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| Alphabetical [« »] seminal 1 send 1 sensation 4 sense 84 senses 49 sensible 6 sensitive 2 | Frequency [« »] 87 well 86 far 84 human 84 sense 84 who 83 less 83 sciences | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances sense |
Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | certainty. The evidence of the sense, helped and guarded by a 2 Pre | which follows the act of sense I for the most part reject; 3 1, XVI | immediate perceptions of the sense, as Hot, Cold, Black, White, 4 1, XLI | false assertion that the sense of man is the measure of 5 1, XLI | perceptions as well of the sense as of the mind are according 6 1, XLV | the other three which the sense perceives. Hence also the 7 1, L | things which strike the sense outweigh things which do 8 1, L | almost unknown. For the sense by itself is a thing infirm 9 1, L | and apposite; wherein the sense decides touching the experiment 10 1, LX | word, if you take it in one sense, flame is humid; if in another, 11 1, LX | immediate objects of the sense) as heavy, light, rare, 12 1, LX | within the range of the human sense.~ 13 1, LXVI | grossly and palpably to the sense as different from what it 14 1, LXIX | process which leads from the sense and objects to axioms and 15 1, LXIX | the impressions of the sense itself are faulty; for the 16 1, LXIX | itself are faulty; for the sense both fails us and deceives 17 1, LXXXII | understanding direct from the sense, by a course of experiment 18 1, LXXXIII| particulars, subject to sense and bound in matter; especially 19 1, LXXXIX | solemnizing this union of the sense and faith as a lawful marriage, 20 1, LXXXIX | empire of faith over the sense, and therefore feared that 21 1, XCIX | easily corrected by the sense. So likewise may there occur 22 1, XCIX | the most part escapes the sense.~For instance: in all generation 23 1, XCIX | too small to strike the sense, no one can hope to govern 24 1, XCIX | is subject to sight and sense, and has place only in organized 25 1, XCIX | express the thing) in a sense agreeable to my own views. 26 1, XCIX | Metaphysics, what (in a purer sense of the word) I call Magic, 27 1, X | ministrations: a ministration to the sense, a ministration to the memory, 28 1, XIII | it dilates. But the air's sense of heat and cold is so subtle 29 1, XIII | that animal spirits have a sense of heat and cold more exquisite 30 1, XIII | Heat, as far as regards the sense and touch of man, is a thing 31 1, XX | considered with reference to the sense. Let us now proceed to further 32 1, XXV | notions, and relative to the sense; and that in fact there 33 1, XXVI | be places in the proper sense of the word, as a door, 34 1, XXVI | conception into contact with the sense (which is indeed the method 35 1, XXVI | are by nature without the sense of smell cannot perceive 36 1, XXVI | division, of taste: that the sense of taste is in part nothing 37 1, XXVI | perceptible to those in whom the sense of smell is wanting or stopped 38 1, XXVI | that it is clear that the sense of taste is a sort of compound 39 1, XXVII | the paucity of organs of sense. And of this a manifest 40 1, XXVIII | quadrupeds; the venereal sense among kinds of touch; the 41 1, XXXVI | does actually appear to the sense such as I have described; 42 1, XXXVIII| the fourth provide the sense with some substitute when 43 1, XXXVIII| attention and notice of the sense, and at the same time set 44 1, XXXIX | information. This is the sense, therefore, for which we 45 1, XXXIX | which do not enlarge the sense of sight, but rectify and 46 1, XL | making an impression on the sense; or because it is not sufficient 47 1, XL | in quantity to strike the sense; or because there is not 48 1, XL | enough for it to act on the sense; or because the impression 49 1, XL | the object is such as the sense cannot bear; or because 50 1, XL | cannot bear; or because the sense has been previously filled 51 1, XL | of manifesting it to the sense but by joining to it or 52 1, XL | challenge and strike the sense from a greater distance — 53 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense by means of those parts 54 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense by conspicuous effects.~ 55 1, XL | is made manifest to the sense by diminution of weight. 56 1, XL | is made manifest to the sense in the rust of metals and 57 1, XL | is made manifest to the sense not only by the increased 58 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense chiefly by careful observation 59 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense by means of weight. For 60 1, XL | to be perceptible to the sense. These are made manifest 61 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense by a calendar glass such 62 1, XL | are made manifest to the sense by artificial and skillful 63 1, XL | they make manifest to the sense things not directly perceptible 64 1, XL | which objects escape the sense, it is obvious that the 65 1, XL | obvious that the action of sense takes place in motion, and 66 1, XL | to the moments which the sense takes to act in, the object 67 1, XL | usually made manifest to the sense by means of aggregates of 68 1, XL | the sixth kind, where the sense is hindered by the too great 69 1, XL | greater distance from the sense; or by deadening its effects 70 1, XL | seventh cause, where the sense is so charged with one object 71 1, XL | almost wholly confined to the sense of smell and has little 72 1, XL | of making manifest to the sense things not directly perceptible 73 1, XL | reduction is made not to the sense of a man, but of some other 74 1, XL | some other animal whose sense in some cases is keener 75 1, XL | of certain scents to the sense of a dog; of the light which 76 1, XL | illumined from without to the sense of a cat, owl, and similar 77 1, XL | inasmuch as animals to whose sense this light is adapted see 78 1, XL | particular inquiries concerning sense and the objects of sense, 79 1, XL | sense and the objects of sense, excepting only that grand 80 1, XLI | observation rather than the sense. For it is strange how careless 81 1, XLII | brought within reach of the sense, not by perceptible operations 82 1, XLII | manifests itself to the sense, since the mixture of air 83 1, XLII | air and flame escapes the sense. Now oil and water, which 84 1, XLVIII | odor is so rejected by the sense of smell as to induce by