796 



INDEX. 



Commou- sense philosophy, Sidgwick 

 on, iii. 4. 



Common-sense, reversion to, iii. 68. 



Comte, Auguste, iii. 5 ; and French 

 philosophical thought, 43 ; ' Philo- 

 sophie Positive,' 33 ; opposed to 

 speculative thought, 39 ; Philosophy, 

 58, 79 ; Sociology, 80, 86 ; histor- 

 ical development of human thought, 

 88 ; " Formula," 89, 94 ; Positivism 

 of, iii. 97, 303, 528; iv. 182, 187; 

 as mathematician and analyst, iii. 

 104; "Religion of Humanity," 117; 

 System, 183 ; 188, 190 ; ' Consider- 

 ations sur les Sciences et les Savants,' 

 193; "esprit d'ensemble," 193, 397, 

 515 ; 234, 236, 262, 269 ; 270 ; J. S. 

 Mill and, 292, 296, 304, 315, 347, 377, 

 381 ; "esprit de detail," 382, 515 ; 

 ' Cours de Philos.,' &c., quoted, 382, 

 383, 384 ; and Duhamel, 384 ; Cour- 

 not, 385 ; 423 ; " positive," 487 ; influ- 

 .ence on philosophy, 488 ; 521, 594, 

 614 ; and positive philosophy, iv. 

 132, 137 ; influence on Mill, 154 ; 

 'Traite de Politique Positive,' ib. ; 

 Positivist Ethics, 168 ; positive view 

 distinguished from German meta- 

 physics and English psychology, 185 ; 

 philosophy, 186 ; Sociology, 187, 213 ; 

 influenced by Turgot and Condorcet, 

 188; and Ethics, 189; and definite 

 order of Society, 190 sqq. ; ' Cours de 

 Philosophie Positive,' 191 ; study of 

 history, 192 ; study of mankind, 

 193 ; comparison with Feuerbach, 

 201 ; 222 ; philosophy of, 233 ; 

 ' Politique Positive,' 234, 356 ; 

 ' Philosophie Positive,' 234, 235 ; 

 narrowly positive, 236 ; 237, 247, 

 256; Altruism, 411; 430, 441, 444, 

 445 ; 456, 465 ; and Saint Simon, 

 -470 ; his philosophy of history, 

 481 sqq. ; and Hegel compared, 481 

 sqq. ; his "Law of the Three States," 

 483 sqq. ; 534 ; his hierarchy of the 

 sciences, 486 sqq. ; his early 'Tract,' 

 486 sqq. ; and Hegel, reception of 

 their doctrines, 492 ; J. S. Mill on, 

 488 ; and J. S. Mill, 494, quoted, 

 495 ; 495 sqq. ; 498, 499 ; and Hegel, 

 500 ; 502, 506, 509. 516 sqq. ; Huxley 

 on, 517 ; 524, 527, 531, 535, 536 ; 

 dualism of, 539; on "Division of 



A Labour," 558 ; 560, 653 ; religious in- 



'l__terest of, 680 ; unity of his system, 

 683 ; and Schopenhauer, 685 ; quoted, 

 ^36 ; and Hegel, parallel between, 

 •687 ; 688, 689, 694 ; and Spencer 



compared, 696 ; and Hegel compared, 

 696 sqq. ; social problem, 700 sqq. ; 

 718, 721, 746, 747, 755, 775. 



Condillac, Philosophy, iii. 186, 200; 

 Helvetius and, 220, 229 ; 'Ti-eatise on 

 Sensations,' 230 ; Cabanis a follower 

 of, 230, 231 ; Maine de Biran a disciple 

 of, 232; 234, 270, 271, 313; iv. 119, 

 427. 



Conditioned, The, iii. 381 ; iv. 298. 



Condorcet, and Laplace, iii. 100 ; iv. 

 Ill, 132, 137 ; and Comte, 188 ; 449, 

 455, 460, 491, 499 ; 686. 



Conic sections, iii. 102. 



Consciousness, data of, iv. 772. 



' Conservation of Force,' Helmholtz' 

 Tract, quoted, iii. 399 ; 564. 



' Contemporary English Psychology,' 

 Ribot's Treatise, iii. 269 ; 270. 



' Contemporary German Psychology,' 

 Ribot, iii. 273. 



' Contemporary Review,' iii. 126, 531. 



"Contingent" and "Discontinuous" in- 

 volved in problem of nature, iii. 618 ; 

 619, 620, 625. 



Conviction, fundamental necessity of, 

 Lotze and Wundt, iv. 719 sqq. 



Copernican Revolution, iv. 778. 



Copernicus, iii. 340. 



Cosmological problem or "problem of 

 nature as a whole," iii. 546. 



Cosmology and Rational Theology, iii. 

 201 ; Universe or the Outer World, 

 431 ; 460, 544 ; or Theory of Nature, 

 545. 



Coupland, W. C, transl. Hartmann's 

 ' Philosophy of the Unconscious,' iv. 

 394. 



Cournot, A. A., 'Theory of Proba- 

 bilities,' iii. 385 ; iv. 555. 



Courtney, W. L. , ' Life of John Stuart 

 Mill,' quoted, iv. 366. 



Cousin, Victor, transl. Plato's 'Dia- 

 logues,' iii. 26 ; 27 ; French eclecti- 

 cism, 79; 97, 185; "Philosophy of 

 Common-sense," 186, 190, 200, 229, 

 2.34; Royer Collard .and, 235, 236, 

 263, 270 ; Hamilton's Essay on, 

 380 ; 381 ; School of Philosophy in 

 France, 384 ; Saint Hilaire's Life 

 of, 426 ; 456 ; ' Fragments Philoso- 

 phiques,' 49i) ; iv. 182 ; eclectic school, 

 236 ; 493, 506 sqq. 



Cowper, iii. 452. 



Creative and critical eras, iii. 6. 



Creative Substance, Lotze on, iv. 714. 



Creative Synthesis, Wundt on, iv. 

 712. 



Critical eras, creative and, iii. 6. 



