272 



INDEX 



Criticism, 61, 204; and philosophy, 

 15-16; and psychology, 132-133; 

 classical, 1 70-1 71, 244; descriptive 

 and philosophic, 55-57, 125-126; 

 historical, 5, 55, 64-68, 200; his- 

 tory of, 5; judicial, 5, 10, 55; 

 modern, 5; nature and function, 

 4-5; re-creative, 5, 55-56; roman- 

 tic, 5, 10, 170, 201, 244 



Critics, 63; German, 67; ideal, 40 



Cubism, 77, 166, 242 



Culture, vii, 9-10, 200; and art, 172, 

 iyg-180, 1 83 ; and race, 97, 1 00, 1 3 1 ; 

 historical nature of, 109; science of, 

 188-189 



Cuvier, Georges, 71, 150, 155, 234 



D'Alembert, Jean, 149 



Dante Alighieri, 163, 197, 236, 238 



Darwin, Charles, and Darwinism, 



viii, 8, 44, 98, 122, 150, 175, 233; 



in Taine's works, 99; Social, 87- 



88, 91, 98, 100 

 Deduction, 19-21, 42-45, 54, 149, 198, 



212, 220, 225; and prediction, 60 

 Definition, 24, 44, 52-53? 150? ]b1> 



219-220; Aristotelian versus Spino- 



zistic, 214; of man, 23, 214; real or 

 true, 19, 58, 220 



Delbos, Victor, 21 1-2 12, 224 



Democracy, 79, 96, 201; of causes, 

 130 



Demonstration, 214; see also Proof 



Dependence, mutual, 66-67, 7^5 75? 

 167 



Descartes, Rene, 26, 210; criticisms of, 

 17-19, 211, 213-214; see Appendix 

 A 



Determinism, 20-23, 27-28, 32-34, 

 71, 140, 150-152, 178, 229; and 

 milieu, 104, 112, 197; of Spinoza, 

 18; see also Causation, Cause and 

 Effect, Causes, Mechanism 



Development, 23, 68-69, lo?? iio, 

 117, 136, 146, 158, 163, 170, 184, 

 212, 217-218, 233; continuity of, 

 109; force and, 165, 168; ideal, 

 24; laws of, 186; of conception, 

 219; of Taine, 8, 247; Romantic 

 interest in, 244-245; scales of, 

 240-241 



Dewey, John, 132, 140, 172, 178, 

 182, 232 



Dialectics, 20, 113, 128-129, 139, 146- 

 147, 157, 166, 216, 229; Hegelian, 



.2i9» 235 

 Ding an sich, 157, 183 

 Dingle, Herbert, 261 

 Discontinuity, 155-156, 171, 173, 233- 



234 

 Documents, literature and art as, 64, 



67? 74? 9O5 184 

 Donatello, 82 

 Don Quixote, 238 

 Dore, Gustave, 250 

 Drama, 171, 180, 204; realistic, 63, 



239; see also Comedy, Tragedy 

 Dreams, 63; and metaphysics, 48 

 Droz, E., 108 

 Dualism, of judgments on Taine, 



197; of Taine's thought, 3, 6-9, 12, 



14? 77. 127, 167-169 

 Dumas, Alexandre, fils, 46 

 Durand, John, 1 74 

 Diirer, Albrecht, 41, 163, 239 

 Dutch, see Holland 

 Dynamic, 137, 157-158, 169, 183, 



237; in Hegel, 216; see also Static 



East and West, 7, 95, 203 



Eclecticism, 57-58; of Cousin, 24, 40, 



, 49. 251-252; of Taine, 3 



Ecole des Beaux-Arts, 3, 8, 74, 79, 

 256-258, 260 



!ficole Normale, see Normal School 



Edman, Irwin, xi, 11, 98, loi, 161 



Education, 187, 238; aesthetic, 189- 

 190 



Ego and Self, 5, 20, 117-118, 137, 

 201, 225 



Einstein, Albert, 153; quoted, 226 



El Greco, 77 



Elimination, 52, 59, 149, 223 



Eliot, T. S., 6, 12, 113 



Empiricism, 7, iin, 18, 20, 123, 147; 

 English, 27, 52, 91 



Energy, see Force 



England and English, 34-35, 52-54> 

 58, 68, 95, 103, 105, 112, 127, 183, 

 203; critics, 193; education, 91; 

 Idealism, 254; Positivism, 254; mind 

 or character, 27, 53, 91, 137, 147, 

 158; race, 90, 136; Taine's trips to, 

 90, 197, 259; tradition, 7; see also 

 Empiricism; Taine, History of Eng- 

 lish Literature, Notes on England 



Entwickelung, see Development 



