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expelled 2
expenditure 1
expense 2
experience 50
experiment 36
experimenta 1
experimental 7
Frequency    [«  »]
51 magnet
51 make
51 shall
50 experience
50 our
50 over
50 point
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

experience

   Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | subtlety of nature to which experience bears witness; let him correct 2 1, XXV | by a scanty and manipular experience and a few particulars of 3 1, XLIX | superstition; the light of experience, from arrogance and pride, 4 1, LVI | the light of nature and experience, which is eternal. These 5 1, LXII | philosophers snatches from experience a variety of common instances, 6 1, LXIII | the nature of things, and experience, and bodies; whereas in 7 1, LXIII | before; he did not consult experience, as he should have done, 8 1, LXIII | will, he then resorts to experience, and bending her into conformity 9 1, LXIII | schoolmen, who have abandoned experience altogether.~ 10 1, LXX | demonstration by far is experience, if it go not beyond the 11 1, LXX | But in the true course of experience, and in carrying it on to 12 1, LXX | So must we likewise from experience of every kind first endeavor 13 1, LXX | Of the paths, however, of experience, which no less than the 14 1, LXXII | for those who rest all on experience. For they had no history 15 1, LXXII | known, and our stock of experience has increased to an infinite 16 1, LXXIV | nature and the light of experience, we see the contrary happen, 17 1, LXXXII | of vague and ill-digested experience. Now let any man soberly 18 1, LXXXII | art.~There remains simple experience which, if taken as it comes, 19 1, LXXXII | experiment. But this kind of experience is no better than a broom 20 1, LXXXII | But the true method of experience, on the contrary, first 21 1, LXXXII | commencing as it does with experience duly ordered and digested, 22 1, LXXXII | either leaving and abandoning experience entirely, or losing their 23 1, LXXXII | route through the woods of experience to the open ground of axioms.~ 24 1, LXXXIII | shut out and stopped up; experience being, I do not say abandoned 25 1, LXXXIV | the young, because of his experience and of the number and variety 26 1, LXXXVIII| throws away the chances of experience itself. And all for the 27 1, XCII | afterwards made good by experience, and were the causes and 28 1, XCVII | mind, apply himself anew to experience and particulars, better 29 1, XCVII | raising it regularly up from experience and building it afresh, 30 1, XCVIII | XCVIII~Now for grounds of experience — since to experience we 31 1, XCVIII | of experience — since to experience we must come — we have as 32 1, XCVIII | and vague fames or airs of experience, and allowed to these the 33 1, XCVIII | philosophy with relation to experience. Nothing duly investigated, 34 1, XCIX | carrying on and advancing experience must also be introduced. 35 1, XCIX | also be introduced. For experience, when it wanders in its 36 1, XCIX | store of natural history and experience as is required for the work 37 1, XCIX | thinking than by writing; and experience has not yet learned her 38 1, XCIX | is brought into use, and experience has been taught to read 39 1, XCIX | may lead, by means of that experience which I term literate, to 40 1, XCIX | differ but slightly from bare experience, while the highest and most 41 1, XCIX | the help of that learned experience of which I spoke, may be 42 1, XCIX | made but short stay with experience, but passing her lightly 43 1, XCIX | regards the collecting of experience) may with the best effect 44 1, XCIX | subtlety is in weighing experience and in founding axioms thereon. 45 1, XCIX | and anxious dwelling with experience and matter and the fluctuations 46 1, XCIX | the natural history and experience that was wanted; far from 47 1, XCIX | just history of nature and experience, and labored diligently 48 1, X | educe and form axioms from experience; the other how to deduce 49 1, XIII | all heat of which we have experience is in some sort opposed 50 1, XXXV | because we have manifest experience of the discursive and irregular


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