The title of Drummond's book refers to the
later Platonic Academy, which was, in fact, not so much
Platonist as
Sceptical in orientation, based on the work of
Pyrrho the Sceptic and later followers of Pyrrho such as
Carneades.
Academical Questions is a work in the Sceptic tradition, in this case influenced by the Sceptical Scottish philosopher
David Hume. According to C.E. Pulos's 1954 book, ''The Deep Truth: A Study of Shelley's Scepticism'', Drummond uses Sceptical
Humean ideas in an attempt to refute the British philosophy predominant in his day, the Common Sense ideas of
Thomas Reid and his followers. These had been enunciated first in Reid's
An Enquiry into the Human Mind (1765). The quotation, "He, who will not reason is a bigot; he who cannot, is a fool; and he, who dares not, is a slave" has been credited to Drummond. ==Other writings==