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Chapter I
Of Ideas in general, and their Original An essay concerning human understanding | ||
13. Impossible to convince those that sleep without dreaming, that they think.
Thus, methinks, every drowsy nod shakes their doctrine, who teach that the soul is always thinking. Those, at least, who do at any time sleep without dreaming, can never be convinced that their thoughts are sometimes for four hours busy without their knowing of it; and if they are taken in the very act, waked in the middle of that sleeping contemplation, can give no manner of account of it.
Chapter I
Of Ideas in general, and their Original An essay concerning human understanding | ||