SUBJECT-INDEX. 



637 



Cooperation : 553-74 ; the term, 553-4 ; 

 examples, 554-6, 556-8; profit shar 

 ing, 558-61; Potter, History, 562; 

 Holyoake, History, 562 ; so-called co 

 operative societies, 561-5 ; the strictly 

 so-called, 565-9 ; will it answer ? 569- 

 74; compulsory (see Militancy); and 

 voluntary (see Industrialism). 



Corn factors, origin, 381. 



Court of justice and temple, 268. 



Craft, meaning a trade, 429. 



Cruelty : and religious evolution, 166 ; 

 of savages, 343. 



Crusades, Grecian analogy, 35 



Currency (see Money). 



Custom: and law, 261-2; primitive, 448. 



DAMNATION-, belief in, 166. 



Dancer and Musician: 201-16; unpro 

 fessional, 201-3 ; before visible ruler, 

 203-5 ; and invisible, 205-10 ; religious 

 differentiation, 210-1 ; clerical origin 

 of latter, 211-5 ; origin of popular 

 dances, 214-5 ; and composers, 212-5 ; 

 rise of actors, 226-7 ; summary, 317. 



Dancing: religious, 33; evolution of 

 drama, 227. 



Daughters (see Descendants). 



da Vinci, Leonardo, 301. 



D.C. L., conferred by Archbishop, 270. 



Dead, the : influence upon the living, 

 95-7, 101-2, 105, 152, 261-2; doubles 

 of, (see Ghosts). 



Deafness and religious idea, 3-4, 17, 

 35. 



Death : conceptions of, 4. 5-8, 40, 52, 

 182 ; and ancestor worship, 8-21, 150, 

 182; religious retrospect, 160, 169. 



Debt punished by slavery, 466. 



Degrees conferred by Archbishop, 270. 



Deluge, a common tradition, 27-8. 



Demons, a cause of disease, 193-5. 



Descendants : priestly duties, 44-6, 150 ; 

 propitiatory duties, 44-5, 45-6 ; 

 priestly duties primitively diffused, 

 46 ; eldest male as quasi-priests, 47- 

 53, 150, 188; primary differentiation, 

 47-8, 150 ; their importance, 48-9 ; 

 leads to adoption, 49-51 ; family cult 

 development, 52-3, 150, 188 ; effect of 

 ancestor worship, 95-7, 101-2, 105. 



Discipline, intellectual, 315. 



Descriptive Sociology, a criticism and 

 reply, 181. 



Differentiation : of priesthoods, 86-90, 

 93-4, 151 ; ecclesiastical, 150 ; ecclesi 

 astical and political, 155 ; implied by 

 Evolution. 217 ; of lawyers, 270-2; of 

 teachers, 276-7, 277-80, 280-1, 284-5 ; 

 of architects, 291-2 ; of sculptors, 

 301-2; of painters, 312-3. 



Dionysus, evolution of actor, 228. 



Disease : primitive interpretation, 40, 



44, 186, 192, 317; and prayer, 193; 

 demoniacal origin, 193-5, 196. 



Dispensary : differentiation of physician 

 and surgeon, 195. 



Dissent (see Nonconformity). 



Dissolution and religious evolution, 

 164-6. 



Distribution : 373-7 ; the two kinds, 

 373-4; primitive, 374-5; wholesale 

 and retail, 375-6 ; fairs and markets, 

 376-7. 



Distribution, Auxiliary, 378-86 ; origin, 

 378-9; shops and pedlars, 379-80; 

 wholesale dealers, 380-3 ; the division 

 of labour amongst, 383 ; inanimate 

 appliances, 383-6. 



Division of Labour (see Labour, special 

 ization and division of). 



Dock construction, 532. 



Doctor (see Physician and Surgeon). 



Dramatist and Orator : 217-34 ; incipient 

 stages, 217-8, 234, 235; evolution, 

 230-2; dramatists-gilds, 232-3 ; sum 

 mary, 318. 



Dreams : primitive conceptions, 5, 8, 21, 

 22, 182 ; Hebrew religion, 26 ; monas- 

 ticism, 91 ; religious retrospect, 160-4, 

 169. 



Drink for the dead, 10, 22, 150, 182. 



Drugs, primitive belief in, 188. 



Drying by centrifugal force, 405. 



Duelling and socialism, 585. 



Duty, ecclesiastical prospect, 157. 



EAST INDIA COMPANY, 529, 530. 



Easter, use of science, 254, 256. 



Ecclesiastical Institutions : 1-175 ; con 

 servative, 102-4; indispensable to 

 social structures, 148-9 ; conform to 

 law of evolution, 150-2, 155; retro 

 spect, 150-5; prospect, 155-8; the 

 professions evolved from, 181, 183-4 ; 

 effect of advancing knowledge, 591. 



Education : the present faulty, 57 ; by 

 priests, 129; by ascetism, 143; in 



Sublic schools, 148; militancy and 

 ogmatic, 251 ; in France, 597 ; and 



socialism, 576, (See also Teachers). 

 Effigies : origin of sculptor, 294-5, 295- 



7; and of painter, 304-5, 306-10. 

 Egypt : religious development, 22-6, 36 ; 



trades in Nile valley, 354. 

 Elohim, interpretation of, 28. 

 Embryology and religious prospect, 174. 

 Emotions : religious evolution, 163-4, 



166-9; expression of, 201-3; and 



music, 214. 

 Emperor- worship, 19. 

 Energy, religious prospect, 170-1, 175. 

 Engineer s trades union, 541, 542, 549. 

 England: religious freedom in, 137-9; 



industrialism and nonconformity, 139; 



effects of industrialism, 345 ; commu- 



