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| Alphabetical [« »] trust 1 trusting 1 trustworthy 3 truth 42 truths 1 try 14 trying 6 | Frequency [« »] 42 former 42 given 42 manifest 42 truth 42 weight 41 different 41 example | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances truth |
Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | errors rather than disclosing truth. There remains but one course 2 1, XII | to help the search after truth. So it does more harm than 3 1, XIX | searching into and discovering truth. The one flies from the 4 1, XIX | from these principles, the truth of which it takes for settled 5 1, XXXVIII| so beset men's minds that truth can hardly find entrance, 6 1, XLVIII | discovered, and cannot with truth be referred to a cause, 7 1, L | alteration, though it is in truth local motion through exceedingly 8 1, LVI | rather than judgments; and truth is to be sought for not 9 1, LXI | error; that so the access to truth may be made less difficult, 10 1, LXIII | words, than about the inner truth of things; a failing best 11 1, LXVII | once despaired of finding truth, its interest in all things 12 1, LXXI | adverse to the inquisition of truth. Thus that name of Sophists, 13 1, LXXI | themselves to the inquisition of truth. And therefore they were 14 1, LXXI | But the inquisition of truth must be despaired of when 15 1, LXXIII | sponsors and sureties for the truth of philosophies. Now, from 16 1, LXXIII | man, and which can with truth be referred to the speculations 17 1, LXXVII | namely, that the signs of truth and soundness in the received 18 1, LXXXI | severe and rigid search after truth. And if by chance there 19 1, LXXXI | there be one who seeks after truth in earnest, yet even he 20 1, LXXXI | to himself such a kind of truth as shall yield satisfaction 21 1, LXXXI | discovered, and not the truth which shall lead to new 22 1, LXXXIV | authority. For rightly is truth called the daughter of time, 23 1, LXXXV | intellectual arts. So that, if the truth must be spoken, when the 24 1, LXXXVI | most ancient seekers after truth were wont, with better faith 25 1, LXXXIX | upon them to deduce the truth of the Christian religion 26 1, LXXXIX | that the investigation of truth in nature might be dangerous 27 1, XCIX | with the investigation of truth, confines his attention 28 1, XCIX | ages the seeds of a purer truth, and performing my part 29 1, XCIX | solid or material. And the truth is that the knowledge of 30 1, XCIX | relying on the evidence and truth of things, I reject all 31 1, XCIX | that the contemplation of truth is a thing worthier and 32 1, XCIX | true and exquisite lines. Truth, therefore, and utility 33 1, XCIX | greater value as pledges of truth than as contributing to 34 1, XCIX | principles of science. Taking the truth of these as fixed and immovable, 35 1, XCIX | of the mind to comprehend truth. But in reality that which 36 1, XCIX | yet (to speak the whole truth), as the uses of light are 37 1, XCIX | forms therefore results truth in speculation and freedom 38 1, XCIX | investigation of the fact itself or truth of the thing, no less than 39 1, XX | XX~And yet since truth will sooner come out from 40 1, XXXIX | to the works of art. The truth however is only this, that 41 1, L | orderly inequality is in truth the daughter of the heavens 42 1, LII | but that it may in very truth dissect nature, and discover