12. Mixed modes made also of other ideas than those of power and action.
I think I shall not need to remark here
that, though power and action make the greatest part of mixed modes, marked by names, and familiar in the minds
and mouths of men, yet other simple ideas, and their several combinations, are not excluded: much less, I think,
will it be necessary for me to enumerate all the mixed modes which have been settled, with names to them. That
would be to make a dictionary of the greatest part of the words made use of in divinity, ethics, law, and politics,
and several other sciences. All that is requisite to my present design, is to show what sort of ideas those are which
I call mixed modes; how the mind comes by them; and that they are compositions made up of simple ideas got
from sensation and reflection; which I suppose I have done.