INDEX 



377 



between teleological and antiteleo- 

 logical interpretation, 153; judgments 

 of, 161 ; are values, 163 



Faith and reason, xvii, 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, 312 ; 

 need for, due to past negligence, 322 ; 

 ages of faith not really religious, 

 327; in supernatural, 361-2 



Falsehood, and uselessness, 37, 40 ; 

 practically untenable, 38 



Feeling, 233 



Fichte, 254 



Fiction, 10, n n., 146, 147, 308 



Formal Logic, ix, x ; notes, 2, 125, 

 185, 238, 268 



Freedom, 15, 77, 176, 182, 283-312 ; 

 and habit, 303 ; and indetermination, 

 306 ; inconvenience of, 302-3 



Future life, why a matter of faith, 

 324 ; scientific investigation of, 

 351-74 ; too much to think of, 342 ; 

 interest in, 357 ; cannot be wholly 

 different, 358 ; unduly tragic view of, 

 359 ; a priori objections to, 365 ; 

 possibility of empirical proof, 373 



Gallon, Sir F., 288 



Geometry, Euclidean and non-Euclidean, 

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

 91 ; necessity and universality, and 

 a-priority, 92 



Ghost, of Banquo, 116 ; rarity of, 363 



God, not the Unity of Things, 76 ; not 

 the Absolute, 77 ; nor author of evil, 

 80-8 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 

 ference, 83-4 ; thought of, does not 

 constitute human reality, 121 ; as 

 author of adaptation, 131 ; united 

 with the devil in the Absolute, 167, 

 372 ; Aristotle s, 203, 211, 253 ; per 

 fection of, 226 ; not the one subject, 



37i 



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, 338 ; 

 a matter of character, 339, and 

 happiness, 340 



Gorgias, 186 



Green, T. H., 112, 212, 235 n., 236)1. 

 Gymnosophistic, 35 



Hallucination, individual, 115; col 

 lective, 116 ; how distinguished from 

 reality, 119 



Hamilton, Sir W., 237 



Happiness, as ideal, 159 ; its validity, 

 162, 344, 345 



Harmony, and individuality, xxvi, 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, 337, 

 344 ; of experience potential, 346 ; 

 must be universal, 349 



Hartmann, E. von, 158 



Heaven, conception of, 177, 212-3, 

 33 6 -7. 3 6 S : its inefficacy, 325, 359 



Hedonism, and pessimism, 158-9 



Hegel, xxvii, 54, 97, 186, 218 



Hegelism, 99 



Helmholtz, 131 



Herakleitos, 39, 42, 207, 284 



Herbart, 85, 186, 187 



Historical method, 107 



Hobbes, 216 



Hodgson, ft., 328 



Homer, 365 



Howison, G. H., xiii 



Humanism, xx-xxix ; its naming, ix, 

 xx ; relation to anthropomorphism, 

 xxi ; to Protagoras s dictum, x, xxi ; to 

 common sense, xxi, xxv ; as a 

 method, xxii-xxvi ; relation to radical 

 empiricism and pluralism, xxiv ; to 

 Humism, 225-48 ; to personal ideal 

 ism and pragmatism, xxv ; to scepti 

 cism, 230 ; to solipsism, 251, 263-7 ; 

 antithesis to barbarism, xxvi, and 

 scholasticism, xxvii, and naturalism 

 and absolutism, xxviii, 13, 197 



Hume, 197, 205, 209, 223, 228-48 

 passim, 253 



Hyperaesthesia, 115-6 



Idea,&quot; 256-7 



Idealism and reality, 110-26; ab 

 solute, 252 ; epistemological and 

 metaphysical, 112 ; a paradox be 

 cause not acted on, 197-8 ; false, 

 198, 262 ; subjective, 252 



Idealistic, art of passing into superior 

 worlds, 1 8 ; experientialism, 366 



Ideals, denial of, leads to pessimism, 

 159 ; freedom to realize, 182 ; of 

 knowledge, 203.; not to be abandoned, 

 342 ; their claims, 343-4 ; of activity 

 and rest, 218 



