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| Alphabetical [« »] names 544 naming 14 narration 1 narrow 30 narrower 7 narrowly 1 narrowness 6 | Frequency [« »] 30 hands 30 laws 30 love 30 narrow 30 passive 30 perceptions 30 proceed | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances narrow |
Book, Chapter
1 I, I | Their notions are few and narrow, borrowed only from those 2 I, III | this universality is very narrow.~Secondly, it seems to me 3 II, VII | any one think these too narrow bounds for the capacious 4 II, X | storehouse of our ideas. For, the narrow mind of man not being capable 5 II, XI | them tied up within those narrow bounds, and have not (as 6 II, XIII | all being only from their narrow and gross imaginations: 7 II, XVII | infinite, in our weak and narrow thoughts, we do it primarily 8 II, XVII | beyond the reach of our narrow capacities: they do, without 9 II, XVII | too large for a finite and narrow capacity. And that cannot 10 II, XVII | the comprehension of our narrow capacities. For, whilst 11 II, XXI | absent good. For, in this narrow scantling of capacity which 12 II, XXI | to me to be the weak and narrow constitution of our minds. 13 II, XXI | almost none at all, fills our narrow souls, and so takes up the 14 II, XXIII| of both these, though our narrow understandings can comprehend 15 III, VI | infinitely exceed what our narrow understandings can conceive 16 III, XI | would shrink into a very narrow compass; and many of the 17 IV, III | and though these be very narrow bounds, in respect of the 18 IV, III | tied down to the dull and narrow information that is to be 19 IV, III | human science, is yet very narrow, and scarce any at all. 20 IV, III | Our knowledge being so narrow, as I have shown, it will 21 IV, III | But how much these few and narrow inlets are disproportionate 22 IV, III | lose themselves in. If we narrow our contemplations, and 23 IV, III | and experiment: which, how narrow and confined it is, how 24 IV, IV | creatures according to our narrow thoughts or opinions, nor 25 IV, VI | concerning substances is very narrow and scanty, in that part 26 IV, X | ourselves to reduce all to the narrow measure of our capacities, 27 IV, XI | thing it is for a man of a narrow knowledge, who having reason 28 IV, XV | has been shown, being very narrow, and we not happy enough 29 IV, XX | inquiry are commonly as narrow as their fortunes; and their 30 IV, XX | forwards and backwards in a narrow lane and dirty road, only