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| Alphabetical [« »] nothing 90 notion 52 notional 1 notions 42 notwithstanding 6 novelties 2 novelty 2 | Frequency [« »] 42 distinct 42 mean 42 nor 42 notions 42 object 41 cause 41 doth | George Berkeley Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous IntraText - Concordances notions |
Dialogue
1 1| things, or advancing such notions as are repugnant to plain 2 1| quitted several of the sublime notions I had got in their schools 3 1| revolt from metaphysical notions to the plain dictates of 4 1| are universal intellectual notions, and consequently independent 5 1| clearly to apprehend your notions, since this may much shorten 6 1| suggested to my mind the notions of God, virtue, truth, & 7 1| adapted to exact philosophic notions seem uncouth and out of 8 1| inquiry, to examine whose notions are widest of the common 9 1| Are not these shocking notions, and are not they subject 10 1| know not how to quit my old notions.~PHIL. To help you out, 11 2| but all in vain, for the notions it led me into, upon review, 12 2| agreed with you in those notions that led to Scepticism. 13 2| own myself less fond of my notions since they have been so 14 2| of these, shifting your notions, and making Matter to appear 15 2| I suspect all my other notions. For surely none could be 16 3| and extravagant than the notions you now maintain: and is 17 3| from my sensations, ideas, notions, actions, or passions, infer 18 3| but whoever entertains notions of the Deity suitable to 19 3| But, according to your notions, what difference is there 20 3| mankind averse from the notions I espouse, it is a misapprehension 21 3| aversion is against your notions and not mine. I do therefore 22 3| There lies the danger. New notions should always be discountenanced; 23 3| novelties, these are the strange notions which shock the genuine 24 3| speech not common. But, if my notions are once thoroughly understood, 25 3| their schemes not so much on notions as on words, which were 26 3| say, We differed in our notions; for that you super-added 27 3| irreconcilable with your notions. Moses tells us of a creation: 28 3| of the creation and your notions?~PHIL. If all possible sense 29 3| contradiction between Moses and my notions, unless you first shew there 30 3| natural, and undebauched notions of mankind; that it manifests 31 3| should have exactly just notions of the Deity, His attributes, 32 3| agreeable to the common notions of divines? or, is any more 33 3| repugnancy between the received notions of Materialists and the 34 3| Moses, with which their notions are utterly inconsistent; 35 3| reconcile this with your notions, if you expect I should 36 3| find in myself towards your notions.~PHIL. When a man is swayed, 37 3| to attend old and rooted notions? And indeed in this respect 38 3| have been) against your own notions.~HYL. I must needs own, 39 3| men will come into your notions with small difficulty, when 40 3| or altered in my former notions.~PHIL. I do not pretend 41 3| to be a setter-up of new notions. My endeavours tend only 42 3| ONLY IN THE MIND. Which two notions put together, do, in effect,