PROBLEMS OF TYPE ANALYSIS 159 



kind of type analysis which reveals relatively permanent causes, 

 approximately true abstractions, and the best available scales and 

 perspectives — all these are necessary for value judgments which 

 may be called critical and philosophical because grounded in 

 true perceptions. We may, therefore, proceed now to consider how 

 such analytical categories are applied by Taine in the judgment of 

 literature and art. 



NOTES 



1 Cf. Appendix A, 'Metaphysical Systems'. 



2 History of English Literature, II, 613-614, our italics. Cf. our Chapter IV, 

 'Defence of Abstraction'. 



3 Book IV, Chapter II. 



4 Ibid., p. 427. 



5 Op. cit., p. X. 



6 See Appendix A, 'Spinoza versus Hegel'. 



7 Hegel's Doctrine of Formal Logic, Being a Translation of the First Section of the 

 Subjective Logic, p. 115. 



8 Ibid., p. 140. 



9 Ibid., p. 145. 



10 Cf. Appendix A, 'The Problem of Method'. 



11 'I mean thereby things common to many instances or individuals' {On 

 Intelligence, II, 133), our italics. 



12 Ibid., 134, our italics. 



13 Ibid., 136, our italics. 



14 Ibid., 138. 



15 Ibid., 137. 



16 Ibid., 141. 



17 Chapter X, 'The "New Criticism'". 



18 On Intelligence, II, 148, our italics. 



19 Ibid., 149, our italics. 



20 Ibid. Cf. also p. 261, ZLnd passim. 



21 Cf. quote from Boutroux, our Chapter X, 'The Metaphysical Issue'. 



22 Those 'treating, like mathematics, of the possible and not of the real' {On 

 Intelligence, II, 151). 



23 Ibid., 161. 

 ^"^ Ibid., 165. 



25 Ibid., 167. 



26 Cf. our Chapter IX, 'On Intelligence'. 



27 On Intelligence, II, 171. 

 ^^ Ibid., 174. 



29 Ibid., 173, our italics. 

 ^^ Ibid., 174. 



31 Ibid., 178. 



32 Ibid., 185, Note. 



33 Ibid., 185. 



