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| Alphabetical [« »] torpor 6 torrid 1 total 2 touch 45 touched 7 touching 13 touchwood 1 | Frequency [« »] 45 especially 45 general 45 particular 45 touch 44 history 44 simple 43 account | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances touch |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, XXVIII| occurrence, they straightway touch the understanding and fill 2 1, LXIX | however, which now I do but touch upon, I will speak more 3 1, XCIX | beforehand; but he does not touch the deeper boundaries of 4 1, XI | is not perceptible to the touch by reason of the smallness 5 1, XII | not found to be hot to the touch; indeed the severest colds 6 1, XII | not proportioned to our touch, so that in respect to us 7 1, XII | perceived and apprehended by the touch, recourse must be had to 8 1, XII | yet are not warm to the touch; nor, again, is the body 9 1, XII | found to be warm to the touch.~To the 7th.~13. In what 10 1, XII | are at first cold to the touch. The water of natural warm 11 1, XII | substances are less cold to the touch than watery, oil being less 12 1, XII | is not perceptible to the touch when they are single, but 13 1, XII | regia gives no heat to the touch; no more does lead dissolved 14 1, XII | heat perceptible to the touch, either in their exudations 15 1, XII | after some time; yet to the touch they are not hot at first. 16 1, XIII | heat perceptible to the touch, but seem to have a certain 17 1, XIII | hot actually, and to the touch, and to their intensities 18 1, XIII | of heat palpable to the touch in animate substances; but 19 1, XIII | which is warm to the human touch. But yet, as stated above, 20 1, XIII | up; and to the internal touch, as the palate or stomach, 21 1, XIII | nothing warm to the human touch. Not even horse dung, unless 22 1, XIII | as to be perceived by the touch. For not even those substances 23 1, XIII | etc., feel warm to the touch; no more does rotten wood, 24 1, XIII | substances which feel hot to the touch, seems to be the heat of 25 1, XIII | hardly perceptible to the touch, but the highest scarcely 26 1, XIII | at all perceptible to the touch) which are the most adorned 27 1, XIII | mouth of the inserted vessel touch the bottom of the receiving 28 1, XIII | perception of the human touch, insomuch that a ray of 29 1, XIII | so hot that you cannot touch it.~40. The less the mass 30 1, XIII | as regards the sense and touch of man, is a thing various 31 1, XXIII | understanding, or at least touch it, with a false opinion 32 1, XXV | be brought so near as to touch the iron in the armed magnet, 33 1, XXVI | and a delicate power of touch — of which this is not the 34 1, XXVIII| venereal sense among kinds of touch; the scent of hounds among 35 1, XXXVI | into two, thus. Either the touch of the magnet of itself 36 1, XXXVI | gathers polarity without the touch of the magnet by its long 37 1, XXXVI | continuance to supply the touch of the magnet and excite 38 1, XXXVI | acquires polarity without the touch of the magnet; as if the 39 1, XL | and secondarily to the touch. For these two senses give 40 1, XL | neither to the sight nor touch. And therefore in these 41 1, XL | themselves perceptible to the touch, but the heat expands the 42 1, XLI | These matters, however, I touch but briefly, meaning to 43 1, XLV | from its place unless they touch each other. Also medicines 44 1, XLV | objects of the taste and touch do not strike those senses 45 1, L | things which are cold to the touch, there are found others