INDEX 



309 



51; and psychology, 189- 

 191; Essay X., 242-270 



Plato, 21, 47, 49, 72, 219 n., 

 278 



Pragmatism, 25, 31, 33, 55, 

 95 n., 109, 130 n., 144; Es 

 say V., 154-168, 193 



Psychical, 81 n., 104 



Psychology, and philosophy, 

 Essay X., 242-270, 301 



Rationalism, Essay XI., 271- 



304 

 &quot;Reality,&quot; 98, 105, 113, 129, 



169 n., 172, 228, 264 

 Relation, and appearance, 



119-120 



Santayana, G., 96, 224 n. 



Sciences, developed out of 

 morals, 56, and industry, 

 57-58; as mode of knowl 

 edge, 108; and philosophy, 

 268-270, 287 



Sensation, 94, 262 n. 



Sensationalism, Essay XI., 

 271-304 



Social Ethics, 302-304 



Socrates, 51, 76, 275, 304 



Species, equivalent to 

 scholastic form, 3-4; as 

 eternal and teleological, 4- 

 5; basis of knowledge, 6-7 



Spencer, Herbert, 16, 33, 66 



Spinoza, 181 



Stoicism, 172, 279 

 Stuart, H. W., 214 n. 

 Subjective, 98, 155, 204 n., 

 270 



Teleology, of life, 4; of 

 nature, 10, 32; basis of 

 idealism, 11; concrete, 15, 

 22; and evolution, 32-35; 

 subjective, 223-224 



Theory, 124-127 



Thinking, practical charac 

 ter of, 124-127 



Tolstoi, 173 n. 



Transcendence, of knowl 

 edge, 103 n., 156-157 



Transcendental, and super 

 natural, 22, 29, 282; view 

 of knowledge, 24, 27; 

 freedom, 74 



Truth, criterion of, 92, 95, 

 107-111; Essay IV., 112- 

 153; absolute, 137; iden 

 tified with existence, 138, 

 145; eternal, 147, 152; 

 Essay V., 154-168; 230- 

 231, 237, 282 



Utilitarianism, 62 



Verification, making true, 

 139 if., 162-164 



Woodbridge, F. J. E., 104 n., 

 240 n. 



