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| Alphabetical [« »] namely 3 names 1 natural 18 nature 52 natures 1 nay 3 near 1 | Frequency [« »] 70 they 64 are 60 with 52 nature 50 from 50 this 49 things | Francis Bacon The great instauration IntraText - Concordances nature |
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1 Pro | the mind of man and the nature of things, which is more 2 Pro | employ in the inquisition of nature is badly put together and 3 Pro | be content to wait upon nature instead of vainly affecting 4 Ded | the world itself and the nature of things and of the mind. 5 Ded | gathered from the facts of nature. May God Almighty long preserve 6 Pre | mind may exercise over the nature of things the authority 7 Pre | complaints of the subtlety of nature, the hiding places of truth, 8 Pre | common condition of men and nature than upon themselves. And 9 Pre | experience and the facts of nature as long as is necessary. 10 Pre | successfully investigate the nature of anything in the thing 11 Pre | subtle enough to deal with nature; and in attempting what 12 Pre | and more hidden parts of nature, it is necessary that a 13 Pre | against the fogs and clouds of nature, and the phantoms flitting 14 Pre | constantly among the facts of nature, withdraw my intellect from 15 Pre | that the inquisition of nature is in any part interdicted 16 Pre | the sciences which regard nature, the divine philosopher 17 Pre | Even as though the divine nature took pleasure in the innocent 18 Pre | far as the inquisition of nature is concerned) as a thing 19 Plan| concerning the Interpretation of Nature The Phenomena of the Universe; 20 Plan| anything as deficient, the nature of which is at all obscure, 21 Plan| difficulties and obscurities of nature. The art which I introduce 22 Plan| call "Interpretation of Nature") is a kind of logic, though 23 Plan| of the other to command nature in action.~In accordance 24 Plan| with this end is also the nature and order of the demonstrations. 25 Plan| too confusedly and letting nature slip out of its hands. For 26 Plan| yet in dealing with the nature of things I use induction 27 Plan| the sense, and closes with nature, and comes to the very brink 28 Plan| which will never lead to nature, though it offers an easy 29 Plan| well defined, and such as nature would really recognize as 30 Plan| out of the very bowels of nature.~Nor is this all. For I 31 Plan| from which all knowledge in nature must be sought, unless men 32 Plan| finding the genuine light of nature and kindling and bringing 33 Plan| are inherent in the very nature of the intellect, which 34 Plan| notions mixes up its own nature with the nature of things.~ 35 Plan| its own nature with the nature of things.~And as the first 36 Plan| true relation between the nature of things and the nature 37 Plan| nature of things and the nature of the mind, is as the strewing 38 Plan| or form of interpreting nature may keep the mind from going 39 Plan| examine and dissect the nature of this very world itself, 40 Plan| that it is no wonder if nature will not give herself into 41 Plan| be a history not only of nature free and at large (when 42 Plan| animals — but much more of nature under constraint and vexed; 43 Plan| the other, seeing that the nature of things betrays itself 44 Plan| be considered cardinal in nature. I mean those original passions 45 Plan| the primary elements of nature; such as dense and rare, 46 Plan| to become familiar with nature, I not unfrequently subjoin 47 Plan| approach may be made to nature, and matter supplied of 48 Plan| continual conversancy with nature, have a value beyond the 49 Plan| servant and interpreter of nature: what he does and what he 50 Plan| what he has observed of nature's order in fact or in thought; 51 Plan| loosed or broken, nor can nature be commanded except by being 52 Plan| fixed upon the facts of nature and so receiving their images