Part, §
1 Text, II | who plainly see of how great Use Mathematical Learning
2 Text, IX | all the Mathematicians in Great Britain, or halloo the mob
3 Text, XII | Sophism in the writings of a great Author, and, in compliment
4 Text, XII | method of detracting from great men, as a concerted project
5 Text, XIV | do not adore your Idol. Great as Sir Isaac Newton was,
6 Text, XV | XV. No great Name upon earth shall ever
7 Text, XIX | living, to understand that great Author and to make sense
8 Text, XX | progress, though ever so great, in the Analysis: neither
9 Text, XXI | and perplexities. If the great author of the fluxionary
10 Text, XXI | suppose, might befall a great genius grappling with an
11 Text, XXI | remark, that I represent the great author not only as a weak
12 Text, XXIV | I had observed, that the Great Author had proceeded illegitimately,
13 Text, XXV | there is on your part either great ignorance or great disingenuity.
14 Text, XXV | either great ignorance or great disingenuity. If you mean
15 Text, XXV | whoever considers what the Great Author writes about it;
16 Text, XXV | very end and Design of the Great Author in this his invention
17 Text, XXVI | thereof may commit very great errours in Logic, which
18 Text, XXVII | and the context, that the Great Author in the end of his
19 Text, XXX | and your prejudices, by great names and authorities, by
20 Text, XXXI | then proceed to extoll the great Author of the fluxionary
21 Text, XXXIV | what you call (P. 56) ``so great, so unaccountable, so horrid,
22 Text, XXXV | and devices used by the great author of the fluxionary
23 Text, XXXV | in various lights is of great use to explain it; which
24 Text, XXXV | inconsistent accounts, which this great author gives of his momentums
25 Text, XXXVII | this Doctrine given by the great Author in different parts
26 Text, XXXVII | appeal to the writings of the Great Author. His methodus rationum
27 Text, XXXVII | you tell me: ``there is a great deal of difference between
28 Text, XXXVII | difference as to the sense be so great between will and can in
29 Text, XXXVIII| colouring, and represent the great Author of the Method of
30 Text, XL | which respect there may be great Logical errours, although
31 Text, XLIV | inaccurate expressions in the great Author, whereby they would
32 Text, XLIV | the principles of their great Master: for if they do not,
33 Text, L | Whether for the sake of a Great man's discoveries, we must
34 App, II | which he gives out, with great assurance, to have been,
35 App, II | learned remains of that Great Man, whose original and
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