Part, §
1 Text, VII | less credible, for your being so sensibly touched, and
2 Text, VII | man of those times for his being an Infidel. Not, that I
3 Text, XXX | half of the moment, and as being about to acquire the other;
4 Text, XXX | lost one half of it, and being about to lose the other.''
5 Text, XXX | contradict common sense; it being plain, that what hath no
6 Text, XXXII | Your moments (I say) not being themselves assignable quantities,
7 Text, XXXII | All which is so far from being true, that the very first
8 Text, XXXIII | will not affirm this; it being most evident, that the product
9 Text, XXXIV | passage, Sir Isaac means their being actually reduced to nothing.
10 Text, XXXVII | others, a Doctrine instead of being illustrated may be explained
11 Text, XXXVIII| conceive a medium between being fast asleep and demonstrating?
12 Text, XL | that you do, to wit, their being inconsiderable in practical
13 Text, XLI | difference is capable of being divided into any, or into
14 Text, XLI | is one whit the less, it being evident that a man may reason
15 Text, XLIII | the Opinions of others, being very desirous to hear what
16 Text, XLVIII | thereupon were not an effect of being inclined to carp or cavil
17 Text, XLIX | your self, and represent as being equally surprised at the
18 Text, L | Argumentum ad Hominem? And being so, whether it ought to
19 App, II | 4) which is so far from being true, that, on the contrary,
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