Part, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | animals; or if they chance to imagine something so novel that
2 II, 7 | of all the things I can imagine; for I supposed that all
3 II, 7 | truth frame one if I were to imagine myself to be anything, since
4 II, 7 | to be anything, since to imagine is nothing more than to
5 II, 9 | supposed) that nothing I imagine is true, still the power
6 II, 12| precisely, what is it that I imagine when I think of it in this
7 II, 12| movable ? Is it not that I imagine that the piece of wax, being
8 II, 12| same which I see, touch, imagine; and, in fine, it is the
9 III, 1 | things which I perceive or imagine are perhaps nothing at all
10 III, 6 | be false; for, whether I imagine a goat or chimera, it is
11 III, 6 | is not less true that I imagine the one than the other.
12 III, 14| ought not on this account to imagine that it is less real; but
13 III, 24| 24. And I must not imagine that I do not apprehend
14 III, 25| although, perhaps, we may imagine that such a being does not
15 V, 3 | first place, I distinctly imagine that quantity which the
16 V, 5 | As, for example, when I imagine a triangle, although there
17 V, 9 | on things; and as I may imagine a winged horse, though there
18 V, 10| perfection, as I am free to imagine a horse with or without
19 V, 11| necessary that I should ever imagine any triangle, but whenever
20 V, 11| contrary, I cannot even imagine such to be the case, so
21 VI, 2 | conception ]. For example, when I imagine a triangle I not only conceive (
22 VI, 2 | three sides; but I cannot imagine the thousand sides of a
23 VI, 2 | imagination; but I can likewise imagine it by applying the attention
24 VI, 3 | it chooses, it may thus imagine corporeal objects; so that
25 VI, 4 | But I am accustomed to imagine many other objects besides
26 VI, 19| extended things; for I cannot imagine any one of them how small
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