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'William Hamlin's careful scholarly detective work shows in most illuminating fashion that sceptical themes are prevalent in some of the major literary writings in Englishat the time of Shakespeare, and that many authors were influenced, in varying ways, by Sextus Empiricus and by Montaigne. This is a very significant scholarly book which should be of great value to readers in many fields'. - Richard Popkin, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Washington University, USA, and adjunct Professor of Philosophy and History at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA
'This is an erudite and innovative study that establishes the centrality of early modern scepticism in English literary culture. Casting a wide net, William Hamlin provides a superb account of the diffusion of various strains of scepticism in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, along with the manner in which such ideas permeated contemporary drama, especially tragedy. Hamlin's meticulously researched, forcefully argued, and deftly presented analysis should prove invaluable both to literary scholars and intellectual historians.' - Mordechai Feingold, Professor of History, California Institute of Technology, USA