The first is to explain lack of assent through incoherence. While A might be (phenomenologically) clear/evident to S, S might not assent to A because A does not cohere with S’s convictions. The cases discussed in Sextus wherein clear (kataleptic) appearances are not assented to are, I think, most often best analysed in such a manner. In the case of Admetus, we are told that he “caught an apprehensive appearance from Alcestis, yet did not trust it” (ὁ Ἄδμητος ἔσπασε μὲν καταληπτικὴν φαντασίαν ἀπὸ τῆς Ἀλκήστιδος, ἠπίστει δ’ αὐτῇ· M. 7.254). Similarly, Menelaus was grasping (ἐλάμβανε) an apprehensive appearance from Helen but did not have trust in it (M. 7.255). Most plausibly, Admetus failed to assent to the kataleptic appearance of Alcestis being before him because it was inconsistent with his other beliefs (e. g. that Alcestis was dead, that dead people do not walk around, etc.), and the same goes for Menelaus (e. g. believing that Helen was on the ship, that people cannot be in two places at once, etc.). Self-presentingly clear/evident as an appearance might be, if its content is obviously inconsistent with deeply held beliefs, it is easy to see why these appearances are not accompanied by assent. One might see, and see (phenomenologically) clearly/evidently, and yet not believe.
Top of page Top of page