A Collection of Several Pieces of Mr. John Locke,: Never Before Printed, Or Not Extant in His Works |
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... fome Pieces , of that il- luftrious Writer , which had indeed been published before , but without his name to them , and were grown very scarce . The value you have for every A 2 every thing that was written by Mr. LOCKE , and.
... fome Pieces , of that il- luftrious Writer , which had indeed been published before , but without his name to them , and were grown very scarce . The value you have for every A 2 every thing that was written by Mr. LOCKE , and.
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Never Before Printed, Or Not Extant in His Works John Locke. every thing that was written by Mr. LOCKE , and your esteem for fome of his friends concern'd in this Collection , emboldens me to offer it to you ; and I flatter myself that ...
Never Before Printed, Or Not Extant in His Works John Locke. every thing that was written by Mr. LOCKE , and your esteem for fome of his friends concern'd in this Collection , emboldens me to offer it to you ; and I flatter myself that ...
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... thing that had pass'd upon that occafion ; in order , not only to open the Peoples eyes upon the fecret views of the Court ; but to do justice to the Country - Lords , and thereby to secure to them the continuance of the affection and ...
... thing that had pass'd upon that occafion ; in order , not only to open the Peoples eyes upon the fecret views of the Court ; but to do justice to the Country - Lords , and thereby to secure to them the continuance of the affection and ...
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... thing : the Publick is equally abused , if instead of restoring it according to the best editions , and in the most correct manner that is pof- fible , the editor gives it from the firft copy he chances to light upon , without troubling ...
... thing : the Publick is equally abused , if instead of restoring it according to the best editions , and in the most correct manner that is pof- fible , the editor gives it from the firft copy he chances to light upon , without troubling ...
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... generality of men expect every thing fhould be perfect , that proceeds from fuch a Writer as Mr. LocKE , and do not enter into the occafions or designs which he propofed to himself A a 2 + L himself in writing ; I own that fome DEDICATION .
... generality of men expect every thing fhould be perfect , that proceeds from fuch a Writer as Mr. LocKE , and do not enter into the occafions or designs which he propofed to himself A a 2 + L himself in writing ; I own that fome DEDICATION .
Common terms and phrases
againſt alfo alſo becauſe Befides beft beſt Bill Biſhops bodys Books buſineſs cafe Caffiques call'd caufe cauſe Church Church of England Cofin confifting Converſation Court fhall debate defire difcourfe diſtance doth Earl Earth Effence Engliſh faid fame felf felves fenfe fent feven feveral fhall fhew fhould fince fion firft firſt fome fometimes fpeaking friendſhip fubject fuch fure furface fwear Government Grand Council greateſt hath himſelf Houfe Houſe Ideas Intereft JOHN LOCKE juft King laft Landgraves laſt Letter LOCKE LOCKE's Lords Proprietors ment mention'd mind moft moſt motion muft muſt neceffary Oates Oath obferve occafion paffed Palatine's Court Parliament Perfon pleaſe prefent Proteftant publick purpoſe Queſtion reaſon refpect reft Regifter Religion ſay Seffion ſelf ſeveral SHAFTSBURY ſhall ſtudy thefe themſelves ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tion Truth Underſtanding uſe Vote whatſoever wherein whofe wou'd
Popular passages
Page 327 - Therein are contain'd the words of eternal Life. It has God, for its Author; Salvation, for its end ; and Truth, without any mixture of Error, for its matter. So that, it is a wonder to me, how any one
Page 311 - but in the confcioufnefs of doing well, and in the hopes of another Life. This is, what I can fay, upon experience? and what you will find to be true, when you come to make up the account. Adieu : I leave my beft
Page 215 - a man, by ufe, hath got this faculty of obferving and judging of the reafoning and coherence of what he reads, and how it proves what it pretends to teach ; he is then, and not till then, in the right way of improving his understanding, and enlarging his knowledge by Reading. But that, as I have
Page 74 - the *? Committee of the whole Houfe, to whom '* the faid Bill was committed, to the end ',< that nothing fhould remain in the faid «< Bill, which might any ways tend towards " the depriving of either of the Houfes of " Parliament, or any of their Members, of " their ancient freedom of debates, or votes,
Page 175 - the Earth turns round upon its own Axis in 24 hours. The turning of the Earth upon its own Axis every 24 Hours, whilft it moves round the Sun in a Year; we may conceive by the running of a bowl on a bowling green: in which not only the center of the bowl hath a
Page 43 - that Bartholomew day was fatal to our Church and Religion, in throwing out a very great number of worthy, learned, pious, and orthodox Divines, who could not come up to this, and other things in that
Page 173 - An Eclipfe of the Moon is, when the Earth being between the Sun and the Moon, hinders the light of the Sun from falling upon and being reflected by the Moon. If the light of the Sun is kept off from the whole body of the Moon, it is a total
Page 173 - Moon, hinders the light of the Sun from falling upon and being reflected by the Moon. If the light of the Sun is kept off from the whole body of the Moon, it is a total Eclipfe; if from a part only, it is a partial one.
Page 218 - and modern Philofophers: but the Morality of the Gofpel doth fo exceed them all, that to give a man a full knowledge of true morality, I {hould fend him to no other book, but the New
Page 226 - in ufefulnefs, pleafantry, and a conftant decorum. And indeed no writings can be pleafant which have not Nature at the bottom, and are not drawn after her copy. There is another fort of books, which I had