820 



INDEX. 



Schmidt, Julian, ' Gescliichte der Deut- 

 schen Litteratur,' quoted, iii. 354. 



Schmidt, Leopold, iv. 172. 



.SchmoUer, Gustav, quoted, iv. 478 ; on 

 Socialism, 536 ; quoted, 551. 



.Schopenhauer, iii. 39, 52 ; ' World as 

 Will and Intelligence,' 55 ; 56, 57, 

 75; "Pessimism," 77; 78, 79, 84; 

 Frauenstadt's ' Letters on Philoso- 

 phy ' of, 74 ; Gwinner's Biography 

 of, 74 ; 94, 104, 125 ; philosophy of, 

 177, 417 ; Kant to, 238 ; 243 ; Schel- 

 linc; to, 253 ; 272 ; ' Parerga and 

 Paralipomena,' 316; 347; Will, 393, 

 418, 507; "Voluntarism," 418, 423, 

 520; 419, 438, 439, 469, 480, 481, 

 482 ; and Wieland quoted, 483 ; 484, 

 485, 486, 492, 493, 508, 521 ; philo- 

 sophical view of Nature, 586 ; ' Will 

 in Nature ' quoted, 586, 593 ; ' Werke ' 

 quoted, 587 ; influenced by Fichte, 

 588 ; an idealist and romanticist, 

 589 ; idealistic system, 590, 594, 596 ; 

 iv. 50 ; von Hartmann and, 69 ; "the 

 Will," ib., 73 sqq. ; peculiarity of his 

 philosophy, 70 sqq. ; interpretation 

 of Beautiful in nature as in art, 75 ; 

 assimilates Plato's doctrine of ideas, 

 76 sqq. ; grouping of the arts, 79 ; 

 theory of music, ih. sqq. ; and Guyau, 

 102, 110, 126 ; Wagner and, 81 ; 83 ; 

 and V. Hartmann, 85 sqq., 102, 110, 

 126 ; 199 ; and pamphleteering style, 

 200, 201 ; pessimism of, 203 ; 204, 

 208 ; primacy of the Will, 209 sqq. ; 

 "Will-philosophy," 210; 216; 246; 

 and Nietzsche, 247 ; and Fichte's sol- 

 iition of the problem of reality, 285 ; 

 286 ; and Sclileiermacher, 317 ; Hegel 

 and, 360 sqq. ; and Nietzsche, 390 

 sqq. ; 394 ; ' The World as Will and 

 Idea,' 394; 511, 537, 596, 612, 630, 

 653 sqq. ; 665, 670, 672 ; and Comte, 

 685; 688, 721, 722, 730, 747, 752, 

 763 sqq. 



Schubert, ' Geschichte der Seele,' iii. 

 .591 ; on Kant, iv. 146. 



Schuize, G. E. (^Enesidemus), iii. 347, 

 380. 



Schuize, Johannes, iii. 141 ; 208, 251, 

 589. 



Schumacher, iv. 552. 



Schumann, Robert, iv. 14. 



Schurz, Carl, Reminiscences of, iv. 53. 



Schiitz, iii. 354. 



Schwann, iv. 518. 



Schwarz, Carl, ' Zur Geschichte der 

 neuesten Theologie,' iii. 168 ; 172, 175. 



Scott, Sir Walter, iv. 246, 359. 



Scottish School, Thomas Reid and, iii. 

 219 ; of Philosophy, 224 ; 239, 312, 

 315 ; of Common-sense, 510, 511, 525. 



Seailles, Gab., 'History of the Prob- 

 lems of Philosophy,' iii", 57. 



Seelenfrage, Die, iii. 197, 198, 261 ; iv. 

 162. 



Seelenlehre, Psychology, iii. 198. 



Seelensubstanz, Gtittingen, iii. 261. 



Seeley, Sir J. R. , 'Life and Times of 

 Stein,' iii. 19 ; ' Natural Religion,' iv. 

 378. 



Selves, the two, Josiah Royce on, iv. 

 437. 



Septimius Severus, "Laboremus," iii. 

 599. 



Sermon, Newman's, on ' Implicit and 

 Exjilicit Reason,' preached in Oxford, 

 iv. 382. 



Seth, Andrew (see Pringle-Pattison), 

 iv. 224 ; quoted, 226. 



Seydel, Rud., 'Religion und Wissen- 

 schaft,' iv. 61, 65 ; Weisse's ' Kleine 

 Schriften ' and Lecture Syllabus on 

 jEslhetics, 61, 65. 



Shakespeare, iii. 114; iv. 8; 136; im- 

 mediateness of, 35 ; 60, 98 ; Lyrics of, 

 426 ; quoted, 520. 



Shaftesbury, iii. 224, 225, 342; iv. 6, 

 16 ; andHutcheson, 27 ; 104; 'Hymn,' 

 135 ; Moral Order, 167. 



Shelley, iii. 609 ; iv. 173. 



Sidgwick, Henry, ' Philosophy of 

 Common-sense,' iii. 4, 66; 'Methods 

 of Ethics,' 186; 189, 314; 'Outlines 

 of the History of Ethics,' iv. 138 ; 

 'Methods of Ethics,' 150, 187, '221, 

 223, 224, 250, 380 ; ethical treatises 

 of, 168; and Lotze, 224 sqq ; 381, 

 402, 748, 756. 



Simmel, Geo., ' Einleitung in die Moral- 

 wissenschaft,' iv. 250. 



Smith, Adam, iii. 5 ; influence of, 133 ; 

 and Political Economy, iv. 127; 

 successor to Hutcheson in Chair of 

 Moral Philosophy at Glasgow, 142; 

 Industrial problem, 143 ; ' Wealth of 

 Nations,' ib.; theory of moral senti- 

 ments, 189 ; 429 ; 452, 453, 4.56 sqq.; 

 460, 463 ; 496, 539, 540, 543, 558. 



Social problem, the, in history, iii. 31 

 sqq. ; iv. 162, 420 sqq. ; contract, 421 ; 

 its three main questions, 446 : science, 

 530 ; central position of, with Comte 

 and Spencer, 700 sqq. 



Socialism, iv. 470, 478, 535 sqq. 



Socialists, the, iv. 465. 



Society, biological view of, iv. 516 sqq. 



Sociology, Comte and doctrine of, iv. 



