544 



THE GRAMMAR OF SCIENCE 



Herschel, A Preliminary Dissertation 

 on Natural Philosophy, 38 



(force as will), 121 ftn. 



Outlin cs of A stronomy, 121 f t n . 

 Hertz, 29-30, 179 

 Heterogeneity, 314 

 Hipparchus, 97-98 

 Histology, 52^5 

 Hodograph, the velocity diagram or, 



219-222 

 Homogeneity, 314 

 Hooker, R. , 89-93 



Ecclesiastical Polity, 89, 90 

 Humanism, 365 



Humanity, solidarity of, 368, 369 

 Humboldt, A. von, 13 

 Hume, 78, 161, 162, 165 



Dialogues conce?'ning Natural Re- 

 ligion, 112 



Essay concerning Human Under- 

 standing, 160 



Treatise on Huinan Nature, 165 ftn. , 

 192 

 Huxley, 21, 329, 364, 380 ftn. 



Hume, 75 



Lay Sermons, 371, 510 ftn. 



On our Knowledge of the Causes of the 

 Phenomena of Organic Nature, 371 

 Hydromechanics, 521 

 Hyperspace, 411 



Ideal, distinction between real and, 



41 ftn. 

 Imagination, disciplined use of, 34 



scientific use of, 31 

 Individualism, 365-370 

 Individuality, 382 

 Inertia, principle of, 286-289, 323. 343i 



533-535 

 Inference, canons of legitimate, 59-60 

 limits of legitimate, 57 

 the scientific validity of an, 55-57 

 Influence, autogeneric, 378 

 bathmic, 378 

 heterogeneric, 378 



inorganic, 378. See Sources of 

 change 

 Inherent growth-force, 375. See Bath- 

 mic evolution 

 Inheritance, 449 ; bi-parental, 468-475 ; 

 blended, 452 ; exclusive, 452, 486- 

 496 ; of fertility, 462 ; of life, 496- 

 500 ; particulate, 452 

 Isolation, 415, 416 



Jevons, Stanley, 32 ftn. , 128, 139 

 Eleme7itary Lessons in Logic, 149 ftn. 

 Limits of Scientific Method, 34 ftn. 

 . Priitciples of Science, 34 ftn., 38, 55, 

 59, 128, 139, 151 



Judgment, sesthetic, 34-36 



scientific, 35 

 Julius, W.H., on "Ether Theories," 277 

 Jurisprudence, 526 



Kant, 16 ftn., 41 ftn., 68 ftn. 



Kritik der reinen Vernunft, 75, 192 

 Keppler, 20, 98, 529 

 Kinematics, 194, 205, 518 

 Kinetic scale, 300, 315 



density as the basis of the, 312-316 

 Kirchhoff, 29, 115, 240 ftn. 



r'orlesungen iiber mathematische 

 Physik, 115 ftn. 



Lamarck, 379 



Lankester, 329, 349 ftn. 



Laplace, 32 ftn., 141, 142, 145-148, 



374. 529 

 Thc'orie Analytique des Probabilitis, 

 32 ftn., 151, 353 

 Laplace's investigation, nature of, 147- 

 148 

 investigation, theory, the bases of, 



143-147 

 investigation, on mechanical theory, 



298-299 

 Larmor, J., on " Gyrostatic Ether," 



266, 277 

 Law, Austin's definition of, 79 



Hooker's, 89 



natural, 78-90 



scientific, 78-87 • 



sequence of sense-impressions not in 

 itself a, 85 



the Stoics' conception of, 88 

 Leibniz, definition of space, 155 

 Leverrier, 166 ftn. 

 Lewes, G. H., 241 



Aristotle, 192, 241 ftn. 

 Life, the perpetuity of (Biogenesis), 



347-349 

 the spontaneous generation of (Abio- 



genesis), 349-352 

 a special creation of, 347 

 Light, 522 

 Linnseus, 529 

 Locke, 59 ftn. , 162 

 Logic, 510, 515 

 Lyell, Principles of Geology, 11 



Macgregor, Kinematics and Dynatnics, 



204 ftn. , 238 

 Mach, Ernst, 64, 65, 194 ftn. 



Analysis of the Sensations, Anti- 

 metaphysical, 65, 76 

 Beit rage zur Analyse der Empfin- 



dungen, 76 

 Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwicklung, 

 326 



