Of the advancement and proficiencie of learning; or, The partitions of sciences, nine booksWritten in Latin by the most eminent, illustrious and famous Lord Bacon . rapt ? How they encountre ? I f Cuflom, Exercife, Habit, Education. I ^ „ J- jEmuIation, Company, Friends, Fame, |^C«re/, or i^«>«e^/^^.<aeproof, Exhortatioi, Laws, Books,t Study, Brief Precepts hereof. I TBody [_ Append. The Congrmty between the Good of^ and ^ lib. VI«, The Platform LIB. Vlir. THE PARTITION OF CIVIL KNOWLEDGE INTO Not AfFeftedjmuch left delpifed. Speech rConception. „ ,^in the \Vtferance, rConverfati
Of the advancement and proficiencie of learning; or, The partitions of sciences, nine booksWritten in Latin by the most eminent, illustrious and famous Lord Bacon . rapt ? How they encountre ? I f Cuflom, Exercife, Habit, Education. I ^ „ J- jEmuIation, Company, Friends, Fame, |^C«re/, or i^«>«e^/^^.<aeproof, Exhortatioi, Laws, Books,t Study, Brief Precepts hereof. I TBody [_ Append. The Congrmty between the Good of^ and ^ lib. VI«, The Platform LIB. Vlir. THE PARTITION OF CIVIL KNOWLEDGE INTO Not AfFeftedjmuch left delpifed. Speech rConception. „ ,^in the \Vtferance, rConverfation ff \ in /Gefturle rspeaker. But Moderated, that !is either i ife/^e-r Quality of Men. J, fi?7z/c ^Nature of Matter. § pies thereof out of Solo- ^to theC^ Of time. § Of Place1»^»/ Proverbs. ^six r Countenance. Works,Anions. Nature. ^ I Scatttered occafions^ exam- rvayst by ^Ends. Reports. Others^ Nego-tiation. J Cap. 2 < •-^^-^i fAcquaintance withleen in the world, \ A wife temper in liberty men wellof \vpays at (peech aud prefent dexterity both to ob-ferve and aft. The Ad-vance-ment of •Fortune^ Precepts^thereof. Cover- f Partitionsmentof )omttedStates jDefcients^^ Horp hit nature and abilities fort withpThe eftate of the prefent time ; Pro-FIim-\feffions that are in prize: His competitors^felf ^tn fortune; The Friends he hath chofen:CThe examples he would follow. Setting forth his Vertues ^ Fortunes; Merita, C his Defefts,<Ctf/tf«r. and Difgraces, by c^»^*^^^^Declaring a Mans mind in particulars by a mediocrity of Revealing, the mind to become flexible to occaiaoiis, of place, time, and perlbns,ct^. That he be well skilld what inftruments to ule and he overtask not his own he do not always ftay for5but fbmetimes. provoke he never undertake great, or long works.^That he never fo engage him(elf but that heI leave a poftern door open for retreat.
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Keywords: ., boo, bookpublisherlondontwilliams, booksubjectlogic, bookyear1674