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| Alphabetical [« »] collect 3 collection 1 college 1 colour 24 coloured 1 colours 44 column 1 | Frequency [« »] 25 sensations 25 unthinking 24 both 24 colour 24 degree 24 doubt 24 each | George Berkeley Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous IntraText - Concordances colour |
Dialogue
1 1| visible object hath that colour which we see in it.~PHIL. 2 1| VISIBLE OBJECT HATH THAT COLOUR WHICH WE SEE IN IT, you 3 1| would appear in the same colour which it exhibits to the 4 1| rays of light, alters the colour of any object, and will 5 1| body hath its true real colour inhering in it; and, if 6 1| for ascertaining that true colour, and distinguishing it from 7 1| there is no such thing as colour really inhering in external 8 1| which is some particular colour.~HYL. Right.~PHIL. And these 9 1| will—figure, or sound, or colour, it seems alike impossible 10 1| And what do you see beside colour, figure, and extension?~ 11 1| WHITE rather than any other colour? Or, directing your open 12 1| subsist without the mind. Colour cannot without extension, 13 1| to the imagination by the colour and figure which are properly 14 1| qualities, as size, figure, colour, &c., that is, our ideas, 15 1| itself INVISIBLE, be like a COLOUR; or a real thing, which 16 1| subterfuge, any new distinction, colour, or comment whatsoever, 17 2| the sensations of sound or colour in the mind? Or how is it 18 3| or stone? I tell you that colour, figure, and hardness, which 19 3| clothes were not of the same colour.~PHIL. It seems, then, we 20 3| I perceive a triangle, a colour, or a sound. The Mind, Spirit, 21 3| colours and sounds: that a colour cannot perceive a sound, 22 3| perceive a sound, nor a sound a colour: that I am therefore one 23 3| principle, distinct from colour and sound; and, for the 24 3| sight is affected with a red colour, the touch with roundness,