292 



HUMANISM 



53 ; due to interest, 53 ; use as test 



of reality, 119 

 Colour-blindness, 116 

 Commensurability, Lotze s argument 



from, 70 



Common sense, xvii, xix, xxi, 6, 190 

 Common world, result of effort, 31, 286 

 Comte, 20 1 

 Conduct, Controls theory, 4 ; thought a 



mode of, 4 ; survival value of, 133 ; 



rewards and punishments as results 



of. 255 



Consciousness, as accident, 130 ; per 

 fection of, 216-8 ; one, as subject of 



world, 286-7 



Contradiction, principle of, 185-6, 188 

 Cope, E. D., 135 

 Criteria of reality, 114-8, 121 ; absolute, 



185, 189 



Damnation of Faust impossible, 177 ; 

 eternal, not an ethical postulate, 264 



Dante, 280 



Darwin, C., 128-56 passim 



Darwinism, 71 ; its implicit atheism, 72, 

 and design, 128-56 



Death, foreknowledge of, 229 ; not 

 thought about, 230-6 ; as withdrawal 

 from common world of waking life, 

 284-9 ! idealist paradoxes about, 285 ; 

 ambiguity of, 286 



Degeneration, 139, 140 



Delbceuf, 86, 90 



Demonstration, hypothetical, 264 



Design, 128-56; argument from, its 

 theological value, 130 ; its weak 

 nesses, 131 ; attacked by Darwin, 

 132 ; ultimately strengthened by evolu 

 tionism, 154-6 



Desire to know, 245-9 



Determinism, as postulate, 15, and 

 Monism, 49 



Dewey, J. , ix 



Dialectic, Hegel s, 95, 97, 103 



Dreams and superior reality, 22, 32, 

 282 ; as individual truths, 60 ; their 

 alleged incoherence and unreality, 

 113, 119 ; private worlds of, 196 ; 

 of metaphysics, 226, and the transi 

 tion to other worlds, 281, 284 ; in 

 ferior reality of dream worlds, 282-3 



Economic man, 146-8 



Eleaticism, 206-7 



Elimination of unfitter, 132 



Eliot, George, 254 



End, affair of finite individuals, 105; or 



good, 1 60 

 Energeia, Aristotelian conception of 



substance, 204-27 ; as life and per 



fection of activity, 221, and energy, 



223 

 Energy, dissipation of, 214, and ener- 



geia, 223 

 Epistemological question prior to onto- 



logical, 9 ; but conditioned by ethical, 



10, and ontological, 114 

 Equilibration, as death, 219-20; as 



life, 220-21 



Equilibrium, 188, 214-21 

 Ethical theory dependent on practice, 



33-5 



Ethics and Pragmatism, xiv, and psy 

 chological facts of conduct, 228 



Evil, 78-80 



Evolution, its essence, 108 ; factors of 

 organic, 134, 136 ; not explained by 

 Darwinism, 138-43 ; facts of, do 

 not exclude intelligence, 149-50; 

 mechanical views of, 155 



Evolutionism, 108, 129, 144 ; its an 

 tiquity, 155 



Experientialism, idealistic, 281 



Fact, as value, 10, 55 ; its recognition 

 provisional, 12, and truth, 46 ; 

 valued as true, 57; cannot decide 

 between ideological and antiteleo- 

 logical interpretation, 153; judgments 

 of, 161 ; are values, 163 



Falsehood, and uselessness, 37, 40 ; 

 practically untenable, 38 



Faith and reason, xiv, 7 ; its venture, 

 16, 79-80 ; Dr. McTaggart s, in the 

 unknown synthesis, 96 ; extralogical, 

 97 ; ultimate appeal to, 99 ; needed 

 for ultimate assumptions, 153 ; need 

 for, due to past negligence, 237 ; 

 ages of faith not really religious, 

 242; in supernatural, 276-7 



Freedom, 15, 77, 176, 182 



Future life, why a matter of faith, 

 239 ; scientific investigation of, 

 266-89 i to much to think of, 257 ; 

 interest in, 272 ; cannot be wholly 

 different, 273 ; unduly tragic view of, 

 274 ; a priori objections to, 280 ; 

 possibility of empirical proof, 288 



Geometry, Euclidean and non-Euclidean, 

 85-94 ; its certainty, 91 ; real validity, 

 91 ; necessity ami universality, and 

 a-priority, 92 



Ghost, of Banquo, 116; rarity of, 278 

 God, not the Unity/ of Things, 76; not 

 the Absolute, 77 ; nor author of evil, 

 80-1 ; vagueness of the current con 

 ception, 8 1 ; a priori proofs of, 

 worthless because too wide, 82 ; 

 must be given an a posteriori re- 



