Page:AnEssayTowardsARealCharacterAndAPhilosophicalLanguage.pdf/56

 Tranfcendentalr General.

„e30 ‚'

Part. II.

V. DIFFEKENCES of things relating to the. MEANS, may be di fiributed into fuch as are '

Y. DIFFE RENCE re~

kring to the

rMore Simple, denoting the being of things

MEANS.

l ‘l’Good 5 as good is determined by La» 5 whether according to Lato, or not again/ì it. LAWFULNESS, legitimate, right, legal, canonical, orderly.

" шшггвввысв, adiaphorouc. Cn/lom or opinion 5 whether fueh as the ‘generality of men do

= l 5

‹

l

l

think nie/lof and praCtife, or ‘Мг/(е and avoid. ÈDECENCY, Decorum, meet, Я‘, feemlj, делайте, becoming,

l

a.

camel] goodlj.

l Il "

INDECEŕCLßIîdecorum, ;tnmeet, urft, unfcenilj, unhand/orne,

штате], mi e eemmg, ugj. ’ tFree from ш! 3 whether of I

0

1 Hurt 5

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î’SAFETY, Security, fiere, tute/ary, innoxiouc, fave, protec'ï, in

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< .¿ ß¢re,indernntf1`e, warrant, Sanöluar), Shelter, Refuge. ‘3' |DANGER, Haqiard, Peril, Теории’), unßfe, rick, rventure, ad 1 lventure, endanger, expoß, incur. tLahor and l’ain5 inthe

I

Agent; the Doing of things with little or much labor. EASINESS, Facil ‚щит, clear, gentle, light,

l

4' DIFFICULTT, Hard, weiße, ешь/‚ш, intricate, Мент,

i l

ßreight, Perplexity, rub, knot, grave/ing, hardput to it.


 * l

Patient 5 Thejufering of things with little or no Iabor,or with much. {SENTLENESS, Ea/ìncß‘, fòftmj?, ßill, tenderly, gingerlj. `

s'

’

IOLENCE, hotßerow,

rough, har/7), hln/lering, трети,

force, raz/yh.

’

`_Comparative 5 of the "Nature of the rneam­ to one another5 whether mutual/)1 agreeing 'as ha tо

ving the fame as­are kind ofapt affections, or ‘Иду-сет; as having kind of afi'eê’tions to exclude one another out of fuch the fame



Гцыеа'.


 * Í

CONGRUITY, Sutablencjî, Agreablencß, Sympathy, conjonant,

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compatible, right, appoßte, ‚Едим‘, apt, adapt, corni/lent, accord,

— =I t

софтт, accommodate, comply. CONTRARIEATT, Repugnance, wit/Jiand, again/l, unjîttable', Anti ­

perzßa tr, counter, „ф incongruoua, inconßfíent, incompatible, interfere.

‘l’J/êfulneßor ‘Unufefulneß‘of means to an end, whether in rLower degree.r5 when there is a fair probability that a means may l either’prornote or hinder the end. < Í{EXPIEDIENCEI,Con'oenience,behoov_fì¢l,meer,ft,perquütefequftea I7’ INCONl/ENIENCE, Inexpedience, unrneet, unß't, incommodioua.

Higher degree5 when there is a certain dependance betwixt the means and the end. To which may be oppofed that kind of nexuc betwixt means and

end, which is altogether uncertain and doubtful. ÉNECESSITY, needful, regni/ite, eßentíal, lfhould, nzuß,ßreight, 8

exigent, force, perquißte, preßìng.

‚

CONTINGENCE, Venture, adatenture,rnay,Accident,peradventure,

adventitiour, fortuitoua, incident, happen,pcrhapr.

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