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Discover LudwigThe phrase "without assent" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that something is done or occurs without agreement or approval from someone. Example: "The decision was made without assent from the board members, leading to significant controversy."
Exact(11)
But since the Iraqis would be backed up by American air power and possibly by more direct military involvement, it is unlikely they would act without assent in Washington. 4 As the battle in Najaf lurches toward a possible cease-fire, the marines of C Company 1-4, who spearheaded the attack, are grappling with the disturbing things they saw early this month during the opening days of the fight.
Pyrrhonian skepticism was, thus, a way of life conducted without assent.
In a rational creature, these are exercises of the rational faculty which do not arise without assent.
4. It is justified instead by Arcesilaus'practicalal criterion' for action, which is supposed to allow him to endorse 'reasonable' views without assent, i.e., without believing them.
It is a cornerstone of Stoic philosophy that there can be no action without assent, and so without the belief that the action done is to be done.
To be sure, Arcesilaus and other Academics defended the possibility of a life without knowledge and without assent (Plutarch, Adversus Colotem 1122A F; cf. Long and Sedley [henceforward L&S] 69A).
Similar(49)
The second component of Arcesilaus' reply, thus, is that the skeptic, in acting without assenting, adheres to the reasonable (eulogon) (SE M 7.158; 7.150; Striker 2010; Vogt 2010).
Either one lives entirely without opinions, while following probable impressions without assenting to them or one lives with opinions, but opinions that are held in a self-consciously tentative spirit and subject to revision in the light of new evidence.
Thus, by combining both stages, Clitomachus was able to argue that the Academic is free to 'follow' or 'approve' persuasive impressions without assenting to them: the Academic has a 'practical criterion' that allows for action without presupposing the cognitive access to objective truth required for rational assent (Sextus M. 7. 166; cf. Cicero Ac. 2.108).
Though Clitomachus rejected assent, he accepted Carneades' proposal that we could follow or use impressions without assenting to them and adopted this attitude toward, among other impressions, the skeptical doctrines that nothing can be known and that one ought therefore suspend judgment (Acad. 2.109 10).
The third problem is that Arcesilaus' positive doctrine appears to rest on a hugely implausible claim about our rationality, viz., that it is possible to think or reflect, and come up with 'reasonable' conclusions, without assenting to anything, i.e., without having any beliefs of any kind or degree (see Frede 1979, Bett 1989).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com