The Works of George Berkeley, Volume 3J. F. Dove, 1820 |
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Page 12
... kind of philosophic popery among a free people . XVII . I have said ( and I venture still to say ) that a fluxion is incomprehensible : that second , third , and fourth fluxions , are yet more imcomprehensible : that it is not possible ...
... kind of philosophic popery among a free people . XVII . I have said ( and I venture still to say ) that a fluxion is incomprehensible : that second , third , and fourth fluxions , are yet more imcomprehensible : that it is not possible ...
Page 14
... kind caring to dwell long upon principles , but inclining rather to take them upon trust : and things early ad- mitted by repetition become familiar : and this fami- liarity at length passeth for evidence . Now to me it seems , there ...
... kind caring to dwell long upon principles , but inclining rather to take them upon trust : and things early ad- mitted by repetition become familiar : and this fami- liarity at length passeth for evidence . Now to me it seems , there ...
Page 52
... kind , which , what it is , I am at a loss to com- prehend . But I can clearly comprehend that , if we ad- mit motion without space , then Sir Isaac Newton's ac- count of it must be wrong : for place by which he defines motion is ...
... kind , which , what it is , I am at a loss to com- prehend . But I can clearly comprehend that , if we ad- mit motion without space , then Sir Isaac Newton's ac- count of it must be wrong : for place by which he defines motion is ...
Page 58
... kind , and tell him in his own language , that all his skill is vain and impertinent . Vind . p . 36 . XVII . But it doth not become me to find fault with * Analyst , sect . xliv , xlv , xlvi . } this learned professor , who at bottom ...
... kind , and tell him in his own language , that all his skill is vain and impertinent . Vind . p . 36 . XVII . But it doth not become me to find fault with * Analyst , sect . xliv , xlv , xlvi . } this learned professor , who at bottom ...
Page 74
... kind , being much more hurt- ful in its consequences , though not so infamous as penury . It was the great art of Cardinal Richelieu , by encouraging luxury and expense to impoverish the French nobility , and render them altogether ...
... kind , being much more hurt- ful in its consequences , though not so infamous as penury . It was the great art of Cardinal Richelieu , by encouraging luxury and expense to impoverish the French nobility , and render them altogether ...
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acid Æneid Analyst ancient animal spirit answer Aristotle atheism attraction authority balsam blood bodies burning-glass cause Christian circulation colour common conceive considered costive cure distempers diuretic Divine doctrine doth drink earth effect elastic erysipelas ether experience farther fevers fire fluxions force foreign gold gout hath heat Heraclitus Hippocrates human increments industry infidels intellect juices kingdom labour laws learning less light liquors living mankind manner medicine method method of fluxions mind motion nation nature never observed opinion Parmenides particles perhaps persons philosophers plant Plato pleurisies Plotinus Plutarch prejudices principles produce produceth pure qualities quantity reader reason religion resin saith salts scurvy Sect seems sense sensible shew Sir Isaac Newton small-pox sort soul stomach subtile sudorific supposed tar water Theophrastus thereof things thought tion trade true truth turpentine vegetable velocity vessels virtues volatile Walton wealth wherein whole
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