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nevertheless 6
new 6
new-raised 1
newton 30
next 5
nihil 2
nine 1
Frequency    [«  »]
31 was
30 cannot
30 must
30 newton
30 same
29 sense
29 would
George Berkeley
A Defence of Free-Thinking in Mathematics

IntraText - Concordances

newton

   Part, §
1 Text, II | and Authority of Sir Isaac Newton and his Followers, by shewing 2 Text, IX | to dissent from Sir Isaac Newton. I propose some helps to 3 Text, IX | Dr. Barrow and Sir Isaac Newton, and burn them under the 4 Text, XIII | freely own that Sir Isaac Newton hath shew'd himself an extraordinary 5 Text, XIV | Idol. Great as Sir Isaac Newton was, I think he hath, on 6 Text, XV | degree to imitate Sir Isaac Newton.'' It might, perhaps, have 7 Text, XV | or go beyond Sir Isaac Newton.'' And I am persuaded you 8 Text, XV | not only beyond Sir Isaac Newton, but beyond all mankind. 9 Text, XVIII | well as you or Sir Isaac Newton. And every one can know 10 Text, XXI | I have placed Sir Isaac Newton. [NOTE: Analyst, Sect. 18.] 11 Text, XXIII | where I find Sir Isaac Newton using such expressions as 12 Text, XXIII | if according to Sir Isaac Newton a Fluxion be the velocity 13 Text, XXIX | venerable ghost of Sir Isaac Newton whispers you, the Velocity 14 Text, XXX | you contradict Sir Isaac Newton. And if you take it in either 15 Text, XXXI | quantity which Sir Isaac Newton through his whole Lemma, 16 Text, XXXII | determined by Sir Isaac Newton, and the Increment of the 17 Text, XXXIV | was not possible Sir Isaac Newton could be guilty of it. For 18 Text, XXXV | hard usage of Sir Isaac Newton. You declaim copiously, 19 Text, XXXVII | those words of Sir Isaac Newton; and whether the difference 20 Text, XXXVIII| portraiture of Sir Isaac Newton and Dame Fortune, as will 21 Text, XXXIX | fully removed by Sir Isaac Newton in the first section of 22 Text, XLIV | and all from Sir Isaac Newton. Some plead inaccurate expressions 23 Text, XLIV | that we, who deny Sir Isaac Newton's Authority, shall not submit 24 Text, XLVIII | on Mr. Locke or Sir Isaac Newton, as they would on Aristotle 25 App | VINDICATION~Of Sir ISAAC NEWTON's~Principles of FLUXIONS ~ 26 App, I | passages from Sir Isaac Newton's Principia, and enlarge 27 App, II | been ascribed to Sir Isaac Newton (P. 36). And this writer 28 App, II | been, because Sir Isaac Newton had presumed to interpose 29 App, III | understands either Sir Isaac Newton, or me, or himself, (whatever 30 App, IV | diminished (P. 9), when Sir Isaac Newton hath expressly excluded


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