IV 



INDEX. 



Civil Code, German, 132. 



'Civilisation in Europe,' Guizot's His- 

 tory, 33. 



' Civilisation in France,' Guizot's His- 

 tory, 33. 



Clarke, 220, 327. 



Classical Antiquity, culture of, 143. 



Classical period, connection of modern 

 with the, 265. 



Classical studies, Thuringia and Saxony 

 the traditional home of, 128. 



Classicism and Romanticism, 257. 



Classics and Holy Scriptures, 127. 



Clement XIV., Pope of Rome, 351. 



Clifford, W. K., 404 ; and K. Pearson, 

 579 ; 580. 



Cockburn. ' Life of Lord Jeffrey,' 92. 



Code Civil of Napoleon, 133. 



Coleridge, 118; 122; 200; 304; influ- 

 ence on Mill, 378 ; 379, 423, 456 ; 527, 

 528, 609, 614. 



College de France, 384. 



Collins, 228. 



Columbus, 154. 



Commission for Universities, Parlia- 

 mentary, 222. 



Common-sense and Speculation, 3. 



Common-sense, Language and, 3. 



Common - sense philosophy, Sidgwick 

 on, 4. 



Common-sense, reversion to, 68. 



Comte, Auguste, 5 ; and French philo- 

 sophical thought, 43 ; ' Philosophic 

 Positive,' 33 ; Speculative not positive 

 thought, 39 ; Philosophy, 58, 79 ; 

 Sociology, 80, 86 ; historical develop- 

 ment of human thought, 88 ; ' For- 

 mula,' 89, 94 ; Positivism of, 97, 303, 

 528 ; as mathematician and analyst, 

 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. 



Condillac, 'Philosophy,' 186, 200; Hel- 

 vetius and, 220, 229; 'Treatise on 

 Sensations,' 230 ; Cabanis a follower 

 of, 230, 231 ; Maine de Biran a disciple 

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

 Conditioned, The, 381. 



Condorcet and Laplace, 100. 

 Conic sections, 102. 



' Conservation of Force,' Helmholtz' 

 Tract, quoted, 399 ; 564. 



' Contemporary English Psychology,' 

 Ribot's Treatise, 269 ; 270. 



' Contemporary German Psychology,' 

 Ribot, 273. 



' Contemporary Review,' 126, 531. 



"Contingent" and "Discontinuous" 

 involved in problem of nature, 618 ; 

 619, 620, 625. 



Copernicus, 340. 



Cosmological problem or "problem of 

 nature as a whole," 546. 



Cosmology and Rational Theology, 201 ; 

 Universe or the Outer World, 431 ; 

 460, 544 ; or Theory of Nature, 545. 



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

 babilities,' 385. 



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

 logues,' 26 ; 27 ; French eclecticism, 

 79; 97, 185; 'Philosophy of Com- 

 mon-sense,' 186, 190, 200, 229, 234 ; 

 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 Philosophiques,' 490. 



Cowper, 452. 



Creative and critical eras, 6. 



Critical eras, creative and, 6. 



' Critical Journal,' Hegel, 493. 



Critical Movement in Germany, 111. 



Critical Movement of Nineteenth Cen- 

 tury, 110. 



Critical periods, Three, 110. 



'Critical Philosophy,' Kant, 341. 



'Critical Review,' 92. 



Critical spirit, growth and diffusion of, 

 50 ; 91 ; 95 ; sapping effect of, 106 ; 

 105 ; in Germany, 126 ; Gottingen 

 and the, 127 ; 144, 160. 



Critical tendency in England, 186. 



Criticism, as used by Kant, 48, 422 ; 

 and 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 Religion, 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 

 origins, 163; influence on religious, 

 theological, or philosophical Thought, 



