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| Alphabetical [« »] glad 2 gladly 1 glances 1 glass 54 glasses 19 glide 1 glides 1 | Frequency [« »] 56 come 56 since 54 experiments 54 glass 54 indeed 54 together 53 case | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances glass |
Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | example and look in it as in a glass) let us suppose that some 2 1, LX | is humid; if in another, glass is humid. So that it is 3 1, XCIX | opaque stone, or tenacity on glass, or vegetation on some substance 4 1, XI | dissolved by strong waters in glass, and that without being 5 1, XII | following experiment. Take a glass fashioned in a contrary 6 1, XII | manner to a common burning glass and, placing it between 7 1, XII | of the sun, as a burning glass increases and strengthens 8 1, XII | rays that according as the glass is made thicker or thinner 9 1, XII | moon fall through a burning glass on the top of a glass of 10 1, XII | burning glass on the top of a glass of this kind, and then observe 11 1, XII | the 2nd.~6. Let a burning glass also be tried with a heat 12 1, XII | the 2nd.~7. Let a burning glass also be tried with common 13 1, XII | the hand or a graduated glass.~To the 13th.~19. In like 14 1, XII | gold; neither dissolves glass, and so on with others.~ 15 1, XII | a graduated or calendar glass, hollow at the top; pour 16 1, XIII | the sun without a burning glass or mirror.~21. There are, 17 1, XIII | If you place a burning glass at the distance of (say) 18 1, XIII | which are made thus. Take a glass with a hollow belly, a thin 19 1, XIII | belly upwards, into another glass vessel containing water; 20 1, XIII | the mouth of the receiving glass, but not so as to seal its 21 1, XIII | supply of air.~The lowered glass, before being inserted into 22 1, XIII | of the immersion of the glass, and will draw the water 23 1, XIII | height. To the side of the glass there should be affixed 24 1, XIII | placed on the top of the glass, will cause the water immediately 25 1, XX | vessels crack, and heated glass, on being suddenly placed 26 1, XX | therefore two iron rods, or two glass tubes, exactly alike; warm 27 1, XX | is extended in a calendar glass without impediment or repulsion — 28 1, XXIII | production or existence is glass whole and pounded. Again, 29 1, XXIII | agitated into froth. For glass and water in their simple 30 1, XXIII | not white, whereas pounded glass and water in froth are white, 31 1, XXIII | what has happened to the glass or water from this migration. 32 1, XXIII | by that pounding of the glass and that agitation of the 33 1, XXIII | except the breaking up of the glass and water into small parts, 34 1, XXIII | air and water, or air and glass), do when mingled in small 35 1, XXIV | form of heat, is a calendar glass of air. For flame, though 36 1, XXIV | the senses. But a calendar glass strikingly displays expansion 37 1, XXVII | of conformity: a looking glass and the eye; and again, 38 1, XXXI | as brick, earthenware, glass, enamel, porcelain, etc., 39 1, XXXI | is neither brittle like glass, nor woven as cloth; but 40 1, XXXIII| be consistent; and so can glass; water also can be consistent, 41 1, XL | following contrivance. I took a glass phial, capable of holding 42 1, XL | I immediately took the glass off the fire, placing it 43 1, XL | the sense by a calendar glass such as I have described 44 1, XLI | over a slow fire and in a glass vessel in which everything 45 1, XLII | nor silver, nor stone, nor glass, wood, water, oil, cloth 46 1, XLIII | the solid substances of glass and water so speedily, and 47 1, XLV | following device. I took a glass egg with a small hole at 48 1, XLVII | a pointed diamond cuts glass, and the like.~But we must 49 1, XLVIII| itself in air remaining in glass eggs after suction; in strings, 50 1, XLVIII| tension, as by suction in glass eggs, labors under a strong 51 1, XLVIII| hard bodies, as steel or glass, the resistance to discontinuity 52 1, XLVIII| penetrating through gold, glass, stone, everything. The 53 1, L | expansion of air in the glass eggs. For after powerful 54 1, L | by a long process, while glass is blown at once; stones