INDEX 



293 



ference, 83-4 ; thought of, does not 

 constitute human reality, 121 ; as 

 author of adaptation, 131 ; united 

 with the devil in the Absolute, 167, 

 287 ; Aristotle s, 203, 211 ; perfection 

 of, 226 ; not the one subject, 286 



Goethe, 166, 180 



Good, conditions true and real, 9 ; 

 supreme power of, 12 ; idea of, 41, 

 207 ; of organism determines racial 

 conduct, 133 ; the, 208 ; must be 

 attainable, 217 



Goodness, ultimately harmonious with 

 truth, 24, 28, and truth, 62 ; as 

 ideal, 162 ; its apparent waste, 253 ; 

 a matter of character, 254, and 

 happiness, 255 



Gorgias, 186 



Green, T. H., 112, 212 



Gymnosophistic, 35 



Hallucination, individual, 115 ; col 

 lective, 116 ; how distinguished from 

 reality, 119 



Happiness, as ideal, 159 ; its validity, 

 162, 259, 260 



Harmony, and individuality, xxii, in 

 cludes system, 50 ; the real as, 119 ; 

 includes non-contradiction, 187 ; a 

 postulate, 189 ; result of growing 

 knowledge, 200 ; perfect, 203 ; 

 ethical, postulates a future life, 252, 

 259 ; of experience potential, 261 ; 

 must be universal, 264 



Hartmann, E. von, 158 



Heaven, conception of, 177, 212-3, 

 240-1, 280 ; its inefficacy, 240, 274 



Hedonism, and pessimism, 158-9 



Hegel, xxii, 54, 97, 186, 218 



Hegelism, 99 



Helmholtz, 131 



Herakleitos, 39, 42, 206 



Herbart, 85, 186, 187 



Historical method, 107 



Hobbes, 216 



Hodgson, R., 243 



Homer, 280 



Howison, G. H., ix 



Humanism, xvi-xxv ; its naming, xvi ; 

 relation to anthropomorphism, xvii ; 

 to Protagoras s dictum, xvii ; to 

 common sense, xvii, xxi ; as a 

 method, xviii-xix ; relation to radical 

 empiricism and pluralism, xx ; to per 

 sonal idealism and pragmatism, xxi ; 

 antithesis to barbarism, xxii, and 

 scholasticism, xxiii, and naturalism 

 and absolutism, xxiv 13, 197 



Hume, 197, 205, 209, 223 



Hyperassthesia, 115-6 



Idealism and reality, 110-26; epis- 

 temological and metaphysical, 112; 

 a paradox because not acted on, 

 197-8 ; false, 198 



Idealistic, art of passing into superior 

 worlds, 1 8 ; experientialism, 281 



Ideals, denial of, leads to pessimism, 

 159 ; freedom to realise, 182 ; of 

 knowledge, 203 ; not to be abandoned, 

 257 ; their claims, 258-9 ; of activity 

 and rest, 218 



Immediacy of experience, 101 



Immediate experience, xviii, real, 192 ; 

 not sufficient, 193 ; superior reality 

 of, 195 ; return to, 202 



Immortality, desire for, 228-49 &amp;gt; ethical 

 significance of the idea, 250-65 ; hope 

 of, 232, 258, and fear of death, 229 ; 

 not taken as fact, 240 ; scientific in 

 vestigation of disliked, 241 



Imperfection, 102, 109; of life, 260 



Indetermination of Real, xx, 12 ; im 

 plied in Pragmatism, 15 



Individual, is real, 122, 123 ; not 

 compounded of universals, 123, 126 



Individuality, of philosophy, xxii, 268 ; of 

 experience, 31 ; abstracted from, 98 ; 

 real, 102 ; extralogical, 123 ; degrees 

 of, 124; in process, 124; inexhaust 

 ible, 126 ; limits extent of common 

 world, 287 



Infinity, as metaphysical ideal, 214 



Intellectual insight, dependent on 

 action, 34 



Intellectualism, xiii, 6 ; of Mephisto, 

 173, 181 



Intelligence, divine, human or animal 

 in evolution, 129 ; as otiose, 130, 

 animal, as source of adaptation, 131 ; 

 divine, in conflict with benevolence 

 and superfluous, 132 : not necessary 

 for natural selection, 133 ; question 

 of its efficacy, 134-5, non- suited, 

 150-1 



Interaction, develops both subject and 

 object, 113 ; necessary to coexistence 

 implied in existence of world and 

 primary fact, 65-6 



Interest, xii, 51, 53 ; in future life, 243, 

 245 ; in future life greater than in 

 past, 279 



Irrationalism, 5 



James, W., v, viii, ix, xvi, xvii, 5, 7, 

 8, 15, 27, 52, 117, 119, 152, 271 



Kant, xxii, 7, 9, 29, 85, 92, 94 

 Karma, 264 

 Kidd, B., 6 

 Knox, H. V., 189 



