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summits 1
summon 1
summoning 2
sun 60
sunk 2
sunshine 1
superficial 3
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61 axioms
61 little
61 say
60 sun
59 cannot
59 said
58 own
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

sun

   Book, Aphorism
1 1, LXXV | as, that the heat of the sun and of fire are quite different 2 1, LXXXVIII| doctrine that the heat of the sun and of fire differ in kind, 3 1, XCIX | polluted thereby, for the sun enters the sewer no less 4 1, XI | Heat~1. The rays of the sun, especially in summer and 5 1, XI | noon.~2. The rays of the sun reflected and condensed, 6 1, XII | passed or approached by the sun, are supposed to increase 7 1, XII | intensity to the heat of the sun, as is the case when the 8 1, XII | as is the case when the sun is in the sign Leo, and 9 1, XII | 2nd.~2. The rays of the sun in what is called the middle 10 1, XII | enough to the body of the sun from which the rays emanate, 11 1, XII | after the rising of the sun are warned and urged by 12 1, XII | reflection of the rays of the sun in regions near the polar 13 1, XII | Thus the direct rays of the sun seem to have but little 14 1, XII | which is the case when the sun tends more to the perpendicular, 15 1, XII | on the contrary, when the sun shines very obliquely, the 16 1, XII | be many operations of the sun, and those too depending 17 1, XII | hand and the rays of the sun, observe whether it diminishes 18 1, XII | diminishes the heat of the sun, as a burning glass increases 19 1, XII | heat, as in the case of the sun's rays.~To the 2nd.~7. Let 20 1, XII | manifestly warmed by the sun, fire, or some other warm 21 1, XIII | highest scarcely equals the sun's heat in the hottest countries 22 1, XIII | accounted the hottest after the sun; then comes Jupiter, and 23 1, XIII | Canicula, and so on.~16. The sun gives greater heat the nearer 24 1, XIII | must also believe that the sun and other planets give more 25 1, XIII | that in some region the sun is at the same time in perigee 26 1, XIII | perpendicularity or obliquity.~18. The sun and other planets are supposed 27 1, XIII | fixed stars. Thus when the sun is in Leo he is nearer Cor 28 1, XIII | will never do, or of the sun without a burning glass 29 1, XVIII | account of the rays of the sun, reject the nature of the 30 1, XVIII | with the exception of the sun, also reject light and brightness.~ 31 1, XXVII | are exposed to the air and sun. For if you take a tender 32 1, XXVIII | singular instances are the sun and moon among stars; the 33 1, XXXI | singularities of nature I placed the sun, the moon, the magnet, and 34 1, XXXV | be the proper work of the sun. From this beginning, therefore, 35 1, XXXV | between the heat of the sun and of fire which cause 36 1, XXXV | is that the heat of the sun compared with the heat of 37 1, XXXV | the oblique course of the sun through the zodiac; whence 38 1, XXXV | whence the heat of the sun, partly by the alternation 39 1, XXXV | generation the approach of the sun, and as the cause of corruption 40 1, XXXV | together (the approach of the sun and his retreat), not respectively, 41 1, XXXV | between the heat of the sun and of fire, and one of 42 1, XXXV | great moment; viz., that the sun operates by gentle action 43 1, XXXV | imitate the heat of the sun in its inequality; and lastly 44 1, XXXV | to the operations of the sun, but yet slower than men 45 1, XXXV | surpass the works of the sun by the heat of fire. We 46 1, XXXVI | whereby to our eyes the sun and stars rise and set, 47 1, XXXVI | reflects the rays of the sun; nor does light seem to 48 1, XXXVI | reflection of the rays of the sun from the upper part of the 49 1, XXXVI | occasionally see rays of the sun in fine evenings reflected 50 1, XXXVI | experiment of allowing the sun's rays to shine through 51 1, XXXVI | indeed the open rays of the sun, falling on the duller kinds 52 1, XXXIX | this we descry spots on the sun, and similar phenomena — 53 1, XL | powerful, as that of the sun, for instance, in a basin 54 1, XLIII | kind; as the light of the sun extinguishes that of a glowworm; 55 1, XLVIII | to their apogees; if the sun holds Venus and Mercury 56 1, L | keeping off the heat of the sun and that open air which 57 1, L | intense than the heat of the sun as it reaches us, or the 58 1, L | comparison as the heat of the sun at noon in the torrid zone, 59 1, L | noon and under a burning sun filled with dew, while all 60 1, L | imitation of the works of the sun — as I have shadowed forth


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