Page:Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion - Hume (1779).djvu/38

 the repugnancies, which you discover in them. I have not capacity for so great an undertaking: I have not leisure for it: I perceive it to be superfluous. Your own conduct, in every circumstance, refutes your principles; and shows the firmest reliance on all the received maxims of science, morals, prudence, and behaviour.

never assent to so harsh an opinion as that of a celebrated writer, who says, that the sceptics are not a sect of philosophers: They are only a sect of liars. I may, however, affirm (I hope, without offence) that they are a sect of jesters or railers. But for my part, whenever I find myself disposed to mirth and amusement, I shall certainly chuse my entertainment of a less perplexing and abstruse nature. A comedy, a novel, or at most a history, seems a