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49. The freest agents are so
determined.
50. A constant determination
to a pursuit of happi-
ness, no abridgment of
liberty.
51. The necessity of pursuing
true happiness, the foun-
dation of all liberty.
52. The reason of it.
53. Government of our pas-
sions, the right improve-
ment 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 de-
sires arising from wrong
judgment.
58,59. Our judgment of pre-
sent good or evil always
right.
60. From a wrong judgment
of what makes a neces-
sary part of their happi-
ness.
61, 62. A more particular ac-
SECT.
1. Mixed modes, what.
2. Made by the mind.
3. Sometimes got by the ex-
plication 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 lan-
guage have none answer-
ing in another.
7. And languages change.
8. Mixed modes, where they
exist.
9. How we get the ideas of
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.
CHAP. XXII.
count of wrong judge- Of the complex ideas of substan-
19-21. Spirits capable of mo-
tion.
22. Idea of soul and body
compared.
23-27. Cohesion of solid parts in
body, as hard to be con-
ceived, as thinking in a
soul.
28, 29. Communication of mo-
tion by impulse, or by
thought, equally intelli-
gible.
30. Ideas of body and spirit
31. The notion of spirit in-
1. Relation, what.
2. Relations, without corre-
lative terms, not easily
perceived.
3. Some seemingly absolute
terms contain relations.
4. Relation different from
the things related.
5. Change of relation may
be without any change
in the subject.
6. Relation only betwixt two
things.
7. All things capable of re-
lation.
8. The ideas of
relation
clearer often, than of the
subjects related.
9. Relations all terminate
in simple ideas.
10. Terms leading the mind
beyond the subjects deno-
minated, are relative.
11. Conclusion.
CHAP. XXVI.
volves no more difficulty Of cause and effect, and other rea
lations.
1. Whence their ideas got.
2. Creation, generation, ma-
king alteration.
3, 4. Relations of time.
5. Relations of place and
extension.
6. Absolute, terms often
stand for relations.
CHAP. XXVII.
Of identity and diversity.
1. Wherein identity con-