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| Alphabetical [« »] synopsis 1 syrups 1 system 9 systems 29 tab 8 table 16 tables 19 | Frequency [« »] 29 quite 29 sea 29 space 29 systems 29 thought 29 ways 28 act | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances systems |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, VIII | we now possess are merely systems for the nice ordering and 2 1, XLIV | judgment all the received systems are but so many stage plays, 3 1, XLIV | fashion. Nor is it only of the systems now in vogue, or only of 4 1, XLIV | mean this only of entire systems, but also of many principles 5 1, LXI | playbooks of philosophical systems and the perverted rules 6 1, LXI | general divisions of such systems I must say something; something 7 1, LXII | Idols of the Theater, or of Systems, are many, and there can 8 1, LXII | bold to educe and construct systems, wresting all other facts 9 1, LXIII | philosophy is compared with other systems of note among the Greeks. 10 1, LXV | harm, whether to entire systems or to their parts. For the 11 1, LXVI | mischievous authorities of systems, which are founded either 12 1, LXVII | against the intemperance which systems of philosophy manifest in 13 1, LXIX | established, such are the systems of philosophy and the contemplations 14 1, LXX | mentioned (signs that the systems of philosophy and contemplation 15 1, LXXII | can be predicted of those systems of philosophy.~ 16 1, LXXIII | philosophies. Now, from all these systems of the Greeks, and their 17 1, LXXIV | increase and progress of systems and sciences. For what is 18 1, LXXVI | first principles and entire systems are for the most part extinguished, 19 1, LXXVI | appears that neither in the systems themselves nor in the modes 20 1, LXXVII | after its publication the systems of older philosophers died 21 1, LXXVII | the falling off of the old systems upon the publication of 22 1, LXXVII | suffered shipwreck, then the systems of Aristotle and Plato, 23 1, LXXVII | soundness in the received systems and sciences are not good, 24 1, LXXXVII| LXXXVII~Moreover, the ancient systems have received no slight 25 1, LXXXIX | perilous by the summaries and systems of the schoolmen who, having 26 1, XCIX | theories, or the received systems of philosophy and doctrine. 27 1, XCIX | created in philosophical systems must be utterly scattered 28 1, XCIX | last to some one of those systems which prevailed in ancient 29 1, XCIX | from them completed their systems and arts, and afterward,