378 



HUMANISM 



Immediacy of experience, 101 



Immediate experience, xxii, real, 192 ; 

 not sufficient, 193 ; of cause, 239- 

 240 ; superior reality of, 195 ; return 

 to, 202 



Immortality, desire for, 313-34 , ethical 

 significance of the idea, Jjj-jo ; hope 

 f- 3 J 7 343 an( 3 fear of death, 314 ; 

 not taken as fact, 325 ; scientific in 

 vestigation of disliked, 326 



Imperfection, 102, 109; of life, 345 



Indetermination of Real, xxiv, i2,3O7/. ; 

 implied in Pragmatism, 15 



Individual, is real, 122, 123 ; not 

 compounded of universals, 123, 126 



Individuality, of philosophy, xxvi, 265, 

 353 ; of experience, 31 ; abstracted 

 from, 98 ; real, 102 ; extralogical,i23; 

 degrees of, 124 ; in process, 124 ; in 

 exhaustible, 126 ; limits extent of 

 common world, 372 



Infallibility, 268-82 



Infinity, as metaphysical ideal, 214 



Intellection, not knowing, 234 



Intellectual insight, dependent on 

 action, 34 



Intellectualism, xvii, 6, 230, 248 ; of 

 Hume, 233-4 ; of Mephisto, 173, 

 181 ; kinds of, 233-4 



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, 



I5Q-5 1 



Intolerance, 274, 276, 282 

 Interaction, develops both subject and 



object, 113 ; necessary to coexistence 



implied in existence of world and 



primary fact, 65-6 

 Interest, xvi, 51, 53 ; in future life, 328, 



330 ; in future life greater than in 



past, 364 

 Intuition, 285 

 Irrationalism, 5 



fames, W., vii, xii, xiii, xx, xxi, xxiv, 

 5,7, 15, 27, 52, 117, 119, 152, 246 ., 

 312, 356 



Kant, xxvi, 7, 9, 29, 85, 92, 94, 205 n., 

 233, 238, 243 n., 247, 257, 258 



Karma, 349 



Kidd, B., 6 



Knowledge, its unity, 23 ; its useful 

 ness, 23 ; useless, relatively so or 

 indirectly useful or apparently so, 

 40 ; about, vs. acquaintance with, 



189, why power, 200 ; as opposed to 

 opinion, 259-60 ; as ideal, 344 ; as 

 postulate, 348 

 Knox, H. V., 189 



Lamarckian factors in evolution, 136 



Law, 300-302 



Lechalas, 86 



Leroy, ., 278 



Lie, 47 



Life, as equilibrium, 214-6 



Locke, 253 



Logic, reform of, ix, x, xiv, xvii ; ab 

 stract, xvi ; relation to psychology, 

 x, xvii ; should not abstract from in 

 terest, 52 ; nor exclude psychology, 

 x, 53 ; of Darwinism, 144 



Loisy, 306 



Lotze, 7, 10, 62-84 passim^ 224, 254 



MacTaggart, J. ., xiii, 95-109 passim 



Magic, 298-9 



Mainlander, 219 



Man, as the measure, xxi ; maker of 

 science, xxiv ; starting-point, xxi-xxii 



Measure, man as the, xxi, xxiv 



Mechanism, its value, 242 



Metageometry, 86, 89, 93 



Metaphysics, an immoralist, 4 ; its 

 foundations in ethics, 10 ; quasi- 

 ethical, 13 ; abstract, 99, 105, 107 ; 

 subordinate to concrete fact, 102 ; 

 ultimately ethical, 105, 107, and 

 epistemology, 112 ; critical denial 

 of, 161 



Methodological assumption, of Darwin, 

 146 ; of Law, 104, 297-312 ; in psy 

 chical research, 355-65 



Methodology, 355 



Mill, J. S,, 223 n. , 225, 238 



Milton, 365 



Mimicry, 48, 152 



Mind! 116 n., 156 n. 



Modernism, 268-84 



Mohammed, 367 



Monads, 124 



Monism, Lotze s proof of, 63 ; not im 

 plied in mere existence of a world, 

 66 ; the One not substantial, 67 ; its 

 besetting sin, 75 ; religiously worth 

 less, 77 ; Eleatic, 206 ; idealistic, 



3 6 9. 371 



Moore, A. W., 7, 56 

 Moore, G. ., 256 

 Moral Order, 181, 254-63 

 Motion, 246; as imperfect energeia, 210,. 



and time, 212 ; equilibration of, 



213-4 



Multiple Personality, 266 

 Myers, F. W. H., 321, 325, 357 



