Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
former 49
formerly 16
forming 3
forms 35
foro 1
forsake 1
forth 6
Frequency    [«  »]
35 depending
35 fact
35 finding
35 forms
35 imperfection
35 learning
35 particle
John Locke
An essay concerning human understanding

IntraText - Concordances

forms

   Book,  Chapter
1 Read | Vague and insignificant forms of speech, and abuse of 2 II, XXIII| who, whatever substantial forms he may talk of, has no other 3 III, III | to them, as patterns or forms, (for, in that sense, the 4 III, III | essences as a certain number of forms or moulds, wherein all natural 5 III, VI | distinct internal substantial forms, and that it was those forms 6 III, VI | forms, and that it was those forms which made the distinction 7 III, VI | inquiries after “substantial forms”; wholly unintelligible, 8 III, VI | certain precise essences or forms of things, whereby all the 9 III, VI | 24. Not by substantial forms. Upon the whole matter, 10 III, VI | less were any substantial forms ever thought on by any but 11 III, VI | themselves about substantial forms, but are content with knowing 12 III, VI | troubled themselves about forms and essences, that have 13 III, VI | reason imagine, that those forms which there hath been so 14 III, VI | essences, or substantial forms; which come not within the 15 III, VIII | doctrine of substantial forms, and the confidence of mistaken 16 III, IX | with those archetypes or forms it has made. He that first 17 III, X | persuaded that substantial forms, vegetative souls, abhorrence 18 III, X | as much as Peripatetick forms and intentional species 19 III, X | doctrine of substantial forms, whereby they firmly imagine 20 IV, IV | one ventures to quit their forms of speaking, as not to foresee 21 IV, XVII | any one argument to those forms: and I believe scarce any 22 IV, XVII | so far looked into those forms, are not sure by virtue 23 IV, XVII | and a confidence in those forms of argumentation; but this 24 IV, XVII | in this very invention of forms of argumentation, wherein 25 IV, XVII | reasoning may be reduced to his forms of syllogism. But yet I 26 IV, XVII | is plain, found out some forms to be conclusive, and others 27 IV, XVII | and others not, not by the forms themselves, but by the original 28 IV, XVII | greater length in artificial forms, than in that short and 29 IV, XVII | art, not knowing the true forms of syllogism, nor the reasons 30 IV, XVII | not at all helped by the forms they are put into; though 31 IV, XVII | reason upon which those forms are established; whereas 32 IV, XVII | perfectly knowing in the forms of syllogism, or expert 33 IV, XVII | found those scholastic forms were of little use to discover 34 IV, XVII | considered,) those scholastic forms of discourse are not less 35 IV, XVII | not ascribe more to these forms than belongs to them, and


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL