"In studying a philosopher, the right attitude is neither reverence nor
contempt, but first a kind of hypothetical sympathy, until it is possible to
know what it feels like to believe in his theories, and only then a revival
of the critical attitude, which should resemble, as far as possible, the
state of mind of a person abandoning opinions which he has hitherto held.
Contempt interferes with the first part of this process, and reverence with
the second. Two things are to be remembered: that a man whose opinions and
theories are worth studying may be presumed to have had some intelligence,
but that no man is likely to have arrived at complete and final truth on any
subject whatever. When an intelligent man expresses a view which seems to us
obviously absurd, we should not attempt to prove that it is somehow true,
but we should try to understand how it ever came to seem true. This exercise
of historical and psychological imagination at once enlarges the scope of
our thinking, and helps us to realise how foolish many of our own cherished
prejudices will seem to an age which has a different temper of mind."

Bertrand Russell, A History of Western Philosophy 1946, p. 58

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