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| Alphabetical [« »] distances 2 distant 5 distempered 1 distinct 42 distinction 9 distinctly 4 distinguish 12 | Frequency [« »] 44 opinion 44 shall 43 time 42 distinct 42 mean 42 nor 42 notions | George Berkeley Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous IntraText - Concordances distinct |
Dialogue
1 1| perceived? or, is it something distinct from their being perceived, 2 1| exterior to the mind, and distinct from their being perceived?~ 3 1| mean a real absolute being, distinct from, and without any relation 4 1| that pain is something distinct from heat, and the consequence 5 1| uniform sensation, or two distinct sensations?~HYL. But one 6 1| immediately perceived is nothing distinct from a particular sort of 7 1| sensible pain is nothing distinct from those sensations or 8 1| therefore, you speak of as distinct from these, I know nothing 9 1| CORPOREAL SUBSTANCE is nothing distinct from SENSIBLE QUALITIES.~ 10 1| substance, prior to and distinct from extension to be the 11 1| frame in your thoughts a distinct ABSTRACT IDEA of motion 12 1| its own nature entirely distinct from extension?~HYL. I tell 13 1| PHIL. So that something distinct from, and exclusive of, 14 1| have in itself an extension distinct from the extension of that 15 1| SUBSTRATUM was something distinct from and exclusive of extension?~ 16 1| painted forth by several distinct things, each of which is 17 2| THE MINDS OF SPIRITS, or distinct from their being perceived. 18 2| and have all existence distinct from being perceived by 19 2| an absolute subsistence distinct from their being perceived 20 2| fancy are not altogether so distinct, so strong, vivid, and permanent, 21 2| have therefore SOME cause distinct from me and them: of which 22 2| INSTRUMENT, as taken in a distinct sense from CAUSE, which 23 2| an unthinking substance, distinct from its being perceived, 24 2| Something entirely unknown, distinct from all these.~PHIL. It 25 2| whether you can frame a distinct idea of Entity in general, 26 3| signs and effects indicating distinct finite agents like ourselves, 27 3| one individual principle, distinct from colour and sound; and, 28 3| have an ABSOLUTE existence, distinct from being perceived by 29 3| on the mind by a spirit distinct from us, have not the like 30 3| so, but some THIRD NATURE distinct from Matter and Spirit. 31 3| no notion of any action distinct from volition, neither. 32 3| to be without, in a Being distinct from ourselves. So far we 33 3| ideas as have no existence distinct from being perceived by 34 3| Matter, TAKEN FOR SOMETHING DISTINCT FROM WHAT WE PERCEIVE BY 35 3| men, speaking of several distinct ideas as united into one 36 3| since it is not a being distinct from sensations. A cherry, 37 3| mean an unknown nature, distinct from all those sensible 38 3| its EXISTENCE something distinct from its being perceived; 39 3| without, or by some being distinct from itself. This is my 40 3| deny they have an existence distinct from being perceived; or 41 3| to them any subsistence distinct from their being perceived. 42 3| independency, or a subsistence distinct from being perceived by