INDEX. 



513 



Coexistence and non-coexistence, ii. 118. 

 Coextension and non-coextension, ii. 118. 

 Cognition involves recognition, i. 12 ; ii. 



120 ; discrimination, i. 14 ; how it 



arises, ii. 121. 

 Coherence as resulting from integration, 



Cohesion, gravity, and chemism, i. 291. 



Dointension and non-cointension, ii. 118. 



Colours of plants and animals, ii. 20. 



Comets and nebulae, i. 389. 



Cornets &quot;forming their own future.&quot; ii. 

 180. 



Commune of Paris, ii. 483. 



Community and environment, ii. 197 ; its 

 growth in size and complexity, ii. 204; 

 more than an organism, ii. 226. 



Comparative method as connected with 

 dynamical habits of thought, ii. 477. 



Comparison, i. 241. 



Compressibility of matter, i. 3. 



Comte, Auguste, his weakness as a psy 

 chologist, i. 82, 163, 249 ; ii. 73 ; com 

 pared with Plato, i. 103, 139 ; abandons 

 the objective method, i. 131 ; empire 

 of dead over living, i. 135 ; ii. 199 ; his 

 habit of abstaining from reading, i. 

 137 ; his Subjective Synthesis, i. 140 ; 

 question as to his insanity, i. 141 ; not 

 the founder of scientific philosophy, i. 

 162 ; his keen historic sense, i. ] 65 ; 

 compared with Cuvior, i. 166 ; his 

 &quot; Law of the Three Stages,&quot; i. 168 ; ii. 

 238, 245, 468 ; his inconsistent state 

 ments, i. 170; compared with Coper 

 nicus, i. 185 ; his classification of the 

 sciences, i. 189 215 ; his wrong ar 

 rangement of the parts of sociology, 

 i. 194 ; his rejection of psychology, i. 

 194 ; ii. 73 : his erroneous view of che 

 mistry, i. 225 ; his small esteem for 

 syllogistic logic, i. 235 ; his contribu 

 tions to the logic of induction, and his 

 conception of Philosophy as an Or- 

 ganon, i. 240 ; merged Philosophy iu 

 Logic, i. 246 ; repudiated cell-doctrine, 

 i. 247 ; condemned all inquiries into 

 the origin of man, i. 248 ; denic d the 

 possil ility of a science of stellar astro 

 nomy, i. 248 ; wherein different from 

 St. Simon and Fourier, i. 260 ; identi 

 fied philosophy with sociology, i. 260 ; 

 how he reached the Religion of 

 Humanity, i. 261 ; his ludicrous treat 

 ment of atheism, i. 262 ; his remark 

 abouf. the meaning of &quot; Physics,&quot; i. 

 279 ; his acceptance of phrenology, ii. 

 74 ; his claim to be regarded as the 

 founder of sociology, ii. 232, 253 ; his 

 VOL. II. 



law of social progress, K. 240 ; his re 

 mark that the heavens declare tho 

 glory of Hipparchos and Newton, ii. 

 415 ; his Religion of Humanity, ii. 

 417 ; his advance towards a dynamical 

 view of things, ii. 486 ; his belief that 

 society can be reorganized by philo 

 sophy, ii. 488 ; his extravagant ex 

 pectations, ii. 493 ; his intention of re 

 stricting scientific research, ii. 496. 



Concealment, its uses in the animal 

 world, ii. 21. 



Concomitant variations, i. 237, 244. 



Concrete relations interpreted soonei 

 than abstract relations, i. 210. 



Concrete sciences, how distinguished by 

 Comte, i. 189 ; cannot furnish a pri 

 mordial theorem upou which to found 

 a philosophy, i. 268. 



Condillac, i. 118. 



Conlorcet, i. 253; ii. 253. 



Connature and non-connature, ii. 118. 



Conscience, beginnings of, ii. 348. 



Consciousness, how tar known, i. 16 ; its 

 d rect warrant for the existence of ita 

 states, i. 64 ; dependent on cerebral 

 changes, i. 413 ; ii. 149 ; involves an 

 orderly succession of changes, ii. 119 ; 

 how evolved from automatic mental 

 action, ii. 151 ; does not assert that 

 volitions are uncaused, ii. 182. 



Conspicuous phenomena generalized 

 sooner than those that are inconspi 

 cuous, i. 209. 



Contingent Truths defined by Mr. Lewea 

 i. 58. 



Continuity between inorganic and or 

 ganic phenomena, i. 435 ; among psy 

 chical phenomena, ii. 132. 



Contract and status, ii. 221. 



Convolutions in the brain, structure of. 

 ii. U1. 



Cooling of the solar system, i. 357. 



Cooperation as masking the effects of 

 natural selection, ii. 258. 



Copernican revolution and final causes, i. 

 261. 



Corporate responsibility in ancient com 

 munities, ii. 268. 



Corpuscular theory of light, i. 130. 



Correlation of forces, i. 40, 290 ; affordi 

 no support for materialism, ii. 440. 



Correlation of growth, ii. 16. 



Correspondence extending in time and 

 space, i. 35 ; ii. 89, 299 ; in speciality, 

 ii. 93 ; in complexity, i. 36 ; ii. 94, 

 309 ; in definiteness, ii. 307 ; in gene 

 rality, i. 36 ; ii. 308 ; in integration, i 

 37. 



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