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| Alphabetical [« »] passion 14 passionate 1 passionately 2 passions 29 passive 30 passport 1 past 69 | Frequency [« »] 29 manifest 29 mistakes 29 negation 29 passions 29 reader 29 rightly 29 told | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances passions |
Book, Chapter
1 I, III | minister to his pleasures and passions, and not make inquiry a 2 II, I | ideas, but some sort of passions arising sometimes from them, 3 II, X | turbulent and tempestuous passions; our affections bringing 4 II, XX | thoughts of the mind.~3. Our passions moved by good and evil. 5 II, XX | the hinges on which our passions turn. And if we reflect 6 II, XX | ourselves the ideas of our passions.~4. Love. Thus any one reflecting 7 II, XX | into the bare ideas of our passions, as they depend on different 8 II, XX | had it before us.~14. What passions all men have. These two 9 II, XX | ultimately. In fine, all these passions are moved by things, only 10 II, XX | that, in reference to the passions, the removal or lessening 11 II, XX | as a pain.~17. Shame. The passions too have most of them, in 12 II, XX | show how our ideas of the passions are got from sensation and 13 II, XX | this as a Discourse of the Passions; they are many more than 14 II, XX | discovery of truth. But the passions being of much more concernment 15 II, XXI | accompanies, most of the other passions, as wholly excluded in the 16 II, XXI | influence the will. These passions are scarce any of them, 17 II, XXI | think, scarce any of the passions to be found without desire 18 II, XXI | desire.~54. Government of our passions the right improvement of 19 II, XXI | moderation and restraint of our passions, so that our understandings 20 II, XXI | say, he cannot govern his passions, nor hinder them from breaking 21 II, XXI | consideration, will be found rather passions than actions; and consequently 22 II, XXXIII| in the understanding or passions, have been much less heeded 23 II, XXXIII| as well moral as natural, passions, reasonings, and notions 24 III, X | insinuate wrong ideas, move the passions, and thereby mislead the 25 IV, III | us certainty, if vices, passions, and domineering interest 26 IV, XIX | receive no evidence from our passions or interests, so it should 27 IV, XX | hypotheses.~III. Predominant passions or inclinations. IV. Authority.~ 28 IV, XX | penance.~12. III. Predominant passions. Probabilities which cross 29 IV, XX | appetites and prevailing passions run the same fate. Let ever