Part, §
1 Text, I | there are fair and candid Men among the Mathematicians.
2 Text, II | traduce a Set of learned Men whose Labours so greatly
3 Text, II | so, the less it employs Men's time and thoughts, the
4 Text, III | Argumentum ad Hominem against Men, who reject that very thing
5 Text, V | Times, and the Characters of Men, is well aware, there are
6 Text, V | this is not to own, that Men who reason well, are Enemies
7 Text, V | endeavour to shew, that such men are defective in Point of
8 Text, VI | the Inconsistence of such Men. If there be no such Thing
9 Text, VI | there will never be wanting Men to deal with them at their
10 Text, VII | imagine Geometry disposeth men to Infidelity; but that
11 Text, VII | Ignorance, or Vanity, like other Men Geometricians also become
12 Text, VIII| it inaccessible to most men, will be thought a criminal
13 Text, VIII| illustrious Seminary of Learned men, which hath produced so
14 Text, IX | nothing new or strange, that men should choose to indulge
15 Text, IX | tragical uproars of Bigoted men, be the Subject of their
16 Text, X | the arts of all bigoted men, raising terrour and calling
17 Text, XII | of detracting from great men, as a concerted project
18 Text, XIII| XIII. Two sorts of learned men there are: one, who candidly
19 Text, XIV | insult and exclaim at other men, because they do not adore
20 Text, XX | operating or calculating, men do not return to contemplate
21 Text, XX | elements of the method; men by further and frequent
22 Text, XXI | my opinion the greatest men have their Prejudices. Men
23 Text, XXI | men have their Prejudices. Men learn the elements of Science
24 Text, XXII| hath observed the ways of men, will be apt to suspect
25 Text, XLIV| some to be limits. As many Men, so many minds: each differing
26 Text, L | Mysteries? Whether with such men it is not a fair, reasonable,
27 Text, L | the Irreligion of those men is not to be presumed an
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