Part, §
1 Text, IX | exclaim in the following Words. ``Let us burn or hang up
2 Text, XIX | consult, examine, weigh the words of Sir Isaac. In answer
3 Text, XXIII | of Curves, where his own words are, motuum vel incrementorum
4 Text, XXVII | it be not plain from the words, the sense, and the context,
5 Text, XXVIII| us hear Sir Isaac's own words: Earum (quantitatum scilicet
6 Text, XXVIII| address me in the following words ---Believe me there is no
7 Text, XXX | your strange conceits; if words without a meaning may be
8 Text, XXXIII| represented the sense of those words, evanescant jam augmenta
9 Text, XXXIII| is evident from his own words in the very same page, that
10 Text, XXXIV | his eyes must see it. The words Evanescere sive esse nihil
11 Text, XXXIV | be more sparing of hard words: Since, as you incautiously
12 Text, XXXIV | with authorities or harsh words. The latter will recoil
13 Text, XXXVII| letter, in which the very words of Sir Isaac should alone
14 Text, XXXVII| fairly drawn from those words of Sir Isaac Newton; and
15 Text, XLIV | they do, he could not want words to express his meaning.
16 Text, XLVIII| than to define in terms or words that which is incomprehensible
17 Text, XLVIII| in idea, forasmuch as any words can be either separated
18 Text, XLVIII| Definition and the Idea, between words or expressions and the conceptions
19 Text, XLVIII| whether laying aside the words he can frame in his mind
20 Text, L | mistake the signification of words, or stick at an expression
21 App, III | to be imposed on by hard words and magisterial assertions,
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