae hypotyposes
RN: Lucretius, De rerum natura
RP: Cicero, De republica.
Diels and Kranz references are to H. Diels and W. Kranz,
eds., Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, 6th ed. (Berlin,
1951-52). Texts bearing on the Empirical School of medicine
are cited from K. Deichgräber, Die Griechische Empiriker-
schule (Berlin, 1930), and Owsei and C. Lillian Temkin, eds.,
Ancient Medicine: Selected Papers of Ludwig Edelstein
(Baltimore, 1967). Galen, unless otherwise noted, is cited
by volume and page of Opera omnia, ed. C. G. Kühn
(Leipzig, 1821-33; reprint Hildesheim, 1964-65). Photius,
the Byzantine patriarch (ninth century A.D.), is cited from
Photius, Bibliothèque, ed. and trans. into French by R.
Henry (Paris, 1959-67).
Of the histories of ancient skepticism the most highly
acclaimed is V. Brochard, Les sceptiques grecs (Paris, 1887;
reissued 1923 and 1959). Also useful are A. Goedeckemeyer,
Die Geschichte des Griechischen Skeptizismus (Leipzig,
1905); L. Robin, Pyrrhon et le scepticisme grec (Paris, 1944);
and M. Dal Pra, Lo scetticismo greco (Milan, 1950). Three
histories are in English: N. Maccoll, The Greek Sceptics from
Pyrrho to Sextus (London and Cambridge, 1869); M. Patrick,
The Greek Sceptics (New York and London, 1929); and
C. L. Stough, Greek Skepticism: A Study in Epistemology
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1969). For further items consult
the bibliographies in Robin and Dal Pra.
PHILLIP DE LACY
[See also
Certainty; Epicureanism; Happiness;
Necessity;
Platonism;
Skepticism in Modern Thought; Stoicism.]