Index for Chapter XXXI - Of Adequate and Inadequate Ideas
- 1. Adequate ideas are such as perfectly represent their
archetypes.
- 2. Simple ideas all adequate.
- 3. Modes are all adequate.
- 4. Modes, in reference to settled names, may be inadequate.
- 5. Because then meant, in propriety of speech, to correspond to
the ideas in some other mind.
- 6. Ideas of substances, as referred to real essences, not
adequate.
- 7. Because men know not the real essences of substances.
- 8. Ideas of substances, when regarded as collections of their
qualities, are all inadequate.
- 9. Their powers usually make up our complex ideas of substances.
- 10. Substances have innumerable powers not contained in our
complex ideas of them.
- 11. Ideas of substances, being got only by collecting their
qualities, are all inadequate.
- 12. Simple ideas, ektupa, and adequate.
- 13. Ideas of substances are ektupa, and inadequate.
- 14. Ideas of modes and relations are archetypes and cannot be
adequate.
R.
© Roger Bishop Jones
created 29/10/94; modified 4/12/95