INDEX. 



257 



Dualism of idea and ideatum, in ration 

 alism, 57, in empiricism, 60. 



Dualism of universal and particular, in 

 rationalism, 43 ff.; in empiricism, 51; 

 in Kant, 74; in Hegel, 109; in im- 

 mediatism, 244. 



Elements, simplicity of, 30, 51 ff.; in 

 rationalism, 30 ff.; in empiricism, 

 33; in Kant, 73 ff.; in modern psy 

 chology, 120 f.; logical complexity 

 of psychological, 35. 



EMPEDOCLES, 21. 



Empiricism, Part I passim; debt to 

 Locke, 10 ff.; place of psychology, n; 

 development in XVIII century, 12; 

 outline of Hume s system, 12 ff. ; 

 Hegel s attitude toward, 86 ff.; re 

 lation to pragmatism, 120 ff. 



End, definition of, 136; survival and 

 happiness,- 137; intellectual satisfac 

 tion, 129, 139 ff., 197 ff., 210. 



EPICURUS, 155. 



Evolution, in absolute idealism, 94, 

 95 ff. ; Darwinian theory of, 117 ff., 

 136; in pragmatism, 123 ff., 148. 



Evolution of knowledge, 18; unrecog 

 nized by dogmatists, 19 f.; in Hegel, 

 99; in pragmatism, 131; its continu 

 ity, 214. 



Experience, in empiricism, 12; in criti 

 cism, 70; in absolute idealism, 103 f. ; 

 in immediatism, 231 ff., 238 ff. 



EUCLID, 5, 7, 39. 



Fallacies, interpretation of, 17. 



First principles, their nature for ration 

 alism, 8, 38 ff. 



Formal logic, validity of its principles, 

 159, 210 ff.; pragmatist estimate of, 

 203 ff. 



Forms of thought, in criticism, 73, 78 ff.; 

 a posteriori for Mill, 181; in prag 

 matism, 202 ff. 



Freedom of will, 226 ff. 



Geometry, scientific ideal of rationalism, 

 6; influence on Plato s logic, 22; val 

 idity of its principles, 159. 



God, meaning of, for rationalism, 9, 40; 

 ontological proof, in Descartes, 57 n.; 

 in Anselm, 57; relation to world, in 

 Kant, 83. 



HEGEL, 14, 40 n., 86 ff., 148 n., 215, 

 225 f. 



HERACLITUS, 21, 96, 100, 146. 



HERDER, 96. 



Historical criticism of philosophy, its 

 value, 1 6 ff. 



History of philosophy, Hegel s concep 

 tion of, 99 ff. 



HOBBES, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, n, 39 n., 68. 



Humanism, 123, 133, 225 ff. 



HUME, 3, 12 f., 20, 34 f., 48, 50 f., 53, 55, 

 60, 61 ff., 68, 69, 72, 120, 129 n., 149, 

 160, 174, 178 n., 185, 187, 196. 



HUTCHESON, 12, 14, 2O, 129 n. 



Identity of thing and percept, 55; in 

 subjective idealism, 60 ff.; in realism, 

 62 ff.; criticised, 63; in immediatism, 

 186. 



Immediacy, reinterpreted by Hegel, 101. 



Immediate empiricism see Immedi 

 atism. 



Immediate experience, certainty of, 

 20 ff., 243. 



Immediatism, 185 ff., 231 ff., Appendix 

 II; as a method, 254. 



Inclusion, intensive, in rationalism, 37 f. 



Induction, in rationalism and empiric- 

 cism, 3, 12, 104 n.; in Hegel, 104. 



Introspection, infallibility of, 25, 27; 

 Berkeley s method, 25 ff. 



Intuition, 8; in Locke, 10; in Plato, 

 Aristotle, Augustine, Descartes, 23; 

 in Berkeley and Hume, 28 f.; re 

 jected by absolute idealism, 92; 

 evolutionary theory of, 156. 



JAMES, 126 ff, 140 ff., 166, 187, Appendix 



KANT, 14, 37, 39 n., 67 ff., 91, 92, 95, 181, 

 212 ff., 228, 236. 



Language, relation to general concept, 

 193 ff. 



