1. Other simple modes of simple ideas of sensation.
Though I have, in the foregoing chapters, shown how, from
simple ideas taken in by sensation, the mind comes to extend itself even to infinity; which, however it may of all
others seem most remote from any sensible perception, yet at last hath nothing in it but what is made out of simple
ideas: received into the mind by the senses, and afterwards there put together, by the faculty the mind has to
repeat its own ideas;--Though, I say, these might be instances enough of simple modes of the simple ideas of
sensation, and suffice to show how the mind comes by them, yet I shall, for method's sake, though briefly, give an
account of some few more, and then proceed to more complex ideas.