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| Alphabetical [« »] consisted 11 consistency 6 consistent 9 consisting 35 consists 84 consolations 1 consolidate 1 | Frequency [« »] 35 consequence 35 considers 35 consist 35 consisting 35 content 35 depending 35 fact | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances consisting |
Book, Chapter
1 I, III | a man, being a creature consisting of soul and body, be the 2 II, I | sleeps, and Socrates the man, consisting of body and soul, when he 3 II, III | solidity: all the rest, consisting almost wholly in the sensible 4 II, XII | complex one;—v.g. beauty, consisting of a certain composition 5 II, XIV | perception of motion; which consisting in a constant succession, 6 II, XVII | than as number does; which, consisting of additions of finite units 7 II, XXI | being an action, and freedom consisting in a power of acting or 8 II, XXI | case is not free: liberty consisting in a power to act or not 9 II, XXI | once considers of: liberty consisting in a power to act or to 10 II, XXII | drunkenness, a lie, &c.; which consisting of several combinations 11 II, XXII | that stand for them. For, consisting of a company of simple ideas 12 II, XXII | one idea. Every mixed mode consisting of many distinct simple 13 II, XXII | them as one complex one, consisting of those parts; and the 14 II, XXIV | as make an army, though consisting of a great number of distinct 15 II, XXIV | of particular substances, consisting of an aggregate of divers 16 II, XXVI | i.e., another complex idea, consisting of a collection of simple 17 II, XXVII| united together, the mass, consisting of the same atoms, must 18 II, XXX | v.g. a rational creature, consisting of a horse’s head, joined 19 II, XXX | uniform, unorganized body, consisting, as to sense, all of similar 20 II, XXX | existing that we know; and consisting of such collections of ideas 21 II, XXXII| perceptions in our minds consisting, as has been said, only 22 II, XXXII| properties; for those properties consisting mostly in the active and 23 III, IV | in complex ideas; which, consisting of several simple ones, 24 III, VI | different abstract ideas, consisting not exactly of the same 25 III, VI | distinguish them one from another, consisting only in the different collection 26 III, VI | sorts of artificial things, consisting for the most part in nothing 27 III, VI | abstracting this complex idea, consisting of a substance having that 28 III, VII | tongue there is a particle consisting of but one single letter, 29 III, XI | a virtue, indeed, which, consisting for the most part in nothing 30 IV, II | Intuitive. All our knowledge consisting, as I have said, in the 31 IV, II | answer, No: for our knowledge consisting in the perception of the 32 IV, III | their ways of operating, consisting in a texture and motion 33 IV, IV | ideas of substances, which, consisting of a collection of simple 34 IV, VII | self-evident a proposition as that consisting of more general terms, “ 35 IV, VIII | joined; and propositions consisting of such terms, may, with