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| Alphabetical [« »] indisposition 1 indispositions 1 indissolubility 1 individual 31 individuals 19 individuationis 2 indivisibility 1 | Frequency [« »] 31 comprehensive 31 doing 31 fixed 31 individual 31 inseparable 31 intelligent 31 moved | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances individual |
Book, Chapter
1 II, XXVII| from all other, and is that individual life, which existing constantly 2 II, XXVII| nature of matter why the same individual spirit may not be united 3 II, XXVII| be annexed solely to one individual substance, or can be continued 4 II, XXVII| same consciousness the same individual action it could not: but 5 II, XXVII| actions is annexed to any individual agent, so that another cannot 6 II, XXVII| consciousness, not being the same individual act, why one intellectual 7 II, XXVII| that Socrates, the same individual man, should be two persons. 8 II, XXVII| by Socrates, or the same individual man.~First, it must be either 9 II, XXVII| must be either the same individual, immaterial, thinking substance; 10 II, XXVII| and consequently the same individual man, wherein perhaps few 11 II, XXVII| consciousness were annexed to some individual immaterial substance or 12 II, XXVII| and the affection of, one individual immaterial substance.~But 13 II, XXVII| continued preserves it the same individual under the same denomination. ~ 14 II, XXXI | of substances, which each individual in its several kinds is 15 III, III | that is peculiar to each individual, and retaining so much of 16 III, III | existence of so much as one individual of that kind. For, were 17 III, V | constituted, before any one individual of that species ever existed. 18 III, VI | which are to be found in any individual of that sort. The foundation 19 III, VI | will: and our idea of any individual man would be as far different 20 III, VI | or the other, or to any individual whatever, till the mind 21 III, VI | essences perceived by us in individual substances are those qualities 22 III, VI | and everything in each individual will be essential to it; 23 III, VI | Even the real essences of individual substances imply potential 24 III, VI | immutable; but there is no individual parcel of matter to which 25 III, VI | different properties in any two individual substances of the same species, 26 III, VI | by which means the same individual will be a true man to the 27 III, VI | incommunicable to more than one individual; so to make other yet more 28 III, VI | what is to be found in each individual. If therefore any one will 29 III, X | internal constitution to each individual which we rank under one 30 IV, VI | regularly imparts to every individual of that kind, whereby it 31 IV, X | really all matter is not one individual thing, neither is there