Part, Paragraph
1 II, 9 | hear a noise, and feel heat. But it will be said that
2 II, 9 | hear a noise, and feel heat; this cannot be false, and
3 II, 12| and greater still when the heat increases; and I should
4 III, 7 | see the sun, or if I feel heat, I have all along judged
5 III, 8 | whether I will or not, I feel heat; and I am thus persuaded
6 III, 8 | idea (sensum vel ideam) of heat is produced in me by something
7 III, 8 | from myself, viz., by the heat of the fire by which I sit.
8 III, 14| others superior to them]; and heat can only be produced in
9 III, 14| at least as perfect as heat; and so of the others. But
10 III, 14| further, even the idea of the heat, or of the stone, cannot
11 III, 14| conceive existent in the heat or in the stone for although
12 III, 19| sounds, odors, tastes, heat, cold, and the other tactile
13 III, 19| ideas I have of cold and heat are so far from being clear
14 III, 19| is only the privation of heat, or heat the privation of
15 III, 19| the privation of heat, or heat the privation of cold; or
16 III, 19| nothing but a privation of heat; and so in other cases. ~
17 III, 25| before said of the ideas of heat and cold, and the like:
18 VI, 6 | perceived in them hardness, heat, and the other tactile qualities,
19 VI, 14| sounds, odors, tastes, heat, hardness, etc., I safely
20 VI, 15| respect similar to the idea of heat in my mind; that in a white
21 VI, 15| approaching the fire I feel heat, and even pain on approaching
22 VI, 15| something resembling the heat I feel is in the fire, any
23 VI, 15| in me those sensations of heat or pain. So also, although
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