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| Alphabetical [« »] houses 2 how 53 however 3 human 31 humanity 1 humble 1 humour 2 | Frequency [« »] 32 well 31 colour 31 either 31 human 31 number 31 philosophers 31 sensations | George Berkeley A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge IntraText - Concordances human |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pre, Int, 4 | the First Principles of Human Knowledge, to sift and examine 2 Pre, Int, 9 | you please, humanity, or human nature; wherein it is true 3 Pre, Int, 11 | abstraction." - Essay on Human Understanding, II. xi. 10 4 Pre, Int, 11 | general ideas." - Essay on Human Understanding, IV. iii. 5 Pre, Int, 13 | passage out of the Essay on Human Understanding, (IV. vii. 6 Pre, Int, 18 | elsewhere of the Essay on Human Understanding. Let us examine 7 Text | CONCERNING THE PRINCIPLES~ OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE~ 8 Text, 0, 1 | survey of the objects of human knowledge, that they are 9 Text, 0, 5 | I imagine the trunk of a human body without the limbs, 10 Text, 0, 30 | which are the effects of human wills often are, but in 11 Text, 0, 36 | spiritual substances, minds, or human souls, which will or excite 12 Text, 0, 36 | more powerful and wise than human spirits. These latter are 13 Text, 0, 57 | collection of sensible ideas, as human agents are by their size, 14 Text, 0, 82 | rivers, and cities, and human bodies. To which I answer 15 Text, 0, 86 | have laid down it follows human knowledge may naturally 16 Text, 0, 89 | respective kinds the object of human knowledge and subject of 17 Text, 0, 101| it is beyond the power of human understanding to fathom 18 Text, 0, 123| been esteemed a reproach to human reason, and withal make 19 Text, 0, 131| promotes the benefit of human life, does still remain 20 Text, 0, 133| of all knowledge, whether human or divine, have ever placed 21 Text, 0, 134| labour of study, and make human sciences far more clear, 22 Text, 0, 135| regard to which, perhaps, human knowledge is not so deficient 23 Text, 0, 135| looked on as a defect in a human understanding that it does 24 Text, 0, 146| things which convince us human agents are concerned in 25 Text, 0, 147| considerable than those ascribed to human agents. There is not any 26 Text, 0, 148| explain my meaning; - A human spirit or person is not 27 Text, 0, 148| ideas denotes a particular human mind, whithersoever we direct 28 Text, 0, 151| places, miseries incident to human life, and the like, are 29 Text, 0, 151| compass of thought, all human sagacity and design, could 30 Text, 0, 153| pleasure, the nature of human freedom, and the design 31 Text, 0, 156| the highest perfection of human nature.~ THE END .~ ~