AN ESSAY CONCERNING HUMAN UNDERSTANDING, WRITTEN BY JOHN LOCKE, GENT. TO WHICH ARE NOW FIRST ADDED, I. AN ANALYSIS OF MR. LOCKE'S DOCTRINE OF IDEAS, ON A LARGE SHEET. WITH AN APPENDIX. III. A TREATISE ON THE CONDUCT OF THE UNDERSTANDING. IV. SOME THOUGHTS CONCERNING READING AND STUDY FOR A GENTLEMAN. VI. A NEW METHOD OF A COMMON PLACE-BOOK. EXTRACTED FROM THE AUTHOR'S WORKS. A NEW EDITION. IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. III. LONDON: PRINTED FOR THOMAS TEGG; W. SHARPE AND SON; G. OFFOR ; G. AND J. ROBINSON; J. EVANS AND CO.: ALSO R. GRIFFIN 1823. HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY JACKSON FUND June 29, 1932 LONDON: PRINTED BY THOMAS DAVISON, WHITEFRIARS. 1973 45-49 212 CONTENTS VOLUME III. 2. A right joining or separating of signs; i. e. ideas or words. 3. Which make mental or verbal propositions. 4. Mental propositions are very hard to be treated of. 5. Being nothing but joining or separating ideas, without 10. General propositions to be treated of more at large. > 11. Moral and metaphysical truth. > 1. Treating of words, necessary to knowledge. 2. General truths hardly to be understood, but in verbal pro- 3. Certainty two-fold, of truth, and of knowledge. 4. No proposition can be known to be true, where the essence 5. This more particularly concerns substances. 6. The truth of few universal propositions concerning sub- |