| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] 78 2 8 55 857324 1 9 47 90 1 9000 1 91 2 | Frequency [« »] 48 nay 48 necessity 48 taking 47 9 47 allowed 47 appearances 47 appears | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances 9 |
Book, Chapter
1 I, I | thoughts rightly that way.~9. It is false that reason 2 I, II | prosecute what others avoid.~9. Instances of enormities 3 I, III | atheism as their lives do.~9. The name of God not universal 4 II, I | some scarce ever at all.~9. The soul begins to have 5 II, VII | ways get the idea of power.~9. Idea of succession. Besides 6 II, VIII | which produce them in us.~9. Primary qualities of bodies. 7 II, IX | reasons they were convinced.”~9. This judgment apt to be 8 II, X | and quickness of parts.~9. A defect which belongs 9 II, XI | the first use of language.~9. Abstraction. The use of 10 II, XIII | compare them with those other.~9. Place relative to a present 11 II, XIV | part of a circle in motion.~9. The train of ideas has 12 II, XV | minutes, days, and years, &c.~9. All the parts of extension 13 II, XVII | thoughts can find none.~9. Number affords us the clearest 14 II, XX | sense of a present evil.~9. Hope is that pleasure in 15 II, XXI | two may make this clear.~9. Supposes understanding 16 II, XXII | that excite them in us.~9. How we get the ideas of 17 II, XXIII | different parts of our bodies.~9. Three sorts of ideas make 18 II, XXV | those birds themselves.~9. Relations all terminate 19 II, XXVII | making of the same man.~9. Personal identity. This 20 II, XXVIII| the hands of the ALMIGHTY.~9. Civil law the measure of 21 II, XXIX | different signification.~9. Their simple ones mutable 22 II, XXXI | collection of all its properties.~9. Their powers usually make 23 II, XXXII | unintelligibly to others.~9. Simple ideas may be false, 24 II, XXXIII| most men wholly overlooked.~9. Wrong connexion of ideas 25 III, III | comprehended under the name animal.~9. General natures are nothing 26 III, IV | when he used that sound?~9. Modern definitions of motion. 27 III, V | of their significations.~9. This shows species to be 28 III, VI | their general denominations?~9. Not the real essence, or 29 III, IX | using the same language.~9. The way of learning these 30 III, X | commendation and reward.~9. This learning very little 31 III, XI | even to themselves alone.~9. Second remedy: To have 32 IV, I | to think on at one time.~9. Habitual knowledge is of 33 IV, II | knowledge and reasonings.~9. Demonstration not limited 34 IV, III | different from any other.~9. Of their co-existence, 35 IV, IV | are in the minds of men.~9. Nor will it be less true 36 IV, V | that such have existed.~9. Truth and falsehood in 37 IV, VI | that all gold is fixed.~9. No discoverable necessary 38 IV, VII | of our knowledge depend.~9. Because maxims or axioms 39 IV, VIII | instructive real knowledge.~9. General propositions concerning 40 IV, X | kind of thing that must be.~9. Two sorts of beings, cogitative 41 IV, XI | made acquainted with them.~9. But reaches no further 42 IV, XII | been demonstrated to him.~9. Our knowledge of substances 43 IV, XVI | he himself is a witness.~9. Experience and testimonies 44 IV, XVII | well as in the general.~9. Our reason often fails 45 IV, XVIII | examination, as a matter of faith.~9. Revelation in matters where 46 IV, XIX | our dim candle, reason.~9. Enthusiasm how to be discovered. 47 IV, XX | itself not evidently true.~9. Instilled in childhood.