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| Alphabetical [« »] foul 1 found 212 foundation 45 foundations 30 founded 28 founders 1 fountain 7 | Frequency [« »] 30 fashion 30 feel 30 fitted 30 foundations 30 four 30 hands 30 laws | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances foundations |
Book, Chapter
1 Read | that the taking away false foundations is not to the prejudice 2 I, I | makes them unfit to be the foundations of all our other knowledge; 3 I, I | parts of truth, and the foundations of all our knowledge, which 4 I, II | on the minds of men the foundations of knowledge and the rules 5 I, II | almost that dare shake the foundations of all his past thoughts 6 I, III | call it pulling up the old foundations of knowledge and certainty, 7 I, III | conformable to truth, lays those foundations surer. This I am certain, 8 I, III | to clear my way to those foundations which I conceive are the 9 I, III | leaning on borrowed or begged foundations: or at least, if mine prove 10 II, XI | seem to depend on those foundations which I have laid, and to 11 II, XII | ideas, as the materials and foundations of the rest, the others 12 II, XXI | established upon its true foundations, cannot but determine the 13 II, XXVI | Time and place are also the foundations of very large relations; 14 IV, II | they are supposed to be the foundations of all our knowledge and 15 IV, III | and pursued, afford such foundations of our duty and rules of 16 IV, VII | are not the principles and foundations of all our other knowledge. 17 IV, VII | against, as overturning the foundations of all the sciences; it 18 IV, VII | are not, nor have been the foundations whereon any science hath 19 IV, VII | general maxims were not the foundations on which the first discoverers 20 IV, VII | knowledge began, and the foundations whereon the sciences were 21 IV, VII | were nowhere thought the foundations on which the sciences were 22 IV, XII | general propositions, as foundations whereon to build the knowledge 23 IV, XII | doctrines, thus laid down for foundations of any science, were called 24 IV, XVI | chapter: as they are the foundations on which our assent is built, 25 IV, XVI | according as those two foundations of credibility, viz. common 26 IV, XVII | the building upon false foundations brings a man into, that 27 IV, XVII | proofs drawn from any of the foundations of knowledge or probability. 28 IV, XVIII| subvert the principles and foundations of all knowledge, evidence, 29 IV, XVIII| overturn all the principles and foundations of knowledge he has given 30 IV, XVIII| knowledge: this shakes not the foundations of reason, but leaves us