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| Alphabetical [« »] speak 39 speaking 11 special 4 species 37 specific 23 specious 1 spectacles 1 | Frequency [« »] 37 notions 37 quantity 37 rays 37 species 37 subject 37 wine 36 according | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances species |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, XVI | notions of less general species, as Man, Dog, Dove, and 2 1, LX | substances, especially of lowest species and well-deduced (for the 3 1, LXVI | he meets with different species of things, of animals, of 4 1, LXVI | the collision of different species and the transplanting of 5 1, XCVIII| contains the variety of natural species only, and not experiments 6 1, XIII | also according to their species, as in the lion, the kite, 7 1, XX | genus of which heat is a species, I would be understood to 8 1, XXII | color in flowers of the same species, are solitary instances. 9 1, XXVI | which constitute a single species of the proposed nature, 10 1, XXVI | artificial places, and verse, one species of aid to the memory is 11 1, XXVI | is constituted. And this species may with propriety be called 12 1, XXVI | will give us this second species: that whatever brings the 13 1, XXVI | will give us this third species: that things which make 14 1, XXVI | will give us this fourth species: that things which are chiefly 15 1, XXVI | will give us this fifth species: that a multitude of circumstances 16 1, XXVI | will give us this sixth species: that things which are waited 17 1, XXVI | give and constitute this species, or rather division, of 18 1, XXVI | will give or constitute one species of communication; heat and 19 1, XXVIII| concurrence, not in the species itself. Whereas now the 20 1, XXIX | latter are prodigies of species, the former of individuals. 21 1, XXIX | part. For to produce new species would be very difficult, 22 1, XXIX | difficult, but to vary known species and thereby produce many 23 1, XXX | are those which exhibit species of bodies that seem to be 24 1, XXX | seem to be composed of two species, or to be rudiments between 25 1, XXX | be rudiments between one species and another. These instances 26 1, XXX | quality of the ordinary species in the universe, and carrying 27 1, XXX | animals, mixed of different species, and the like.~ 28 1, XXXI | account of the difference in species which they exhibit as compared 29 1, XXXI | exhibit as compared with other species, yet if we have them by 30 1, XXXV | in their very essence and species — that is to say, in their 31 1, XLVIII| therefore ought to constitute a species by themselves.~Let the tenth 32 1, XLVIII| and formed into a distinct species, because in many cases the 33 1, XLVIII| however, to make a distinct species of it, on account of a remarkable 34 1, XLVIII| constitutes the peculiar species of motion in question.~Let 35 1, XLVIII| it seems, to constitute a species by itself. It is a motion 36 1, XLVIII| then, have I set forth the species or simple elements of motions, 37 1, XLVIII| mean to say that other species may not be added, or that