| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] nations 1 native 1 natura 2 natural 35 naturalis 1 naturally 6 nature 91 | Frequency [« »] 36 much 36 thoughts 35 first 35 natural 35 necessary 35 true 35 truth | George Berkeley A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge IntraText - Concordances natural |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pre, Pre | immateriality of God, or the natural immortality of the soul. 2 Pre, Int, 2 | obscurity of things, or the natural weakness and imperfection 3 Pre, Int, 4 | conceiving it to arise from the natural dulness and limitation of 4 Pre, Int, 4 | intricacy in the objects, or natural defect in the understanding, 5 Pre, Int, 14 | ideas. From all which the natural consequence should seem 6 Text, 0, 4 | objects, have an existence, natural or real, distinct from their 7 Text, 0, 50 | can be no use of Matter in natural philosophy. Besides, they 8 Text, 0, 51 | seem absurd to take away natural causes, and ascribe everything 9 Text, 0, 62 | through the whole chain of natural effects; these are learned 10 Text, 0, 62 | is in the production of natural effects; as will be evident 11 Text, 0, 64 | subservient to the production of natural effects, it is demanded 12 Text, 0, 65 | parts of bodies, whether natural or artificial, we may attain 13 Text, 0, 66 | be the employment of the natural philosopher; and not the 14 Text, 0, 86 | things are thought to have a natural subsistence of their own 15 Text, 0, 91 | to which they attribute a natural subsistence, exterior to 16 Text, 0, 93 | another - all this is very natural. And, on the other hand, 17 Text, 0, 101| received from sense, are Natural Philosophy and Mathematics; 18 Text, 0, 101| I shall say somewhat of Natural Philosophy. On this subject 19 Text, 0, 105| difference there is betwixt natural philosophers and other men, 20 Text, 0, 105| observed in the production of natural effects, are most agreeable 21 Text, 0, 107| when they inquire for any natural efficient cause, distinct 22 Text, 0, 107| the various ends to which natural things are adapted, and 23 Text, 0, 108| man may well understand natural signs without knowing their 24 Text, 0, 109| extent, and variety of natural things: hence, by proper 25 Text, 0, 110| the aforesaid analogy or natural Science will be easily acknowledged 26 Text, 0, 118| 118. Hitherto of Natural Philosophy: we come now 27 Text, 0, 119| attempted the explication of natural things by them. But, if 28 Text, 0, 121| they directed it. It is natural to think that at first, 29 Text, 0, 141| that they who assert the natural immortality of the soul 30 Text, 0, 141| which we hourly see befall natural bodies (and which is what 31 Text, 0, 146| order, and concatenation of natural things, the surprising magnificence, 32 Text, 0, 146| pleasure, and the instincts or natural inclinations, appetites, 33 Text, 0, 150| share in the production of natural things, and must they be 34 Text, 0, 151| observed in the production of natural things do not seem to have 35 Text, 0, 152| the splendid profusion of natural things should not be interpreted