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fiat 2
fictions 2
fifthly 2
figure 45
figured 3
figures 12
fill 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 itself
47 me
46 most
45 figure
45 knowledge
45 since
43 god
George Berkeley
A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge

IntraText - Concordances

figure

   Part, Chapter,  Paragraph
1 Pre, Int, 8 | peculiar, as this or that figure or magnitude, which distinguish 2 Pre, Int, 8 | nor solid, nor has any figure or magnitude, but is an 3 Pre, Int, 8 | moved, but likewise from the figure it describes, and all particular 4 Pre, Int, 9 | any particular shape or figure, there being no one shape 5 Pre, Int, 9 | there being no one shape or figure common to all animals, without 6 Pre, Int, 11 | this or that magnitude or figure.~ 7 Pre, Int, 16 | that a man may consider a figure merely as triangular, without 8 Text, 0, 1 | certain colour, taste, smell, figure and consistence having been 9 Text, 0, 3 | it was heard; a colour or figure, and it was perceived by 10 Text, 0, 7 | sensible qualities are colour, figure, motion, smell, taste, etc., 11 Text, 0, 7 | therefore wherein colour, figure, and the like qualities 12 Text, 0, 8 | but an idea; a colour or figure can be like nothing but 13 Text, 0, 8 | nothing but another colour or figure. If we look but never so 14 Text, 0, 9 | former they mean extension, figure, motion, rest, solidity 15 Text, 0, 9 | substance, in which extension, figure, and motion do actually 16 Text, 0, 9 | already shown, that extension, figure, and motion are only ideas 17 Text, 0, 10 | 10. They who assert that figure, motion, and the rest of 18 Text, 0, 10 | mind. In short, extension, figure, and motion, abstracted 19 Text, 0, 14 | we not as well argue that figure and extension are not patterns 20 Text, 0, 15 | same thing of extension, figure, and motion. Though it must 21 Text, 0, 17 | substratum or support of figure and motion, and other sensible 22 Text, 0, 22 | possible for a sound, or figure, or motion, or colour to 23 Text, 0, 25 | follows that extension, figure, and motion cannot be the 24 Text, 0, 32 | a certain round luminous figure we at the same time perceive 25 Text, 0, 38 | the colour, taste, warmth, figure, or suchlike qualities, 26 Text, 0, 47 | appears greater, and its figure varies, those parts in its 27 Text, 0, 47 | consequently void of all shape or figure. From which it follows that, 28 Text, 0, 49 | objected that if extension and figure exist only in the mind, 29 Text, 0, 49 | hardness, extension, and figure which are predicated of 30 Text, 0, 50 | corporeal substance, but by figure, motion, and other qualities, 31 Text, 0, 61 | evident that solidity, bulk, figure, motion, and the like have 32 Text, 0, 62 | that a particular size, figure, motion, and disposition 33 Text, 0, 65 | said that, by discerning a figure, texture, and mechanism 34 Text, 0, 67 | positive ideas of extension, figure, solidity and motion, and 35 Text, 0, 73 | was thought that colour, figure, motion, and the rest of 36 Text, 0, 73 | leaving only the primary ones, figure, motion, and suchlike, which 37 Text, 0, 78 | offered with relation to figure, motion, colour and the 38 Text, 0, 87 | 87. Colour, figure, motion, extension, and 39 Text, 0, 87 | What may be the extension, figure, or motion of anything really 40 Text, 0, 102| mechanical causes, to wit. the figure, motion, weight, and suchlike 41 Text, 0, 102| of colours or sounds, by figure, motion, magnitude, and 42 Text, 0, 121| the signification of each figure according to the place it 43 Text, 0, 124| either perceive by sense, or figure to myself in my mind: wherefore 44 Text, 0, 126| signified are (by a very usual figure) transferred to the sign, 45 Text, 0, 148| we see the colour, size, figure, and motions of a man, we


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