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| Alphabetical [« »] images 8 imaginable 5 imaginary 8 imagination 17 imaginations 14 imagine 103 imagined 20 | Frequency [« »] 17 going 17 highest 17 hinders 17 imagination 17 independent 17 infinitum 17 informed | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances imagination |
Book, Chapter
1 Read | hit alike upon every man’s imagination. We have our understandings 2 II, II | as far from our notice, imagination, and conception, as now 3 II, XIII| think that every floating imagination in men’s brains is presently 4 II, XVII| actually boundless, to which imagination the idea of space or expansion 5 III, II | talk barely of their own imagination, but of things as really 6 III, V | we frame to ourselves no imagination of anything existing, which 7 III, VI | together only by his own imagination, not taken from the existence 8 III, X | tarantula, without having any imagination or idea of what it stands 9 III, XI | extent of our knowledge or imagination reaches not beyond our own 10 IV, I | knowledge, no reasoning, no imagination, no distinct thoughts at 11 IV, IV | little further than bare imagination: and I believe it will appear 12 IV, VI | according to the useless imagination of the Schools, any one 13 IV, X | thinking beings. But this imagination, however more natural, is 14 IV, XI | sport and play of my own imagination, when I find that the characters 15 IV, XI | not be the effect of my imagination, nor could my memory retain 16 IV, XI | furnace be barely a wandering imagination in a drowsy man’s fancy, 17 IV, XI | something more than bare imagination. So that this evidence is