INDEX. 



805 



and Comte, 481 sqq. ; Corate and, 

 reception of their doctrines, 492 ; 

 498, 499 ; and Comte, 500 ; 502, 503, 

 512, 524, 526 sqq., 528 ; Spencer and, 

 contrasted, 529 sqq. ; 531, 534, 535, 

 538, 565, 583, 595, 596, 603, 604, 629, 

 630, 642 sqq. ; main principle of, 644 

 sqq. ; method of, 647 sqq. ; the ' Secret 

 of,' 650 sqq., 653 ; theory of develop- 

 ment, 658 ; 664, 669 ; parallel between 

 Comte. and, 687 ; 689 ; compared with 

 Comte, 696 sqq. ; 705, 729, 741 sqq. ; 

 747, 754. 



Hegelian system, iv. 214 ; influence of, 

 287 ; school of, 537 ; 540, 666 sqq. 



Hegelianism in Prussia, iv. 197 ; collapse 

 of, 233 ; reaction of, 234 ; 235. 



Heine, Heinrich, perfected pamphleteer- 

 ing style, iv. 200 ; 204. 



Heinze, Max, ' Ueberweg ' ed. , iii. 38 ; 

 ' History of Philosophy,' 349 ; quoted, 

 350 ; re-edited ' Gruudriss der Gesch- 

 ichte der Philosophic,' iv. 266 ; ' His- 

 tory of Philosophy since beginning of 

 19th Century,' 266. 



Helferich, H. von., iv. 552. 



Hellenic and Romantic, iv. , 36. 



Helmholtz, H., ' Physiological Acous- 

 tics,' iii. 73 ; ' Physiological Optics,' 

 ib. ; ' Data which lie at the Founda- 

 tion of Geometry,' 180 ; physiological 

 investigations, 181 ; and Darwin, 182 ; 

 253, 289, 375 ; ' Conservation of 

 Force ' quoted, 399 ; 564 ; ' Ueber die 

 Wechselwirkung der Naturkriifte,' 

 551; 582, 598; iv. 343, 396, 608, 

 710. 



Helvetius and Condillac, iii. 220 ; and 

 Holbach, hedonism of, iv. 132 ; 

 Puffendorf and, 138 ; Bentham and, 

 138 ; 144, 427. 



Henke, ' Jacob Fr. Fries,' iii. 258. 



Heraclitus, iii. 494. 



Herbart, iii. 6, 39, 58, 67, 69, 71; 

 ' Works,' 74 ; 482 ; ' Lehrbuch zur 

 Einleitung in die Philosophic,' 125 ; 

 return from Metaphysics to Psycho- 

 logy, 179 ; and Beneke, 179, 213, 214 ; 

 198 ; Stout on, 202 ; 204, 205, 206 ; 

 System, 206 ; " Ideas," 207 ; concep- 

 tions introduced by, ib. ; School of, 

 208 ; psychology, ib. ; 209, 211, 215 ; 

 influenced by Leibniz, 217 ; 243, 248, 

 258, 259, 265, 267, 279, 347, 368, 406, 

 410, 480 ; "Together " in space, 482 ; 

 ethical interest, 483 ; Review of 

 Schopenhauer's Work, 485 ; 492, 499, 

 500, 504, 506, 529, 536 ; iv. 14 ; real- 

 ism, 62; 'Introd. to Philosophy,' 



102; Encyclopaedia, ib. ; 'Works,' 

 102 ; 104, 105 ; " Value," 106 ; meta- 

 physical system of, 129 ; reform of 

 ethical philosophy in Germany, 205 

 sqq.; 244; and modern psychology, 

 274 ; 317, 329, 396, 512, 555, 604, 656, 

 734. 



Hercules, iv. 36. 



Herder, iii. 30 ; 98, 114, 117, 119, 120, 

 151, 161 ; poetical views elaborated 

 by, 165 ; relations to GiJttingen, ib. ; 

 Haym, ib. ; ' Spirit of Hebrew Poetry,' 

 ib. ; 255, 256, 257, 265, 329 ; 'Ideen,' 

 352 ; Haym quoted, 353 ; 354 ; List 

 of Important Writings, 355 ; 356, 364, 

 371, 387, 395, 444, 452, 453, 472, 494, 

 557 ; iv. 6, 10; naturalism of, 11 sqq.; 

 16, 17, 91, 105 ; 135 sqq.; 211 ; ' Ideas 

 towards a History of Mankind,' 212 ; 

 246, 271, 288, 292, 296 ; Hamann 

 and, 300; and Rousseau, 423; 424 

 sqq. ; 464, 479 ; 501, 506, 514, 534, 

 536, 574, 618, 689. 



Hermann, Gottfr., iii. 134; "criti- 

 cism " as practised by Ritschl and, 

 137 ; 139, 140 ; 141, 145, 146 ; School 

 of, 156 ; classical tutor of Weisse, iv. 

 61. 



Hermes, iii. 39. 



Herodotus, iii. 310. 



Herschel, Sir John, ' Study of Natural 

 Philosophy,' iii. 376 ; 381, 556. 



Hertling, "Beneke" in ' Allgemeiue 

 Deutsche Biographic,' iii. 280. 



Hertz, iii. 580 ; posthumously pub- 

 lished ' Principles of Mechanics ' 

 quoted, 584. 



Hesiod, iii. 99. 



Hettuer, ' Litteratur-Geschichte,' iii. 

 117 ; 129. 



Heyne, C. G., iii. 127, 129 ; ' Seminary,' 



137 ; 145, 146 ; and Wolf, 164, 165. 

 'Hibbert Journal,' iii. 22, 199; iv. 



QT/ 



Hill, G. W., iii. 102. 



Hinneburg, Paul, ' Die Kultur der 

 Gegenwart,' iii. 94. 



Hirt, introduced the term ' ' character- 

 istic," iv. 39. 



Historical development of human 

 thought, iii. 88. 



History since Niebuhr, broader views 

 of, iii. 150. 



Hobbes, iii. 197, 215, 309, 329 ; philo- 

 sophy of, iv. 130 ; new doctrine of, 



138 ; and Mackintosh, 150 ; 420, 421. 

 Hodgson, S. H., in 'Mind,' quoted, iii. 



389, 390. 

 HSffding, Harald, ' History of Modern 



