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The Contents.
lxvii
47. | The power to suspend the prosecution of any desire, makes way for consideration. | |
48. | To be determined by our own judgment is no restraint to liberty. | |
49. | The freest agents are so determined. | |
50. | A constant determination to a pursuit of happiness no abridgment of liberty. | |
51. | The necessity of pursuing true happiness the foundation of all liberty. | |
52. | The reason of it. | |
53. | Government of our passions the right improvement of liberty. | |
54, 55. | How men come to pursue different courses. | |
56. | How men come to choose ill. | |
57. | First, from bodily pains. Secondly, from wrong desires arising from wrong judgment. | |
58, 59. | Our judgment of present good or evil always right. | |
60. | From a wrong judgment of what makes a necessary part of their happiness. | |
61, 62. | A more particular account of wrong judgments. | |
63. | In comparing present and future. | |
64, 65. | Causes of this. | |
66. | In considering consequences of actions. | |
67. | Causes of this. | |
68. | Wrong judgment of what is necessary to our happiness. | |
69. | We can change the agreeableness or disagreeableness in things. | |
70. | Preference of vice to virtue, a manifest wrong judgment. | |
71–73. | Recapitulation. | |
CHAPTER XXII. | ||
OF MIXED MODES. | ||
SECT. | ||
1. | Mixed modes, what. | |
2. | Made by the mind. | |
3. | Sometimes got by the explication of their names. | |
4. | The name ties the parts of the mixed modes into one idea. | |
5. | The cause of making mixed modes. | |
6. | Why words in one language have none answering in another. | |
7. | And languages change. | |
8. | Mixed modes, where they exist. | |
9. | How we get the ideas of mixed modes. | |
10. | Motion, thinking, and power have been most modified. | |
11. | Several words seeming to signify action, signify but the effect. | |
12. | Mixed modes made also of other ideas.
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