816 INDEX. 



Poisson and Faraday's 'Lines of Force,' tory of the Popes,' 151 ; "Ideas" of, 



iii. 577. 151 ; 152 ; Conception of History, 



Pollock, Sir Fr., 'Spinoza: his Life ib.; 157, 160; iv. 501, 569 sqq.; his 



and Philosophy,' iii. 121; 'Spinoza Ideenlehre, 570. 



and Modern Thought,' 122 ; in Raphael, .iv. 47. 



' Mind,' iv. 395. Rational Psychology, iii. 544, 545. 



Poncelet, iii. 323, 404. Rational Theology, iii. 544, 545 ; and 



Pont de Nemours, Du, iv. 452, 453. sensual, relationship of, iv. 160. 



Pope, the, and 'Les Paroles d'un Rationalism, Orthodoxy or, iii. 161; 



Croyant,' iv. 405. German, 169 ; iv. 135. 



" Positive," double use of the term, iii. Ravaisson, iii. 66; 'Rapport,' 94; 



614 ; Spirit, iv. 665 sqq. quoted, 426, 427 ; 230; 'La Phil- 

 Positivism, iv. 169 ; of Comte, 182 ; osophie en France,' 231 ; 234 ; iv. 



489 ; 185, 234 sqq. ; 275 ; of Spencer, 398 ; quoted, 484. 



371; 679 sqq.; 760 sqq. Rawlinson, iii. 154. 



Positivists, iv. 61. Reactionaries, the, iv. 465. 



Pott, A. F., etymological researches, Reality, Appearance and, iii. 27 ; and 



iii. 147. Knowledge, 293 ; 442 ; ultimate, 450, 



Pragmatism (Wm. James), iv. 253, 349, 473, 587 ; 457 ; iv. 789 ; pathway 



414, 613, 722. to, iii. 466 ; or spiritual ground of 



Pragmatists, iv. 93. things, 469 ; 477, 479, 480, 481 ; 



"Presentation -continuum," iii. 291; problem of, 482, 484, 488, 490, 505 ; 



sensory and motor (see Jas. Ward). since Lotze, 506 ; 508, 509, 510, 



" Presentations," iii. 205. 511, 516, 518, 521, 523, 525, 526, 



" Presentative " Activity and " Pre- 527, 529, 533, 542, 544, 592; 483, 



sented " Content, iii. 206. 485, 494 ; essence of, 498, 517 ; 499, 



Prichard, J. C.,iv. 514. 501, 503; moral side of, 507; 512, 



Priestley, iii. 4 ; Hartley and, 197. 514, 534, 536 ; Bradley's Degrees of, 



Pringle-Pattison (Andrew Seth), 'Scot- 540; 541; twofold aspect of, 615; 



tish Philosophy,' iii. 3, 226, 241, problem of, iv. 77, 83, 115, 125; 



242 ; iv. 143 ; ' Hegelianism and Per- interpretation of, 783. 



sonality,' 373 ; in ' Hibbert Journal,' Reformation, the, iii. 116, 210, 305, 



376. 524 ; iv. 149, 219, 258, 277, 288, 312, 



Projection, Principle of, iii. 323. 358. 



Proudhon, iv. 493, 539. Reform Bill, iv. 141. 



Psychological problem, religion a, iii. Rehmke, J., ' Die Seele des Menschen ' 



163, 172; point of view, iv. 271. "Essence" and "Life of the Soul," 



Psychologism, iv. 607 ; and Intellectual- iii. 199 ; 289. 



ism, 785. ' Rehnisch, iii. 266 ; iv. 599. 



Psychology, British introspective, iii. Reid, Thos., iii. 3, 4, 8, 188 ; and 



209 ; in Germany at beginning of Stewart, 202, 232 ; and Scottish 



century, 202; British empirical, ib.; school, 219; iv. 402; iii. 225, 226, 



Kant and, 237 ; 339 ; and Logic, 449 ; 228, 229, 235 ; psychological insight 



531, 537 ; iv. 128 ; science of, 187, of, 241 ; 242, 253 ; influence on 



262 ; 210 ; anthropology opposed to, Hamilton, 380 ; 525 ; iv. 11 ; and 



212; 213, 235 sqq.; 245; and Logic, Butler, 226; 268. 



relation of, 735. Reinach, Salomon, iii. 185. 



Puchta, G. F., iii. 455. Reinhold, iii. 125 ; 'Letters on Kantian 



Puffendorf, Samuel, "Naturrecht" or Philosophy,' 162, 852; Fichte's cor- 



Natural Law, iii. 132 ; and Helvetius, respondence with, 295 ; 345, 351 ; at 



iv. 138 ; ' Law of Nature,' 138. Weimar, 355 ; 357, 445, 464, 479 ; 



iv. 10, 13 ; chief exponent of Kant's 



Quakerism, rise of, iv. 287. Intellectualism, 21 ; 57, 172 ; 595. 



'Quarterly Review,' iii. 92, 579; iv. Religion, iii. 158, 159; from psycho- 



102. logical point of view, 163 ; as a cred- 



Quesnay, F., iv. 452, 453, 454, 456. ible doctrine, iv. 394. 



Quetelet, iv. 511. Religious ideas, conflict of, iv. 585 sqq. 



Religious interest in England, iv. 681 



Ranke and his school, iii. 150; 'His- sqq. *v 



