INDEX 



Absolute Idealism, 86 ff.; essentiality 

 of relations, 88 ff.; concrete universal, 

 93 f.; a philosophy of evolution, 95 f. ; 

 dialectic, 97 ff.; compared with Dar 

 winism, 118 ff.; history of philosophy, 

 99 f.; logic, 100 ff.; pure thought, 102 

 ff.; concrete thought, 104 f.; relation 

 to rationalism, 105, no f.; prin 

 ciple of contradiction, 105 ff. ; com 

 pared with humanism, 225 f. 



Absolute knowledge, in pragmatism, 131. 



Actual, Hegelian theory of, 93 ff.; self- 

 contradictoriness of theory, no; 

 compared with immediatism, 250 ff. 

 See Thing-in-itself, Substance, Real 

 ity. 



Agreement, see Consistency. 



ARISTOTLE, 4, 6, 23, 95, 109, 118, 155, 

 156. 



Association by similarity, 190. 



Associationism, 53. 



Aufhebung, 94 n., 97 ff. 



AUGUSTINE, 23, 225. 



BACON, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 47, 99, 143, 204. 

 Belief, in pragmatism, 130, 144. 

 BERKELEY, 12, 14, 15, 20, 25 ff., 48 ff., 



5i. 53. 55. 60 ff., 120, 173 ff., 195 ff., 



220. 

 BUTLER, 12. 



CANTOR, 18. 



Categories, schematism of, 76; value of 



Kant s theory, 212 ff. 

 Causality, in rationalism, 8, 52; Hume s 



theory, 13; modified by Mill, 178; 



criticism of concept, 227 f. 

 Cogito ergo sum, 24. 

 Comparison, 28, 128. 

 Concept, immediatist theory of, 240 ff. 

 Concept, general, 188 ff.; conditions of 



origin, 189; compared with concept 



of object, 189 ff. ; indirectness of 

 control, 192; communicability, 193; 

 Berkeley s theory of, 26 f.; 195 f.; 

 scientific concepts, 197 ff. 



Concept of object, 166 ff.; conditions 

 of origin, 167 f.; import, 168 f.; con 

 tent, 169 ff.; distinguished from per 

 cept and idea, 170 ff. 



Concrete universal, 93; criticised, in. 



CONDORCET, 96. 



Conduct, reference of thought to, 126 f., 

 205 f. 



Consciousness, as an organic function, 

 125, 137 f., 202. 



Consistency, 128; feeling of, 128 n., 

 140; ambiguity of term, 148. 



Content and import, 126, 162 ff. 



Critical Philosophy, 67 ff.; dual con 

 ception of truth, 67, 70; relation to 

 rationalism, 68, 76 ff.; thing-in-itself 

 71, 80 f.; realitas phaenomenon, 72; 

 form and content, 73 ff., 79 f.; re 

 lation to pragmatism, 82 ff. ; perma 

 nent value of standpoint, 215. 



DARWIN, 96, 117. 



Darwinism, influence on mental and 

 social sciences, 117; exception of logic, 

 118; compared with absolute idealism, 

 118 ff. 



Definition, theory of, 200. 



Definitions, views of Bacon and ration 

 alists, 4; as principles, 8, 19. 



DESCARTES, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 16, 20, 23, 

 25, 31 f., 38 ff., 42, 43 ff-. 56, 57. 59. 

 68, 89, 90, 106. 



DEWEY, 122, 127 n., 144 n., 171 n., 

 231, 235 ff. 



Dialectic, in Plato, 22 ff.; in Hegel, 97 

 ff., 108; pragmatist estimate of, 203. 



Dualism of form and content, 79. 



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