28o 



INDEX 



Romantic and Romanticisnij vii- 

 viii, 11-12, 14, 91, 93, 109, 181, 

 185-186; and nationalism, 87, 90; 

 and Naturalism, 5, 112; concrete- 

 ness and variety of, 170; elements 

 in Taine, 50-51, 138-139, 167, 185, 

 187-188, 200-201, 245; French, 48; 

 German, 230; Idealism, 57; see 

 also Classic; Criticism, romantic 



Rome, see Italy 



Rosea, D. D., 24-25, 28-29, 31, 33- 

 35, 50, 174, 223-224 



Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 195, 201 



Royer-Collard, Pierre Paul, 115 



Rubens, 83, 163, 180, 239 



Russell, Bertrand, 32, 155 



Sainte-Beuve, C.-A.-, vii, 39, 46, 55, 

 59, 64-65, 67, 72, 100, 108, 125, 

 140, 253, 257-258; essay on, 260 



Saint Paul, 67 



Saint-Simon, see Taine, 'Saint- 

 Simon' 



Sand, Georges, 26; essay on, 260 



Saxons, 89-90, 95 



Scales of value, 3, 63-64, 75-76, 96, 

 158-159, 162-170, 181; diagrams, 

 237-241 (Appendix E); ideal, 10, 

 135, 201; stressing permanence, 

 184; Taine's criticized, i66-i6g, 

 202; two possibilities of, 184-185 



Scepticism, 21, 47, 208, 227 



Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm, 27, 215 



Schlegel, Friedrich, 122 



Science and the Sciences, 18, 28, 66, 

 150, 229; and art, 11, 61-63; and 

 criticism, 139-140; and literature, 

 48; and philosophy, 219; as a war, 

 222; historical and natural, 218— 

 220; ideal of, 157, 181; ideal limits 

 of, 154-156, 202; 19th century, 28, 

 45» 94; social, 94, 106, 108-109, 

 153, 156, 186, 200, 233; spHt with 

 humanities, 25; use and abuse of, 

 63; see also Sociology, and names 

 of individual sciences 



Scots and Scotch, 100, 122; Realism, 

 227 



Scott, Walter, 64 



Sculpture, 76 



Second Empire, vii, 7, 26, 105, 222, 



259 

 Second Republic, 25 



Seley, Stephen, 202 



Semantics, 42, 134, 164, 183; his- 

 torical, 86, 103, 199; see Spitzer; 

 also Meaning, Communication 



Shakespeare, William, 16, 75, 95, 120, 

 123, 139, 163, 172, 179, 181, 185, 

 238, 245; characters of, 51, 252; 

 Hamlet quoted, 138 



Siecle. See Time 



Simon, Jules, 33, 250 



Situation, general, 79; whole, 68, 

 74, 96, 126 



Socialism, 26, 87 



Sociology, 52, 104, 123, 171, 179; 

 and biology, 113; in Taine, 106, 

 245; of knowledge, 131; of litera- 

 ture, 106; see also Science, social 



Sonnet, 178-180 



Sophocles, 120, 177; see also Oedipus 

 the King 



Sorbonne, 99, 258 



Soul, and body, 221, 239-240; see 

 also Psychology, passim 



Space, essay on, 225; see also Exten- 

 sion 



Spain, 103, 174, 179, 242; see also 

 Taine, Voyage to the Pyrenees 



Species, 29, 43; see also Types, Type 

 analysis 



Spengler, Oswald, 158 



Spingarn, Joel, 131 



Spinoza, Baruch, and Spinozism, 

 viii, 7, 9-10, 13, 16-18, 21, 25, 32, 

 34-35, 40, 45, 57, 117, 126, 139, 

 147, 157, 161, 168, 197, 20g-2I0, 

 214-216, 219, 221, 224-229, 237; 

 and Descartes, 210-212; Spinoza 

 versus Hegel, 18, 2y-2g, 129, 168, 

 198, 220-224; see Appendix A, 

 passim 



Spiritualists and Spiritualism, 26, 48, 

 57. 210 



Spitzer, Leo, 86-87, 9^> 103-104, 

 107-109, 199 



Standards, 6, 8, 10, 51, 84, 156, 178; 

 relative and absolute, 162; uni- 

 versal, 202 



Static versus Dynamic, 18, 27-28, 

 103, 130, i66-i6g, 178, 184, 198, 

 212, 224, 237; see also Spinoza 

 versus Hegel 



Statistics, 66, 93, 232 



Stendhal, ix, 51, 57, 67, 140, 188, 

 245. 255, 258 



