INDEX. 



795 



15 ; iv. 6 ; Essay, 28 ; denunciation 



of French Revolution, 130 ; 421. 

 Burns, Roliert, iii. 452. 

 Burton, J. H., ' Life of Hume ' quoted, 



iv. 335. 

 Butler, Jos., British Moral Philosophy, 



iv. 150 ; anil Moral Order, 167 ; 223 ; 



Reid and, 226 ; 268, 424. 

 Byron, iii. 314, 609; iv. 200, 204, 



763. 



Cabanis, and Broussais, iii. 197 ; 202 ; a 

 follower of Condillac, 230 ; iv. 489, 

 507. 



Caesar, iii. 158. 



Caird, Ed., Hegelian Thought, iii. 122 ; 

 'Philosophy of Kant,' 186; T. 1(. 

 Green and, 224 ; ' Critical Account of 

 the Philosophy of Kant,' 297; Heg- 

 elianisni, 412 ; Works on Kant, 412 ; 

 532; "Metaphysics "in 'Ency. Brit.,' 

 429 ; ' Essays on Literature and Phil- 

 osophy, ' 429; inlluenced by Kant, 

 4.30, 438; 'Hegel' in Blackwoods' 

 " Philos. Classics," 466 ; quoted, Ho- 

 tho's ' Vorstudien fiir Leben und 

 Kunst,' iv. 51 ; ' Philosophy of Kant,' 

 61 ; and Hegel's Philosophy, 371 ; 

 382, 7.56, 765. 



Caird, John, ' Spinoza,' iii. 122. 



Caldecott, Alfred, 'Philosophy of Re- 

 ligion in England and America ' 

 quoted, iv. 270 ; 362 sqq. ; 376 ; 

 quoted, 377; 396. 



Cambridge Manuals of Science and 

 Literature, iv. 417. 



Cambridge ' Modern History,' iv. 421. 



Cambridge Platonists, iv. 287. 



' Cameralia,' iii. 133. 



Carlyle, Thos., Essay, ' State of German 

 Literature,' iii. 97, 124 ; ' Collected 

 Works,' 97; 98, 118; influence on 

 Mill, 378; 379; 423; "Everlasting 

 No" and "Everlasting Yea" ol' 

 'Sartor Resartus,' 527; iv. 357; iii. 

 528; 'Essays,' iv. 33; 100, 101, 

 125, 246 ; ' Past and Present,' 353 ; 

 ' Wilhelm Meister's Wanderjahre ' 

 quoted, 355, 356 ; and Goethe, 356 ; 

 appreciation of Goethe, 357 sqq. ; 

 'German Romance,' 358; 363, 421, 

 425, 442, 474, 498, 543, 581, 612. 



Carnot, Sadi, iii. 404. 



Carpenter, Estlin, 'Life of Martineau,' 

 iv. 375. 



Casaubon, iii. 48. 



Case, T., Article on "Logic" in 'Ency. 

 Brit.,'iiL 414; quoted, 430. 



"Categorical imperative," Kant, iii. 



125, 437; 441, 443; iv. (.see also 

 Kant). 



' Categories of Aristotle,' Maimon, iii. 

 347. 



Catholicism, Roman, iii. 426. 



Caiichy, iii. 584. 



Cause and efiect defined, iii. 397 sqq.; 

 iv. law of, 73, 76. 



Chalmers, Thos., iii. 224, "collocation," 

 617. 



Chandler, H. W., ed. Mausel's 'Letters, 

 Lectures and Reviews,' iv. 369. 



Charron, Pierre, ' De la Sagesse,' iii. 

 320. 



Chateaubriand, iv. 400, 464. 



Chaumette, iv. 473. 



Church, Dean, iv. 379. 



Church, State, and Society, changes in, 

 iv. 131; 1^2 sqq.; \QZ sqq. 



'Circulation of the Blood,' Harvey, iii. 

 322. 



Civil Code, German, iii. 132. 



'Civilisation in Europe,' Guizot's His- 

 tory, iii. 33. 



'Civilisation in France,' Guizot's His- 

 tory, iii. 33. 



Clarke, iii. 220, 327 ; iv. 268. 



Classical Antiquity, culture of, iii. 

 143. 



Classical period, connection of modern 

 with the, iii. 265. 



Classical School in Germany, iv. 288. 



Classical studies, Thuringia and Saxony 

 the traditional home of, iii. 128. 



Classicism and Romanticism, iii. 257. 



Classics and Holy Scriptures, iii. 127. 



Claudius, M., iv. 292. 



Clement XIV., Pope of Rome, iii. 351 ; 

 iv. 398. 



Cliftbrd, W. K., iii. 404; and K. Pear- 

 son, 579; 580; "Mind-Stuff"; iv. 

 412 ; 759. 



Cockburn, 'Life of Lord Jeffrey,' iii. 

 92. 



Code Civil of Napoleon, iii. 133. 



Coleridge, iii, 118 ; 122 ; 200 ; 304 ; in- 

 fluence on Mill, 378 ; 379, 423, 456 ; 

 527, 528, 609, 614 ; iv. 14, 125 ; J. S. 

 Mill on, 141 ; influence of, 287 ; 4'28 ; 

 498. 



' Collectivism,' iv. 571. 



College de France, iii. 384. 



Collins, Anthony, iii. 228. 



Columbus, iii. 154. 



Conimission for Universities, Parlia- 

 mentary, iii. 222. 



Common-sense and Speculation, iii. 3. 



Common -sense. Language and, iii. 3; 

 iv. 10. 



