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Alphabetical    [«  »]
reasonably 9
reasoned 1
reasoning 68
reasonings 37
reasons 33
rebelled 1
rebound 1
Frequency    [«  »]
37 doth
37 error
37 grounds
37 reasonings
37 sleep
37 thousand
37 whiteness
John Locke
An essay concerning human understanding

IntraText - Concordances

reasonings

   Book,  Chapter
1 Read | into men’s discourses and reasonings. But this hinders not but 2 I, I | acquired knowledge and future reasonings? This would be to make nature 3 I, II | on which he bottoms his reasonings, and by which he judgeth 4 II, I | its former experiences, reasonings, and contemplations, to 5 II, X | And we in our thoughts, reasonings, and knowledge, could not 6 II, X | all his past thoughts and reasonings could be always present 7 II, XI | useful only to abstract reasonings, we may probably conjecture 8 II, XXIX | confusion in a man’s own reasonings and opinions within himself; 9 II, XXIX | is that in disputes and reasonings concerning eternity, or 10 II, XXXIII| extravagant, in the opinions, reasonings, and actions of other men. 11 II, XXXIII| moral as natural, passions, reasonings, and notions themselves, 12 II, XXXIII| mind, what notions, what reasonings, will there be about separate 13 II, XXXIII| with false views, and their reasonings with false consequences.~ 14 III, VII | dependence of his thoughts and reasonings upon one another. And to 15 III, X | disorder in discourses and reasonings about them, and be a great 16 III, XI | such contemplations and reasonings, about little more than 17 III, XI | that such thoughts and reasonings end in nothing but obscurity 18 III, XI | convey their discoveries, reasonings, and knowledge, from one 19 IV, I | in all its thoughts and reasonings, hath no other immediate 20 IV, II | of all our knowledge and reasonings.~9. Demonstration not limited 21 IV, III | and thereby making all our reasonings about it useless. In which 22 IV, III | all his perceptions and reasonings.~20. Remedies of our difficulties 23 IV, IV | of an enthusiast and the reasonings of a sober man will be equally 24 IV, IV | alone gives a value to our reasonings, and preference to one man’ 25 IV, IV | Because in all our thoughts, reasonings, and discourses of this 26 IV, IV | things themselves, nor the reasonings about them; no more than ( 27 IV, IV | separate our contemplations and reasonings from words, we might in 28 IV, V | all, in their thinking and reasonings within themselves, make 29 IV, VII | in the schools, that all reasonings are Ex praeognitis et praeconcessis, 30 IV, VIII | number of propositions, reasonings, and conclusions, in books 31 IV, XII | the easier dispatch in its reasonings, and drawing into comprehensive 32 IV, XII | and a continued chain of reasonings, proceed to the discovery 33 IV, XII | regia be added to it. Our reasonings from these ideas will carry 34 IV, XVII | immediate object of all our reasonings is nothing but particular 35 IV, XVII | mention here again:—~Through reasonings that are demonstrative. 36 IV, XVII | arguments, that men, in their reasonings with others, do ordinarily 37 IV, XX | understandings, apprehensions, and reasonings, to so great a latitude,


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