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From "Greek Doctrine of Non-Causality," by Mary M. Patrick in Aryan Path: "There was a man in Alexandria named Aenesidemus, in the first century b.c., who formed a bridge between the old and the new Pyrrhonism. He was originally an academic sceptic. But when the Academy renounced its sceptical standpoint he turned to Pyrrhonism, then becoming very strong, especially in Alexandria. He may be called the prophet of later scepticism, and we find the sources of his authority in the teachings of the Academy, in early Pyrrhonism, and in the Empiric School of Medicine which had its seat in Alexandria. It is to Aenesidemus that we owe much of our knowledge of scepticism for he was a voluminous writer. He formulated the `Ten Tropes of (Epliche)' or `suspension of judgement' some of which date back to Pyrrho himself. His greatest work however was `The Eight Arguments Against Causality' which have quite a modern ring. He taught that while there is a logical connection between cause and effect in nature as we know it, the idea of causality is after all only a physical conception, for science reveals no final truth and no cause in itself."

-- Notebooks Category 19: The Reign of Relativity > Chapter 4 : Time, Space, Causality > # 74