INDEX. 



79' 



' Critical Journal,' Hegel, iii. 493 ; iv. 

 300. 



Critical Movement in Germany, iii. 

 111. 



Critical Movement of Nineteenth Cen- 

 tury, iii. 110. 



Critical periods, Three, iii. 110. 



'Critical Philosophy,' Kant, iii. 341. 



'Critical Eeview,' iii. 92. 



Critical spirit, growth and diffusion of, 

 iii. 50 ; 91 ; 95 ; sapj^ing effect of, 

 106 ; 105 ; in Germany, 126 ; Got- 

 tingen and the, 127 ; 144, 160. 



Critical tendency in England, iii. 186. 



Criticism, as used by Kant, iii. 48, 

 422 ; .ind History, 49 ; philosophical, 

 48 ; Home's ' Elements ' of, 48 ; 49 ; 

 narrower and wider sense of, 96 ; 

 Pope's Essay on, ib. ; in Germany, 

 97 ; a reflection of Mind, 110 ; 111 ; 

 of Eeligion, Morality, and Life, 

 118; Higher, 126, 131, 133; Class- 

 ical (philology), 127 ; Biblical, ib. ; 

 Lower, ib. ; means of education, 

 130 ; of texts, 135, 137 ; of Revela- 

 tion, Fichte, 161, 357 ; as practised by 

 Hermann and Ritschl, 137 ; Textual 

 and Higher, 148, 149 ; of Religion by 

 Fichte and Kant, 161 ; of religious ori- 

 gins, 163 ; influence on religious, theo- 

 logical, and philosophical Thought, 

 165 ; 180 ; of Critical Philosophy in 

 'Mind' (H. Sidgwick), 186; Pre- 

 dominant, 350 ; and exactness, 367 ; 

 in France, iv. 4 ; influence of, on 

 philosophical thought, 737. 



' Critique Generale,' Renouvier, iii. 206, 

 275. 



'Critique of Judgment,' Kant, iii. 357, 

 443. 



'Critique of Practical Reason,' Kant, 

 iii. 357, 443, 485. 



'Critique of Pure Experience,' iii. 283, 

 284. 



'Critique of Pure Reason,' Kant, iii. 5, 

 283, 345, 358, 377, 442. 



Croce, Benedetto, on Esthetics, iii. 

 16; iv. 5; 'Scienza Nuova,' 6; In- 

 dependence of realm of Ethics, ib. ; 

 15, 32 ; ' JSsthetics ' quoted, 101 ; 

 113, 118; quoted, 119 sqq. ; 124; 

 "general linguistic," 398. 



Croiset, Alfred, iv. 587. 



Curie, M. and Mme., discovery of 

 Radium, iii. 582. 



Curtis, G. H., ' Dissent in its relation to 

 the Church of England ' quoted, iii. 

 305. 



Curtius, Ernst, 'Greek History,' iii. 152, 



157 ; historian and archaeologist, 153 ; 

 the Morea (Peloponnesus), 153, 155 ; 

 'Alterthum und Gegenwart,' 153, 



154 ; Addresses at Giittingen and 

 Berlin, 155 ; Professor "eloquentia^" 



155 ; 1.56 ; Letter quoted, iv. 318. 

 Curtius, Fr., iv. 318. 



Curtius, Georg, 'Greek Grammar,' iii. 



148. 

 Cuvier, iii. 199, 553 ; iv. influence on 



Comte, 188. 

 Czolbe, Lotze's Review of, iii; 563. 



D'Alembert, iii. 3.38 ; ' Traitg de Dyna- 

 mique,' 339; iv. 739. 



Dante, iv. 8, 47. 



Danton, iv. 20. 



Darbishire, R. D., on J. J. Tayler, iv. 

 377. 



Darwin, Chas., 'Idea of Development,' 

 iii. 40, 79, 92, 134 ; iv. 211, 227 ; 

 214, 228 ; influence of Hieniann and, 

 iii. 180; 'Origin of Species,' 180, 

 181, 394; and Helmholtz, 182; 192, 

 214, '286; "Natural Selection," 314, 

 396 ; and development, 394, 397 ; 

 theory of Descent, 461 , 494 ; Malthus 

 and, 554 ; quoted, 609, 617 ; iv. evol- 

 utionary ideas of, 58 ; revolution of 

 thought, 96 ; 166 ; Evolution, 235 ; 

 naturalistic view of, 236; 361, 424, 

 435, 461; 504 sqq.; 515 sqq.; 517, 

 518, 520; and von Baer, 529; 531, 

 559 ; theory of development, 658 ; 

 693, 706, 708, 723, 775. 



Darwiuian points of view, iii. 144 ; pro- 

 gramme, 187 ; " ideas," 187. 



Darwinism in Germanj-, iii. 220 ; iv. 

 211 sqq. 



Data of Consciousness, iii. 253. 



Daub and Schleiermacher compared, 

 iii. 167. 



Davidson, W. L., 'Mind,' iii. 214. 



' De Anima,' Aristotle, iii. 196. 



De Biran, Maine, and Ampere, iii. 231 ; 

 disciple of Condillac, 232, 234, 235, 

 242, 262, 270 : 594. 



De Blainville, iii. 383. 



Declaration of Independence, iv. 421. 



' Defence of Philosophic Doubt,' Bal- 

 four, iii. 527, 531. 



Defoe, iii. 128. 



Degerando, iii. 234. 



Deism, or supernaturalism, iii. 161 ; 

 English, 169, 426. 



Deists, iii. 123, 332. 



De Lamennais, iii. 526, 591 ; iv. 395, 

 397, 399 ; ' Essai sur 1' Indifference, 

 &c.,'400; 401 sqq.; 493. 



