| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] obelisk 1 obeyed 1 obeying 1 object 30 objection 5 objects 20 obliged 1 | Frequency [« »] 30 latent 30 merely 30 namely 30 object 30 oil 30 regard 30 sort | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances object |
Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | the less follow up their object and engage with nature, 2 Pre | powers. As it is, however (my object being to open a new way 3 Pre | propounded. For I do not object to the use of this received 4 1, XXIX | is good; for in them the object is to command assent to 5 1, LI | than forms should be the object of our attention, its configurations 6 1, LXV | for vanity to become the object of veneration. Yet in this 7 1, LXVI | things are produced, the object of their contemplation and 8 1, LXVII | and roam as it were from object to object, rather than keep 9 1, LXVII | as it were from object to object, rather than keep on a course 10 1, LXXXI | sake, yet even with him the object will be found to be rather 11 1, XCII | most fair and excellent object to relax or diminish the 12 1, XCIX | the very point which I object to in others) is not the 13 1, XCIX | too, and conduces to the object we are seeking, although 14 1, XIII | light; for the nearer an object is brought to the light, 15 1, XXII | light received upon the object, resulting in the former 16 1, XXXI | of it. For since our main object is to make nature serve 17 1, XXXI | altogether agreeable to that object that the works which are 18 1, XL | of others which are.~An object escapes the senses either 19 1, XL | because the impression of the object is such as the sense cannot 20 1, XL | and occupied by another object, so that there is not room 21 1, XL | the first kind, where an object is imperceptible by reason 22 1, XL | substituting for it some other object which may challenge and 23 1, XL | sense takes to act in, the object is not perceived at all, 24 1, XL | the too great power of the object, the reduction may be effected 25 1, XL | effected either by removing the object to a greater distance from 26 1, XL | without annihilating the object; or by admitting and receiving 27 1, XL | receiving the reflection of the object where the direct impression 28 1, XL | sense is so charged with one object that it has no room for 29 1, XLV | cone, the rays from the object converging at a certain 30 1, XLVIII| strife, which is our present object~For of the motions I have