| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] source 6 sovereign 1 sow 1 space 21 spare 1 speak 13 speaker 1 | Frequency [« »] 21 occasion 21 opinion 21 others 21 space 21 triangle 20 clear 20 corporeal | George Berkeley A treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge IntraText - Concordances space |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Text, 0, 43 | should in truth see external space, and bodies actually existing 2 Text, 0, 110| admired treatise, Time, Space, and Motion are distinguished 3 Text, 0, 111| holds there is an absolute Space, which, being unperceivable 4 Text, 0, 111| immovable; and relative space to be the measure thereof, 5 Text, 0, 111| vulgarly taken for immovable space. Place he defines to be 6 Text, 0, 111| defines to be that part of space which is occupied by any 7 Text, 0, 111| body; and according as the space is absolute or relative 8 Text, 0, 111| because the parts of absolute space do not fall under our senses, 9 Text, 0, 116| the being of an absolute Space, distinct from that which 10 Text, 0, 116| even frame an idea of pure Space exclusive of all body. This 11 Text, 0, 116| resistance, I say there is Space; but if I find a resistance, 12 Text, 0, 116| lesser or greater, I say the space is more or less pure. So 13 Text, 0, 116| I speak of pure or empty space, it is not to be supposed 14 Text, 0, 116| supposed that the word "space" stands for an idea distinct 15 Text, 0, 116| there still remains pure Space, thereby nothing else is 16 Text, 0, 116| motion, and consequently no Space. Some, perhaps, may think 17 Text, 0, 116| them with the idea of pure space; but it is plain from what 18 Text, 0, 116| shewn, that the ideas of space and distance are not obtained 19 Text, 0, 117| concerning the nature of pure Space. But the chief advantage 20 Text, 0, 117| thinking either that Real Space is God, or else that there 21 Text, 0, 117| limits or annihilation of space, concluded it must be divine.