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| Alphabetical [« »] 13 42 14 40 15 37 16 32 1616 1 162486 1 1656 1 | Frequency [« »] 33 schools 33 sciences 33 wherever 32 16 32 carries 32 constitutions 32 conversation | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances 16 |
Book, Chapter
1 I, I | are not the same thing.~16. Assent to supposed innate 2 I, II | take leave to observe:—~16. These five either not all, 3 I, III | acknowledging no God at all.~16. Idea of God not innate 4 II, I | and so wholly thrown away.~16. On this hypothesis, the 5 II, VIII | themselves, which we call so.~16. Examples. Flame is denominated 6 II, XI | taught by others to imagine.~16. Appeal to experience. To 7 II, XIII | seriously to instruct him?~16. Division of beings into 8 II, XIV | observe and consider them.~16. Ideas, however made, include 9 II, XVII | leave any one to consider.~16. We have no positive idea 10 II, XX | sensation or reflection.~16. Removal or lessening of 11 II, XXI | as he himself wills it.~16. Powers, belonging to agents. 12 II, XXIII | immaterial thinking being.~16. No idea of abstract substance 13 II, XXVII | the same, and when not.~16. Consciousness alone unites 14 II, XXVIII| to signify the relation.~16. The denominations of actions 15 II, XXIX | in manifest absurdities.~16. Infinite divisibility of 16 II, XXXII | ourselves to examine it.~16. Simple ideas can none of 17 II, XXXIII| not able to separate them.~16. A curious instance. Instances 18 III, III | the other nominal essence.~16. Constant connexion between 19 III, IV | be obscure, or uncertain.~16. Simple ideas have few ascents 20 III, V | the other, as it happens.~16. Reason of my being so large 21 III, VI | can fully be assented to.~16. Monstrous births. Secondly, 22 III, IX | his use of it, stands for.~16. Instance, liquor. This 23 III, X | of truth that there is.~16. This makes errors lasting. 24 III, XI | we shall see by and by.~16. Morality capable of demonstration. 25 IV, III | textures at the same time.~16. Our knowledge of the co-existence 26 IV, IV | be found in many a beast.~16. Monsters. But it is the 27 IV, VI | substances as almost none at all.~16. Wherein lies the general 28 IV, VII | be further made manifest.~16. Instance in demonstrations 29 IV, X | else to one above another.~16. III. Thirdly, because a 30 IV, XVII | the other is intuitive.~16. To supply the narrowness 31 IV, XIX | demanding or having such proofs.~16. Criteria of a divine revelation. 32 IV, XX | improbable at the same time.~16. Where it is in our power