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Alphabetical    [«  »]
earnest 5
earnestly 1
ears 1
earth 76
earthen 1
earthenware 1
earthly 1
Frequency    [«  »]
78 too
77 another
77 others
76 earth
76 iron
76 mind
76 thus
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

earth

   Book, Aphorism
1 1, LX | chalk and of mud is good, of earth bad); a more faulty kind 2 1, LXIII | Democritus; the Heaven and Earth of Parmenides; the Strife 3 1, LXVI | toward the globe of the earth, of thin and rare bodies 4 1, LXXIX | philosophy from heaven to earth, moral philosophy became 5 1, LXXXIV| globe — that is, of the earth, of the sea, and of the 6 1, LXXXIX| contradicting) maintained that the earth was round, and of consequence 7 1, XCIX | drags down the mind to earth, or rather sinks it to a 8 1, XCIX | question whether it is the earth or heaven that really revolves 9 1, XII | rays emanate, nor to the earth from which they are reflected. 10 1, XII | from the exhalations of the earth; and, again, in the middle 11 1, XIII | burials take place daily, the earth collects a certain hidden 12 1, XIII | more speedily than pure earth. We are told too that in 13 1, XIII | from their proximity to the earth, than they do in apogee. 14 1, XX | here on the surface of the earth anything that is intensely 15 1, XXVII | bend it down into a clod of earth, although it does not cohere 16 1, XXVII | root. And vice versa, if earth be placed at the top, and 17 1, XXVII | toward the bowels of the earth, by antiperistasis or the 18 1, XXXIII| nothing of the bowels of the earth, and of all the bodies which 19 1, XXXIII| above the bowels of the earth. The other admonition is 20 1, XXXV | here on the surface of the earth is the oblique course of 21 1, XXXV | belong to the globe of the earth, while other bodies (which 22 1, XXXV | bodies downward towards the earth. And this is pretty talk.~ 23 1, XXXV | toward the center of the earth, rare and light toward the 24 1, XXXV | when they say that if the earth were bored through, heavy 25 1, XXXV | solid, does not move to the earth, there is an end of this 26 1, XXXV | opinion be received, that the earth's magnetic power of attracting 27 1, XXXV | great distance from the earth, would hang like the earth 28 1, XXXV | earth, would hang like the earth itself and not fall unless 29 1, XXXVI | it for granted that the earth is immovable. But if the 30 1, XXXVI | is immovable. But if the earth revolves, it is perhaps 31 1, XXXVI | in point of speed) of the earth and waters of the sea, the 32 1, XXXVI | from the interior of the earth, and again retreating into 33 1, XXXVI | bodies, and real in the earth. We may here take for an 34 1, XXXVI | nearer a planet is to the earth its motion is slower, the 35 1, XXXVI | planet is distant from the earth its motion is quicker, and 36 1, XXXVI | deny such motion to the earth. Because it will be manifest 37 1, XXXVI | immovable — that is, the earth.~Again, let the nature in 38 1, XXXVI | and his followers to the earth as well. And let us inquire 39 1, XXXVI | nature to the center of the earth, by reason of their proper 40 1, XXXVI | by the mass and body of earth itself as by the congregation 41 1, XXXVI | heavy bodies approach to the earth, the more rapid and violent 42 1, XXXVI | further they are from the earth, the feebler and more tardy 43 1, XXXVI | such a distance from the earth that the earth's virtue 44 1, XXXVI | from the earth that the earth's virtue could not act upon 45 1, XXXVI | remain suspended like the earth itself, and not fall at 46 1, XXXVI | attraction of the mass of the earth as the cause of weight.~ 47 1, XXXVI | communicated by the presence of the earth, as Gilbert thinks, and 48 1, XXXVI | this position; as if the earth itself, which on account 49 1, XXXVI | surface or outer crust of the earth being destitute, as he insists, 50 1, XXXVI | virtue emanating from the earth than at other times, and 51 1, XXXVI | will leave the poles of the earth and turn toward the poles 52 1, XXXVI | then the presence of the earth must be admitted as the 53 1, XXXVII| bodies to the globe of the earth. There may also be added 54 1, XLV | virtue flowing from the earth (a little below the surface), 55 1, XLV | between the globe of the earth and heavy bodies, or between 56 1, XLVI | motion of heavy bodies to the earth, and of light bodies toward 57 1, XLVI | are instantly seen here on earth; while there is no doubt 58 1, XLVI | preferred believing that the earth moved) renders this motion 59 1, XLVI | sea, supposing that the earth revolved faster than the 60 1, XLVI | allowed, viz., that the earth moves, and also without 61 1, XLVI | gunpowder where vast masses of earth, buildings, and the like 62 1, XLVII | fabric of the universe. The earth for instance stands fast; 63 1, XLVIII| bodies to the globe of the earth, light to the compass of 64 1, XLVIII| And no wonder; for the earth and heaven are ever there, 65 1, XLVIII| from the inner parts of the earth. For heat and cold, in small 66 1, XLVIII| materials in the bowels of the earth which altogether refuse 67 1, XLVIII| removed from the sea, nor the earth from the falling body, and 68 1, XLVIII| admit the motion of the earth from west to east, the same 69 1, XLVIII| attributed rotation to the earth. But a juster question perhaps 70 1, XLVIII| motion (admitting that the earth stands still) is confined 71 1, XLVIII| by this motion that the earth stands still in its mass 72 1, L | by burying them in the earth, as the Chinese are said 73 1, L | vapors into water under the earth, from which springs often 74 1, L | Lastly, in the wombs of the earth itself, those I mean in 75 1, L | under what climates, in what earth, and at what depth, the 76 1, L | generated from a juice of the earth which the corn has left


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