PREFACE Tii 



c. Athletic for strength. 



d. Arts voluptuary for pleasure. 



(2) Knowledge of mind (pp. 127-90). 

 a. The soul (pp. 127-9). 

 6. Faculties (pp. 129-90). 



(a) Rational faculties: Logic 

 (pp. 131-63). 



i. Invention (p. 132). 



(i) — of arts and sciences 

 ,^ (p. 132). 



(u) — of speech and arguments 

 (p. 136). 



ii. Judgement, including also Idols 



of the human mind (p. 139). 

 iii. Custody or Memory (p. 144). 

 iv. Tradition or delivery (p. 146). 



fi) Its organ (p. 146). 

 (ii) Its inethod (p. 149). 

 (iii) Its illustration : Rhetoric 

 (p. 155). 



Appendices to Tradition (p. 160): 

 (i) Critical, 

 (ii) Pedantical. 



(6) Moral faculties : Moral philo- 

 sophy (pp. 163-90). 



i. Exemplar, or Nature of Good 

 (pp. 165-77). 

 The double nature of Good 

 . (p. 166). 

 (i) Private, active and passive 



(p. 169). 

 (ii) Communicative : Duty 

 (p. 173). 



ii. Regiment, or culture of mind 

 (pp. 177-89). 



