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| Alphabetical [« »] phil 407 philonous 50 philosopher 4 philosophers 30 philosophic 5 philosophical 6 philosophy 3 | Frequency [« »] 30 acknowledge 30 another 30 different 30 philosophers 30 well 29 call 29 had | George Berkeley Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous IntraText - Concordances philosophers |
Dialogue
1 1| affected doubts of some philosophers, and fantastical conceits 2 1| is no such thing as what PHILOSOPHERS CALL MATERIAL SUBSTANCE, 3 1| those invisible ones of the philosophers. It is not my business to 4 1| is no more than several philosophers maintain, who nevertheless 5 1| sensible qualities are by philosophers divided into PRIMARY and 6 1| an opinion current among philosophers, but was never thoroughly 7 1| you say be true, why those philosophers who deny the Secondary Qualities 8 1| for every opinion of the philosophers. But, among other reasons 9 2| treatment, then, do those philosophers deserve, who would deprive 10 2| in the same opinion. For philosophers, though they acknowledge 11 2| BEING OF A GOD. Divines and philosophers had proved beyond all controversy, 12 2| of words?~HYL. I thought philosophers might be allowed to speak 13 2| common received sense among philosophers themselves. But, not to 14 3| the affairs of life. But philosophers know better things.~PHIL. 15 3| indeed some heathens and philosophers have affirmed, but whoever 16 3| is now commonly used by philosophers to denote the immediate 17 3| which some heathens and philosophers are wont to ascribe to Nature, 18 3| agreeable to the usage either of philosophers or others to give the name 19 3| persuade me that the natural philosophers have been dreaming all this 20 3| it will not follow that philosophers have been doing nothing; 21 3| indeed, by any except a few philosophers, who do not know what they 22 3| erroneous conceits of the philosophers are owing to the same original: 23 3| used in the acceptation of philosophers, who pretend to an abstracted 24 3| same thing. But whether philosophers shall think fit to CALL 25 3| being more usual, than for philosophers to speak of the immediate 26 3| divers modern and Christian philosophers have thought Matter co-eternal 27 3| are terms introduced by philosophers; and, as used by them, imply 28 3| altogether between you and the philosophers: whose principles, I acknowledge, 29 3| do not now think with the Philosophers; nor yet altogether with 30 3| between the vulgar and the philosophers:—the former being of opinion,