INDEX 



Abstractions rightly used are not 



errors, 379. 



Achilles and the tortoise, 8 1 n. 

 Action motrice, 92. 

 Activity essential to substance, 



90 n, 325, 397. 

 Adamson (R.) on Fichte, i8on, 



Agrippa von Netteslieim, 403 n. 



Albertus Magnus, 260 n, 302. 



Algebra, its connexion with geo- 

 metry, 76 ; relation to other 

 sciences, 80. 



Alphabet of human thoughts, 85. 



Alsted, 376 n. 



Angelus Silesius (Joannes), 384 n. 



Animals, birth and death of, 115, 

 259, 413; indestructibility and 

 immortality of, 262, 306, 374; 

 resuscitation of, 224 n, 306 ; ac- 

 cording to Descartes, are mere 

 machines, 52 ; according to 

 Leibniz, not mere machines, 

 300 ; animals incomparably 

 greater than ours may exist, 

 U4n, Ii6n; organs of animals 

 in relation to perception, 231 ; 

 organic body of, 253 ; souls of, 

 400 ; nature of animal con- 

 sciousness, 232, 322, 364, 412. 



Animal spirits, 314 n. 



Anselm, 277. 



avTiTviria, 35 n, 94 sqq. 



Apperception, in Leibniz's sense, 

 34, 121 ; Locke's view, 367 sqq.; 

 distinction between appercep- 

 tion and perception, 126 sqq., 

 411. See also Perception. 



Appetition denned, 33, 35, 226, 

 407; degrees of, 51, 138; not 



; a 



suf- 



necessarily conscious, 3 



result of the principle o 



ficient reason, 71. 

 Aquinas, 243 n ; on sensible 



species, 2i9n; on antecedent 



and consequent will of God, 



270 n ; on souls of lower 

 .animals, 302 ; on the motions 



of the planets, &c., 382 n; his 



explanation of ' eminent,' 238 n. 

 Aristotle, 32, 155, 238 n, 255 n, 



308, 358 n, 378 n ; in relation 



to Leibniz, 229 n ; his ethics, 



293 n ; his description of place, 



353 ; on the tabula rasa, 360 n ; 



on the motion of the skies, 



382 n. 



Arnauld and Leibniz, 6, 298 n. 

 Association of ideas, 232 n. 

 Astraea, 64 n. 

 Atomism, 23, 26, 31 ; Leibniz's 



relation to, 29, 30, 159; 



Atomism of Descartes and 



Locke, 124. 

 Atoms, 223 n ; Leibniz's early 



liking for atoms and the void, 



32; his criticism of atoms, &c., 



2i8n, 310, 335, 370, 385 ; 



metaphysical atoms, 33 n ; 



atoms of substance = Monads, 



33 n, 3- 

 Attraction (immediate) from a 



distance, 389. 

 Attributes to be distinguished 



from modifications, 394. 

 Augustine, 207 ; Civitas Dei, 



267 n. 

 Automata, 254, 264 n; Monads are 



automata, 229 ; soul a spiritual 



automaton, 315. 



