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Alphabetical    [«  »]
violin 2
virginis 1
virtually 1
virtue 36
virtues 28
viscous 1
visibility 1
Frequency    [«  »]
36 process
36 received
36 taken
36 virtue
35 idols
35 inquiry
35 mean
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

virtue

   Book, Aphorism
1 1, XCIX | things are of much latent virtue, and yet of no use except 2 1, XCIX | to observe the force and virtue and consequences of discoveries, 3 1, XXIV | impediments, or at any rate by virtue of its strength dominant 4 1, XXIV | predominance of its own virtue. And instances of this kind 5 1, XXVI | light. But heat and the virtue of the magnet, after they 6 1, XXXV | extend beyond the orb of its virtue (which acts always to a 7 1, XXXVI | the earth that the earth's virtue could not act upon them, 8 1, XXXVI | account of the diminished virtue of its weights. Repeat the 9 1, XXXVI | account of the increased virtue of its weights. If the virtue 10 1, XXXVI | virtue of its weights. If the virtue of the weights is found 11 1, XXXVI | susceptible and sensitive to the virtue emanating from the earth 12 1, XXXVII| distance of space, in which the virtue or action remains suspended 13 1, XXXVII| succession of actual contacts the virtue passes from limit to limit, 14 1, XXXVII| but only the bodies, the virtue, and the distances. In rays 15 1, XXXVII| that magnetic or attractive virtue admits of media without 16 1, XXXVII| distinction, nor is the virtue impeded in any kind of medium. 17 1, XXXVII| kind of medium. And if the virtue or action has nothing to 18 1, XXXVII| that there is a natural virtue or action subsisting for 19 1, XXXVII| For allow that natural virtue and action, emanating from 20 1, XLII | possibly be found to deaden its virtue more than any other; comparatively, 21 1, XLIV | quantity, or by predominance of virtue. And unless these four things 22 1, XLV | if there be any magnetic virtue flowing from the earth ( 23 1, XLVI | of rhubarb the purgative virtue is extracted first, the 24 1, XLVII | how far the mode of the virtue depends upon the quantity 25 1, XLVII | bears to the mode of its virtue. For it would be natural 26 1, XLVIII| several portion of it, and in virtue of which it absolutely refuses 27 1, XLVIII| heat, or by the eminent virtue of some cognate body, or 28 1, XLVIII| the help derived from the virtue of a cognate body, it is 29 1, XLVIII| which excites in iron the virtue of detaining iron by similarity 30 1, XLVIII| iron being cast off by the virtue of the magnet. And as for 31 1, XLVIII| power of communicating its virtue from stone to iron, and 32 1, XLVIII| homogeneous substances; but this virtue is bound, as is the other, 33 1, XLVIII| loses nothing of its own virtue. Similarly leaven, yeast, 34 1, L | represented in form, perfected in virtue, varied in quantity, and, 35 1, LI | without losing any of its virtue, or in yeast and the like; 36 1, LII | forever a rebel, but in virtue of that charter "In the


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