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Alphabetical    [«  »]
these 22
they 70
thing 20
things 49
think 5
third 1
this 50
Frequency    [«  »]
52 nature
50 from
50 this
49 things
47 so
45 may
42 all
Francis Bacon
The great instauration

IntraText - Concordances

things

   Part
1 Pro | follows manifold ignorance of things, and by reason of that ignorance 2 Pro | of man and the nature of things, which is more precious 3 Pro | because the primary notions of things which the mind readily and 4 Pro | it might be before these things would occur to anyone else, 5 Ded | honor of your age; if these things are indeed worth anything. 6 Ded | itself and the nature of things and of the mind. And to 7 Ded | resemble Solomon in so many things — in the gravity of your 8 Pre | exercise over the nature of things the authority which properly 9 Pre | to further perfection the things invented. In the mechanical 10 Pre | embellish and cultivate those things which have been invented 11 Pre | which has brought down to us things light and puffed up, while 12 Pre | truth, the obscurity of things, the entanglement of causes, 13 Pre | ignominy. Now for those things which are delivered and 14 Pre | kind, therefore, amend some things, but advance little, and 15 Pre | judgments, but I lead them to things themselves and the concordances 16 Pre | and the concordances of things, that they may see for themselves 17 Pre | nevertheless I so present these things naked and open, that my 18 Pre | Wherefore, seeing that these things do not depend upon myself, 19 Pre | likewise I humbly pray, that things human may not interfere 20 Pre | human may not interfere with things divine, and that from the 21 Pre | limits of duty in respect of things divine: for the sense is 22 Pre | or any of these inferior things, but for the benefit and 23 Pre | world. But it is the empty things that are vast; things solid 24 Pre | empty things that are vast; things solid are most contracted 25 Plan| importing into them some useful things by the way.~In laying out 26 Plan| take into account not only things already invented and known, 27 Plan| and known, but likewise things omitted which ought to be 28 Plan| now.~With regard to those things which I shall mark as omitted, 29 Plan| crossed my mind, and that the things which I desire and attempt 30 Plan| wishes, when they are in fact things which men may certainly 31 Plan| reason in the inquisition of things, and the true helps of the 32 Plan| arguments but of arts; not of things in accordance with principles, 33 Plan| although no one can doubt that things which agree in a middle 34 Plan| dealing with the nature of things I use induction throughout, 35 Plan| the heart and marrow of things.~But the greatest change 36 Plan| submitting to examination those things which the common logic takes 37 Plan| first, there are very many things which escape the sense, 38 Plan| sense is the measure of things.~To meet these difficulties, 39 Plan| reflect the genuine rays of things, it is necessary to seek 40 Plan| nature with the nature of things.~And as the first two kinds 41 Plan| The explanation of which things, and of the true relation 42 Plan| relation between the nature of things and the nature of the mind, 43 Plan| as my logic does) in many things — in end and office, in 44 Plan| seeing that the nature of things betrays itself more readily 45 Plan| For I drag into light many things which no one who was not 46 Plan| just the same relation to things and works which the letters 47 Plan| doubtful there are still some things which it seems necessary 48 Plan| include in this part such things as I have myself discovered, 49 Plan| the present condition of things and men's minds cannot easily


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