Part, Paragraph
1 Ded, 4 | manifest to all that they are real demonstrations. And finally,
2 Ded, 6 | existence of God or the real distinction of mind and
3 I, 6 | which this is composed are real. And on the same principle,
4 I, 6 | which, just as of certain real colors, all those images
5 I, 6 | things, whether true and real, or false and fantastic,
6 II, 6 | to me. I am, however, a real thing, and really existent;
7 II, 7 | and perceive something real; but because my perception
8 III, 14| imagine that it is less real; but we ought to consider
9 III, 19| are in truth the ideas of real objects. For although I
10 III, 19| whether they are or are not real qualities: and since, ideas
11 III, 19| represents cold as something real and positive will not improperly
12 III, 25| idea represents nothing real, as I have already said
13 III, 25| distinctly conceives as real or true, and as implying
14 IV, 4 | present to my consciousness a real and positive idea of God,
15 IV, 4 | as error is not something real, which depends for its existence
16 VI | MATERIAL THINGS, AND OF THE REAL DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE
17 VI, 15| nevertheless, experience any real or positive impulse determining
18 VI, 24| my brain, rather than a real man. But when I perceive
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