INDEX 



Taylor, A. ., 4 



Teleology, 71, 129, 133, 137, 143, 148, 

 149, 152-5 



Theages, 27 



Theodicy, 167, 181, 182 



Thompson, Mrs., 334 



Thomson, J. , 158 



Thomson, Sir J. J., 281 



Thought, pure, does not account for 

 actual thinking, xvi ; as acts, 15, 

 52 ; purposive, 8, 52, 53, selec 

 tive, 255 ; not to be separated from 

 reality, 46; no pure, xiv, 51, 52; 

 movement of, due to psychological 

 interest, 51 ; transcended by reality, 

 114, 120, 121, 122-3 I an d its other, 

 125, and sensation, 203 



Time, and succession, 94 ; process, reality 

 and value of, 95-109 ; its alleged un 

 reality, 189; its passage into eternity, 

 212 ; in other worlds, 360 ; persists 

 in dream worlds, 366 



True, what works in practice, 7, 36 ; 

 depends on good, 9 ; true for our 

 needs, 30-1 ; is useful, 37 ; as what 

 fits into a system, 46 ; not use 

 less, 58 



Truth, 44-61 ; eternal, xvi ; not infal 

 lible, xxi ; absolute, 271-8; does 

 not exist apart from human agency, 

 10, 275, 282 ; for the sake of, 24 ; 

 its claims, 26, and goodness, 28 ; 

 and history, 278 ; of sense-percep 

 tion relative to us, 33 ; eternal, of 

 mathematics, 33 ; apart from use 

 remains potential, 36 ; definition 

 of, as agreement of thought with 

 reality, 46,; as systematic coher 

 ence, 46 ; consistency a mark of, 47 ; 

 variously to be constructed by human 

 effort, 49 ; psychological terms in its 

 definition, 51 ; immediate apprehen 

 sion of, 52 ; a form of value, 54, 162 ; 

 a means of prediction, 297-8 ; as 

 individual valuation, 55, 58 ; as 

 valuation of fact, 57, 162 ; formal 

 and material, 57, 98; plural, 273, 276; 

 relative to purpose, 296 ; a social 

 product, 58, and goodness, 62 ; of 

 abstraction, 98, 100 ; a claim, 98 ; 

 eternity due to abstraction, 99 ; 

 methodological, 104 ; as ideal, 162 ; 

 cannot be noxious, 201 



Tweedledee, 369 



Ultimate question for philosophy, 10 

 Ultimate reality, worlds of, 32 ; 

 realizes ideals, 120; non- contra 

 dictory, 185 ; harmonious, 187, 199 ; 

 continuouswith immediate experience, 



192, 195 ; conception of, how reached, 

 194 ; must be satisfactory, 200 ; 

 must establish harmony, 202 ; must 

 become immediate experience, 203 



Ultra-Darwinians, 134, 137 



Unity of the universe, not to be hypos- 

 tasized, 67 ; not proved by Lotze, 72 ; 

 neither personal nor moral, 79 



Universal laws, shorthand for habitual 

 interactions, 125 



Usefulness of knowledge, 23, 28, 42 ; 

 determines social recognition, 59 



Useless persons allowed to pursue use 

 less knowledge, 60 ; useless is false, 

 37-8, 40 



Validity, if unrealizable not valid, xvii ; 

 timeless, 98 ; as practical working, 98 



Valuation, pervades experience, 8, 10 ; 

 truth, 8, 6 1 ; knowledge a form of, 

 10 ; of indetermination, 15 ; of truth, 

 50; as true and false, 55; diffi 

 culty of sustaining it in society, 58 ; 

 systematized in ideals, 159 ; nature 

 of ethical, not accurately known, 313 ; 

 ethical, affirms ideal of goodness, 344; 

 doubt of significance of human, 347 



Value, source of validity, xvii ; essential 

 to truth of a system, 50; truth 

 as, 55 ; no fact without, 55 ; of prac 

 tically important, 117; of life denied, 

 160 ; judgments of, and of fact, 160 ; 

 truth as, 162 ; are facts, 163 ; failure 

 of scheme of, 164; inferior value of 

 dream worlds, 367 



Variability, Darwin s postulate, 132, 139 



Variation, 132, 134, 145 ; accidental, 

 132, 135, 146 ; causes of, 137 ; dis 

 continuity of, 136 ; indefinite, 135, 

 146, 148, 151, 153 ; origin of, 135, 

 142 ; purposive direction of, 137 ; 

 facts of, 148-9 



Verification in science and religion, xix 



Virtue, as knowledge, 285 



Vischer, F. T., 177 n. 



Voluntarism, 8, 231, 233 



Wallace, A. R., 144 



Ward, J., xii, 372 



Will to believe, xii, xx, 5, 153 ; to 

 know, ii, 16, 312, 321 



Wisdom, speculative and practical, 24-6, 

 28 ; opposition between them, 29-30 



Worlds, of higher reality, 18, 32, 193-8, 

 368 ; of relative reality, 366 ; of in 

 ferior reality, 367-8 



Wundt, xiv 



Zeno, 22, 186, 206 

 Zollner, 118 



