Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
now 22
nowhere 5
nugae 1
number 31
numbered 1
numberless 2
numbers 7
Frequency    [«  »]
31 colour
31 either
31 human
31 number
31 philosophers
31 sensations
31 time
George Berkeley
A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge

IntraText - Concordances

number

   Part, Chapter,  Paragraph
1 Pre, Int, 11 | must be reckoned into their number. The reason that is here 2 Pre, Int, 18 | signifying indifferently a great number of particular ideas. All 3 Text, 0, 9 | or impenetrability, and number; by the latter they denote 4 Text, 0, 12 | 12. That number is entirely the creature 5 Text, 0, 12 | different denomination of number as the mind views it with 6 Text, 0, 12 | yard, a foot, or an inch. Number is so visibly relative, 7 Text, 0, 25 | from the configuration, number, motion, and size of corpuscles, 8 Text, 0, 47 | follows there is an infinite number of parts in each particle 9 Text, 0, 47 | or exhibits only a finite number of parts to sense, is, not 10 Text, 0, 47 | it contains an infinite number of parts, but because the 11 Text, 0, 47 | it perceives a greater number of parts in the object, 12 Text, 0, 55 | whoever considers what a vast number of prejudices and false 13 Text, 0, 65 | made to signify a great number of effects and actions, 14 Text, 0, 81 | whose faculties both in number and extent are far exceeding 15 Text, 0, 96 | notions, such an incredible number of disputes and puzzling 16 Text, 0, 98 | must be estimated by the number of ideas or actions succeeding 17 Text, 0, 119| object abstract ideas of Number; of which to understand 18 Text, 0, 120| not any such idea. But, number being defined a "collection 19 Text, 0, 120| abstract, there are no ideas of number in abstract denoted by the 20 Text, 0, 121| them into words; and so the number becomes perfectly known. 21 Text, 0, 121| perfectly known. For then the number of any particular things 22 Text, 0, 121| themselves that we intend to number.~ 23 Text, 0, 123| of Geometry from a great number of difficulties and contradictions 24 Text, 0, 124| my ideas into an infinite number of other ideas, that is, 25 Text, 0, 124| consists of parts infinite in number is so manifest a contradiction, 26 Text, 0, 127| 127. Because there is no number of parts so great but it 27 Text, 0, 127| more than any assignable number; which is true, not of the 28 Text, 0, 130| divided into an infinite number of parts, do yet farther 29 Text, 0, 130| barely contain an infinite number of parts, but an infinity 30 Text, 0, 131| infinitely small, or an infinite number of parts contained in any 31 Text, 0, 143| and effects. Hence a great number of dark and ambiguous terms,


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