Part, §
1 Text, IV | had no Mind to it. When a Man thinks fit to publish any
2 Text, VII | reason assigned by a witty man of those times for his being
3 Text, VIII | how possible it is, for a man to cry out against Calumny
4 Text, XII | to publish as any other man, it is imputed to rashness
5 Text, XII | perplexities that beset a man, who undertakes to defend
6 Text, XV | represent your self (P. 52) as a man, ``whose highest ambition
7 Text, XV | to imitate the greatest man in his Defects, who even
8 Text, XVIII | in Mathematics. What any man evidently knows, he knows
9 Text, XVIII | can it be supposed, that a man of Sense and Spirit will
10 Text, XIX | I sincerely believe) any man living, to understand that
11 Text, XIX | writer was infallible. And a man of moderate parts, who takes
12 Text, XX | Demonstration: That if a man destroys his own Hypothesis,
13 Text, XXI | would only shew he was a man. And if by vertue of some
14 Text, XXI | errour in his principles a man be drawn into fallacious
15 Text, XXI | only as a weak but an ill man, as a Deceiver and an Impostor.
16 Text, XXXVIII| Induction, and Analogy, whence a man may derive and satisfy himself
17 Text, XLI | it being evident that a man may reason most absurdly
18 Text, XLVI | it is above the power of man to form a compleat idea
19 Text, L | for the sake of a Great man's discoveries, we must adopt
20 App, II | learned remains of that Great Man, whose original and free
21 App, III | Nothing is easier, than for a man to translate or copy, or
22 App, IV | too hard on an innocent man, who probably meant nothing,
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