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Alphabetical    [«  »]
principally 1
principia 1
principle 11
principles 50
priori 2
privileged 1
privy 1
Frequency    [«  »]
53 were
51 bodies
50 man
50 principles
49 know
48 body
47 itself
George Berkeley
A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge

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principles

   Part, Chapter,  Paragraph
1 Pre, Int, 3 | right deductions from true principles should ever end in consequences 2 Pre, Int, 4 | can discover what those Principles are which have introduced 3 Pre, Int, 4 | inquiry concerning the First Principles of Human Knowledge, to sift 4 Pre, Int, 4 | understanding, so much as from false Principles which have been insisted 5 Pre, Int, 17 | upon a view of the false principles that have obtained in the 6 Pre, Int, 25 | care to clear the First Principles of Knowledge from the embarras 7 Text | TREATISE~ CONCERNING THE PRINCIPLES~ OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE~ 8 Text, 0, 11 | are run into by their own principles, resembles that antiquated 9 Text, 0, 34 | probably be made against the principles we have hitherto laid down. 10 Text, 0, 34 | objected that by the foregoing principles all that is real and substantial 11 Text, 0, 34 | objected, I answer, that by the principles premised we are not deprived 12 Text, 0, 36 | much a real being by our principles as by any other. Whether 13 Text, 0, 40 | imaginable; nor are there any principles more opposite to Scepticism 14 Text, 0, 45 | that from the foregoing principles it follows things are every 15 Text, 0, 46 | observe how far the received principles of philosophy are themselves 16 Text, 0, 47 | unavoidably follow, from the principles which are now generally 17 Text, 0, 47 | philosophers, who on the received principles demonstrate it beyond all 18 Text, 0, 47 | themselves are by their own principles forced to acknowledge, that 19 Text, 0, 48 | reasonably charged on the principles we have premised, so as 20 Text, 0, 48 | follow from the foregoing principles that bodies are annihilated 21 Text, 0, 50 | undermine those mechanical principles which have been applied 22 Text, 0, 51 | no longer say upon these principles that fire heats, or water 23 Text, 0, 58 | reasons. But, on the foregoing principles, there can be no such thing. 24 Text, 0, 58 | found to agree with the principles we have premised; for, the 25 Text, 0, 60 | be asked, how, upon our principles, any tolerable account can 26 Text, 0, 61 | not solve by the foregoing principles, yet this objection could 27 Text, 0, 61 | neither are the received principles free from the like difficulties; 28 Text, 0, 82 | shewn to be agreeable to our principles; and the difference betwixt 29 Text, 0, 84 | stress and import by our principles. What must we think of Moses' 30 Text, 0, 84 | consequence of the foregoing principles, must be looked upon only 31 Text, 0, 84 | but only on the received principles, and consequently makes 32 Text, 0, 85 | longer any place on our principles. Many other advantages there 33 Text, 0, 86 | 86. From the principles we have laid down it follows 34 Text, 0, 91 | acknowledged, on the received principles, that extension, motion, 35 Text, 0, 93 | hand, when men of better principles observe the enemies of religion 36 Text, 0, 101| are influenced by false principles to that degree as to mistrust 37 Text, 0, 107| those rules we take for principles: which we cannot evidently 38 Text, 0, 116| mind is clear upon the same principles that demonstrate the like 39 Text, 0, 118| from mistakes, if in their principles there lurks some secret 40 Text, 0, 118| evidence, yet their first principles are limited by the consideration 41 Text, 0, 118| involved in them. That the principles laid down by mathematicians 42 Text, 0, 118| of deduction from those principles clear and incontestible, 43 Text, 0, 123| essential a connexion with the principles and demonstrations in Geometry, 44 Text, 0, 124| prejudices do often pass into principles; and those propositions 45 Text, 0, 129| severe examination of those principles it has ever embraced for 46 Text, 0, 131| firm and unshaken on our principles; that science considered 47 Text, 0, 133| their rise from those false Principles which were impugned in the 48 Text, 0, 133| appear to be most fruitful Principles, from whence do flow innumerable 49 Text, 0, 134| consequence of the foregoing principles, several disputes and speculations 50 Text, 0, 134| ground of dislike to the principles and tenets herein laid down,


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