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| Alphabetical [« »] realized 1 really 9 reap 1 reason 40 reasonable 2 reasoners 1 reasoning 3 | Frequency [« »] 40 good 40 hope 40 off 40 reason 40 something 40 times 40 under | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances reason |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, XXVI | The conclusions of human reason as ordinarily applied in 2 1, XXVI | rash or premature). That reason which is elicited from facts 3 1, LIX | For men believe that their reason governs words; but it is 4 1, LXVI | this is alteration; if by reason of the change the mass and 5 1, LXXIII| discussion and the conclusions of reason have given birth to few 6 1, XC | be so according to right reason, it is not so acted on in 7 1, XCIX | to be expected from man's reason and industry and direction 8 1, XCIX | refutation of the natural human reason, left to itself; secondly, 9 1, XCIX | not such as a man's own reason would have it to be; a thing 10 1, XCIX | and honored. There is no reason why the arts which are now 11 1, XCIX | will be governed by sound reason and true religion.~CXXX~ 12 1, XCIX | if more are required, by reason of the difficulty of combining 13 1, XCIX | Nor again is there any reason to be alarmed at the subtlety 14 1, XCIX | which are (in the eye of reason at least, and in their essential 15 1, X | ministration to the mind or reason.~For first of all we must 16 1, XI | perceptible to the touch by reason of the smallness of their 17 1, XII | commonly assigned not a bad reason, viz., that that region 18 1, XX | about the same time. The reason is that in gold the separating 19 1, XXV | heterogeneous matter; the reason being that the approach 20 1, XXV | other bubble were away, by reason of the appetite of coition 21 1, XXV | portions of bodies; the reason being that larger masses 22 1, XXIX | in her deviation, and the reason thereof made evident, there 23 1, XXXV | exploded, not only because the reason for it is not probable, 24 1, XXXV | question be discourse of reason. The distinction between 25 1, XXXV | distinction between human reason and the sagacity of brutes 26 1, XXXVI | the senses, often without reason, and to prefer what is obscure), 27 1, XXXVI | center of the earth, by reason of their proper configuration; 28 1, XXXVI | an inverted pyramid; the reason being that the air admits 29 1, XL | object is imperceptible by reason of its distance, there is 30 1, XL | to be corrected except by reason and universal philosophy.~ 31 1, XLI | regarded as night studies by reason of the smallness of our 32 1, XLII | other pneumatic bodies, by reason of their subtlety. Yet how 33 1, XLIII | Instances, but for a different reason. I call them awakening, 34 1, XLIII | dissect nature. For which reason also I sometimes call them 35 1, XLVI | by those things which by reason of the velocity of their 36 1, XLVI | gone; which is also the reason why rings being spun round 37 1, XLVIII| of heat, it is for this reason that heat has been denned 38 1, XLVIII| I am satisfied, that the reason for which a vacuum was introduced 39 1, L | And therefore there is no reason why men should be much afraid 40 1, L | they do not thrive, the reason is obvious — that both of