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| Alphabetical [« »] owing 1 own 106 owned 2 pain 37 painful 8 pains 1 painted 1 | Frequency [« »] 38 though 37 external 37 out 37 pain 37 thought 35 absolute 35 believe | George Berkeley Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous IntraText - Concordances pain |
Dialogue
1 1| degree of heat a very great pain?~HYL. No one can deny it.~ 2 1| unperceiving thing capable of pain or pleasure?~HYL. No, certainly.~ 3 1| therefore be the subject of pain?~HYL. By no means.~PHIL. 4 1| acknowledge this to be no small pain?~HYL. I grant it.~PHIL. 5 1| yielding intense heat to be a pain. It should seem rather, 6 1| should seem rather, that pain is something distinct from 7 1| HYL. It is.~PHIL. And the pain?~HYL. True.~PHIL. Seeing 8 1| immediately perceived, and the pain; and, consequently, that 9 1| from a particular sort of pain.~HYL. It seems so.~PHIL. 10 1| sensation to be without pain or pleasure.~HYL. I cannot.~ 11 1| yourself an idea of sensible pain or pleasure in general, 12 1| therefore follow, that sensible pain is nothing distinct from 13 1| of painful sensation; and pain cannot exist but in a perceiving 14 1| matter. You know the least pain cannot exist unperceived; 15 1| therefore, degree of heat is a pain exists only in the mind. 16 1| pleasure, any more than of pain.~HYL. I did.~PHIL. And is 17 1| great degree of heat is a pain.~PHIL. I do not pretend 18 1| a pleasure as heat is a pain. But, if you grant it to 19 1| than a privation of both pain and pleasure. And that such 20 1| intense degree of cold is a pain; for to feel a very great 21 1| some kind of uneasiness or pain?~HYL. I grant it.~PHIL. 22 1| bitterness, that is, Pleasure and pain, agree to them?~HYL. Hold, 23 1| particular sorts of pleasure and pain; to which simply, that they 24 1| probable that pleasure and pain being rather annexed to 25 1| visibly absurd to hold that pain or pleasure can be in an 26 1| you must do it in that of pain. But how is it possible 27 1| how is it possible that pain, be it as little active 28 3| a doubt.~HYL. To suffer pain is an imperfection?~PHIL. 29 3| sometimes affected with pain and uneasiness by some other 30 3| The ideas, therefore, of pain and uneasiness are in God; 31 3| other words, God suffers pain: that is to say, there is 32 3| among other things, what pain is, even every sort of painful 33 3| His creatures to suffer pain, I make no question. But, 34 3| in us, can Himself suffer pain, I positively deny. We, 35 3| attended with the sensations of pain or pleasure in His mind. 36 3| joy or grief, pleasure or pain, to do with Absolute Existence; 37 3| forms, and am no longer in pain about their UNKNOWN NATURES