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individuals confidered as thus connected, which name, by gathering them together into one clafs, ferves in a curt manner to exprefs the whole of thefe individuals as diftinct from others. Thus the word animal ferves to denote every being which hath self-motion; and the words man, horse, lion, &c. answer fimilar purposes. This is the first and most common fort of abftraction; and it is of the most extenfive use, by enabling us to comprehend in our reafoning whole kinds and forts, inftead of individuals without end. The next fort of abstract ideas and terms comprehends a number of individual objects confidered as connected by fome occafional relation. A great number of perfons collected together in one place, without any other relation but merely that of contiguity, are denominated a crowd: in forming this term, we abftract from fex, from age, from condition, from drefs, &c. A number of perfons connected by being fubjected to the fame laws and to the fame. government, are termed a nation; and a number of men fubjected to the fame mili

tary

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tary command, are termed an army. A
third fort of abftraction is, where a fingle
be common
property or part, which
to many individuals, is felected to be the
fubject of our contemplation; for example,
whiteness, heat, beauty, length, roundness,
head, arm.

42. Abstract terms are a happy invention: it is by their means chiefly, that the particulars which we make the subject of our reafoning, are brought into clofe union, and feparated from all others however naturally connected. Without the aid of fuch terms, the mind could never be kept fteady to its proper fubject, but would perpetually be in hazard of assuming foreign circumstances or neglecting what are effential. In a word, a general term denotes in a curt manner certain objects occafionally combined. We can, without the aid of language, compare real objects by intuition, when these objects are prefent; and, when abfent, we can compare them by means of the ideas we have of them: but when we advance farther, and attempt to make inferences, and draw conclufions, we always employ

abstract

abstract terms, even in thinking.

It

would be as difficult to reafon without them, as as to perform operations in algebra without figns : for there is scarce any reasoning without fome degree of abftraction; and we cannot abstract to purpose without making use of general terms. Hence it follows, that without language man would scarce be a rational being.

43.

The fame thing, in different refpects, has different names. With respect to certain qualities, it is termed a fubftance; with respect to other qualities, a body; and with respect to qualities of all forts, a fubject: it is termed a paffive fubject with respect to an action exerted upon it; an object with respect to a percipient; a caufe with respect to the effect it produces; and an effect with refpect to its cause.

I NDE X.

[The volumes are denoted by numeral letters, the pages by
figures.]

A

Bftract idea) defined iii. 402. Abstract ideas
of different kinds iii. 403.

Abstraction) power of iii. 401. Its ufe iii. 402. 403.
Abstract terms) ought to be avoided in poetry i. 294.
iii. 198. Cannot be compared but by being per-
fonified iii. 6. Personified iii. 65. Defined iii. 402.
The use of abstract terms iii. 405.

Rules for ac-

Accent) defined ii. 361. The mufical accents that
are necessary in an hexameter line ii. 376. A low
word must not be accented ii. 405.
centing English heroic verse ii.
fected by the pause ii. 422. &c.
have a mutual influence ii. 428.

415.

How far af-

Accent and pause

Action) what feelings are raised by human actions i.
48. 49. 276. We are impelled to action by de-
fire i. 55.
Some actions are ultimate, fome are
means leading to an end i. 57. Actions great and
elevated, low and groveling i. 276. Emotions oc-
cafioned by propriety of action ii. 13. Occasioned
by impropriety of action ii. 14. Human actions
produce a great variety of emotions ii. 28. Hu-
man actions confidered with refpect to dignity and
meanness ii. 35. We are confcious of internal ac-

tion as in the head iii. 377.

Internal action may
exift without our being confcious of it iii. 377.
Actor) bombaft action i. 308. An actor ought to feel
the paffion he represents ii. 153.
Admiration) defined i. 320.

Affectation) defined ii. 11.

Affection) to children accounted for i. 82. To blood-
relations accounted for i. 83. To property accounted
for i. 84. Affection to children endures longer
than any other affection i. 150. Opinion and be-
lief influenced by affection i. 199. Affection defi-
ned ii. 87. iii. 394.

Agamemnon) of Seneca cenfured ii. 193.
Agreeable emotions and paffions i. 127. &c.
Alceftes) of Euripides cenfured iii. 286. 289.
Alexandre of Racine) cenfured ii. 177.

Allegory iii. 108. &c. More difficult in painting than
in poetry iii. 129. In an historical poem iii. 248.
All for Love) of Dryden cenfured ii. 202.'
Ambiguity) occafioned by a wrong arrangement ii.

297.

Amynta) of Tafso cenfured ii. 167.

Amor patria) accounted for i. 88.
Amphibrachy's ii. 460.

Amphimacer ii. 460.

Analytic) and synthetic methods of reasoning compa-
red i. 31.

Anapæftus ii. 460.

Anger) explained i. 95. &c. Sometimes exerted a-
gainst the innocent i. 191. And even against things
inanimate i. 191. Not infectious i. 221. Has no
dignity in it ii. 33.

Animals)

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