Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] beholden 2 beholdeth 2 beholding 4 being 159 belief 18 beliefs 2 believe 9 | Frequency [« »] 167 these 165 well 164 like 159 being 153 only 150 make 149 many | Francis Bacon The advancement of learning IntraText - Concordances being |
Book, Chapter
1 Int | unfruitfulness of the way, being a philosophy (as his lordship 2 1, Int | understanding admirable, being able to compass and comprehend 3 1, I | Lumen madidum, or maceratum, being steeped and infused in the 4 1, II | began to flock about him, being allured with the sweetness 5 1, II | and he will fly apace from being irresolute. Let him look 6 1, II | and it will hold him from being vaporous or imaginative. 7 1, II | Elizabeth and your Majesty, being as Castor and Pollux, lucida 8 1, III | of Junia, of which, not being represented as many others 9 1, III | philosophers for going too far and being too exact in their prescripts 10 1, III | true or worthy end of their being and ordainment, and therefore 11 1, III | arrogantly and uncivilly being applied to himself out of 12 1, III | out of his own mouth, but, being applied to the general state 13 1, III | pertinently and justly, when, being invited to touch a lute, 14 1, III | houses of great persons, being little better than solemn 15 1, IV | finding his own solitude, being in nowise aided by the opinions 16 1, IV | reading, but their wits being shut up in the cells of 17 1, IV | popular contempt, the people being apt to contemn truths upon 18 1, IV | truth: for the truth of being and the truth of knowing 19 1, IV | divers of the Arabians, being fraught with much fabulous 20 1, V | strange to our assent; but being demonstrate, our mind accepteth 21 1, VI | beauty of the form. This being supposed, it is to be observed 22 1, VI | for necessity; for there being then no reluctation of the 23 1, VII | and belief. Which honour, being so high, had also a degree 24 1, VII | serenity of his mind, which being no ways charged or encumbered, 25 1, VII | book entitled Caersares, being as a pasquil or satire to 26 1, VII | his speeches and answers, being full of science and use 27 1, VII | first into Gaul, his estate being then utterly overthrown 28 1, VII | his entitled De Analogia, being a grammatical philosophy, 29 1, VII | other conditions; wherein he being resolute not to give way, 30 1, VII | there accumulate, Metellus, being tribune, forbade him. Whereto 31 1, VIII | the gem; or of Midas, that being chosen judge between Apollo, 32 1, VIII | praetulit immortalitati, being a figure of those which 33 2, Int | the gravest of sciences, being the arts of arts; the one 34 2, I | with his eye out, that part being wanting which doth most 35 2, I | truth; where, the subject being touching beauty, Socrates, 36 2, I | and it becomes you well, being a man so trim in your vestments,” & 37 2, II | men and matters. But such being the workmanship of God, 38 2, II | the wisdom of the pilot, being one of the most sufficient 39 2, II | of England and Scotland, being now reunited in the ancient 40 2, II | history of cosmography: being compounded of natural history, 41 2, III | unto divine prophecies, being of the nature of their Author, 42 2, IV | the imagination; which, being not tied to the laws of 43 2, IV | doth deny it, the world being in proportion inferior to 44 2, IV | the fable that the giants being overthrown in their war 45 2, IV | report no deficience; for being as a plant that cometh of 46 2, V | commixed and confused; but being examined, it seemeth to 47 2, V | not to have been visited, being of so excellent use both 48 2, VI | VI~(1) This science being therefore first placed as 49 2, VI | received and may receive by being commixed together; as that 50 2, VII | supposeth in nature only a being and moving; and metaphysic 51 2, VII | no enumeration, this part being but as a gloss or paraphrase 52 2, VII | easily comprehensible; and being known induceth and manifesteth 53 2, VII | and worthy to be inquired, being kept within their own province, 54 2, VII | of the rest, both causes being true and compatible, the 55 2, VIII | metaphysic. For the subject of it being quantity, not quantity indefinite, 56 2, VIII | immersed in matter. For it being the nature of the mind of 57 2, VIII | containing all the inventions (being the works or fruits of Nature 58 2, VIII | and his scholar Donius, being as a pastoral philosophy, 59 2, IX | the mind and body, which being mixed cannot be properly 60 2, IX | and fantastical arts, yet being purged and restored to their 61 2, IX | of this observation, as being most part of their ability; 62 2, IX | strict; nay, the faith itself being clear and serene from all 63 2, IX | said, “a Delian diver,” being difficult and profound. 64 2, X | harmony. So, then, the subject being so variable hath made the 65 2, X | conjectural; and the art being conjectural hath made so 66 2, X | son of [the] sun, the one being the fountain of life, the 67 2, X | which I think good to note, being a few of many, and those 68 2, X | anatomies; but the latter, being comparative and casual, 69 2, X | many diseases; which not being observed, they quarrel many 70 2, X | not in fault; the fault being in the very frame and mechanic 71 2, X | manifest in life: which being supposed, though the inhumanity 72 2, X | state of Rome, which either being consuls inclined to the 73 2, X | inclined to the people, or being tribunes inclined to the 74 2, X | the best physicians, which being learned incline to the traditions 75 2, X | traditions of experience, or being empirics incline to the 76 2, X | deficiences which it hath; being neither fine enough to deceive, 77 2, XIII | the manner of antiquity being to consecrate inventors) 78 2, XIII | necessity of conservation of being. For so Cicero saith very 79 2, XIII | the Egyptians’ gods; there being little left to the faculty 80 2, XIII | ever correct that error, being (as the physicians speak) 81 2, XIII | and variable discourses; being rather like progresses of 82 2, XIII | interpretatio naturae; the former being but a degree and rudiment 83 2, XIII | contrary. And Cicero himself, being broken unto it by great 84 2, XIII | as things of great use, being mixtures of logic with the 85 2, XIV | syllogism, for the proof being not immediate, but by mean, 86 2, XIV | sophism of all sophisms being equivocation or ambiguity 87 2, XIV | that the spirit of man, being of an equal and uniform 88 2, XIV | kinds of subjects. For there being but four kinds of demonstrations, 89 2, XV | funambuloes, baladines; the one being the same in the mind that 90 2, XVI | signified. As Periander, being consulted with how to preserve 91 2, XVI | regarded; so these arts, being here placed with the principal 92 2, XVII | the vulgar capacities from being admitted to the secrets 93 2, XVII | satisfy. But particulars being dispersed do best agree 94 2, XVII | and barren generalities; being but the very husks and shells 95 2, XVII | sciences, all the kernel being forced out and expulsed 96 2, XVII | passed over in silence, being in my judgment the more 97 2, XVII | which have been made since; being nothing but a mass of words 98 2, XVIII| the vulgar capacities from being admitted to the secrets 99 2, XVIII| satisfy. But particulars being dispersed do best agree 100 2, XVIII| and barren generalities; being but the very husks and shells 101 2, XVIII| sciences, all the kernel being forced out and expulsed 102 2, XVIII| passed over in silence, being in my judgment the more 103 2, XVIII| which have been made since; being nothing but a mass of words 104 2, XIX | that the first six kings being in truth as tutors of the 105 2, XX | and not with the teacher; being directed to the auditor’ 106 2, XX | and more profound: which being by them in part omitted 107 2, XX | conservation of life and being; according to that memorable 108 2, XX | of Pompeius Magnus, when being in commission of purveyance 109 2, XX | for a famine at Rome, and being dissuaded with great vehemency 110 2, XX | feeling of communion.~(8) This being set down and strongly planted, 111 2, XX | philosophy and contemplation, who being asked what he was, answered, “ 112 2, XXI | 4) The former question being debated between Socrates 113 2, XXI | aspersion of all other arts; and being in some opinion one of the 114 2, XXI | in the spirits thereof, being agreeable to truth and apt 115 2, XXI | the killing of a tyrant being a usurper, they were divided 116 2, XXII | which are most radical in being the fountains and causes 117 2, XXII | exercise and custom, which being so conducted doth prove 118 2, XXII | indeed another nature; but, being governed by chance, doth 119 2, XXIII| De petitione consulatus (being the only book of business 120 2, XXIII| the example is the ground, being set down in a history at 121 2, XXIII| null est via, and the like, being taken and used as spurs 122 2, XXIII| there be not anything in being and action which should 123 2, XXIII| be an end worthy of his being, and many times the worthiest 124 2, XXIII| as lidger; whose opinion being asked touching the appointment 125 2, XXIII| are: the Italian proverb being elegant, and for the most 126 2, XXIII| their ends. For princes being at the top of human desires, 127 2, XXIII| his parts and inclination; being such, nevertheless, as a 128 2, XXIII| himself and his example being the unlikest in the world; 129 2, XXIII| unlikest in the world; the one being fierce, violent, and pressing 130 2, XXIII| without dwelling too long, or being too serious; or with an 131 2, XXIII| are seldom recovered, it being extreme hard to play an 132 2, XXIII| directions: chiefly that, that being without well-being is a 133 2, XXIII| a curse, and the greater being the greater curse; and that 134 2, XXIII| philosophers aspired unto; who being silent, when others contended 135 2, XXIII| means to keep them from being too vast in volume, or too 136 2, XXIII| De petitione consulatus (being the only book of business 137 2, XXIII| the example is the ground, being set down in a history at 138 2, XXIII| null est via, and the like, being taken and used as spurs 139 2, XXIII| there be not anything in being and action which should 140 2, XXIII| be an end worthy of his being, and many times the worthiest 141 2, XXIII| as lidger; whose opinion being asked touching the appointment 142 2, XXIII| are: the Italian proverb being elegant, and for the most 143 2, XXIII| their ends. For princes being at the top of human desires, 144 2, XXIII| his parts and inclination; being such, nevertheless, as a 145 2, XXIII| himself and his example being the unlikest in the world; 146 2, XXIII| unlikest in the world; the one being fierce, violent, and pressing 147 2, XXIII| without dwelling too long, or being too serious; or with an 148 2, XXIII| are seldom recovered, it being extreme hard to play an 149 2, XXIII| directions: chiefly that, that being without well-being is a 150 2, XXIII| a curse, and the greater being the greater curse; and that 151 2, XXIII| philosophers aspired unto; who being silent, when others contended 152 2, XXIII| means to keep them from being too vast in volume, or too 153 2, XXV | fundamental, and what perfective, being matter of further building 154 2, XXV | confessed, that the Scriptures, being given by inspiration and 155 2, XXV | whereof is, because not being like man, which knows man’ 156 2, XXV | with the Scriptures, which being written to the thoughts 157 2, XXV | directed by the former—the one being as the internal soul of 158 2, XXV | and conservation of the being, to the Holy Spirit. So 159 2, XXV | confessions: but now the adoration being in spiritu et veritate,