INDEX 



Chambers, G., on nebular hypothe- 

 sis, 2. 294. 



Chance and law, 3, 251. 



Chemical affinity, 2. 154. 



Chemical heterogeneity of the earth's 

 surface, 2. 361. 



Chemism, cohesion and gravity, 2. 

 154. 



Chemistry, 2. 11 ; and mineralogy, 

 5 ; and physics, 9, 24 j an ab- 

 stract-concrete science, 44, 48 ; 

 progress in, 59 ; stellar, 93. 



Chinese constitution of society, 3. 

 364, 4. 26. 



Christianity, genesis of, 3, 249, 302, 

 320; and evolution, 4. 364. 



Circulatory system, stages of its evo- 

 lution, 3. 212. ■ 



Civilization, a process of adaptation, 



3. 296, 311 ; altruism in, 298 ; 

 when its progress became the dom- 



. inant aspect of evolution, 4. 100, 



128. 

 Clan, ethical sentiment in, 3. 298, 



4. 142 ; development of, from the 

 family, 3. 317, 4- I34- 



Classification, and knowledge, I. 15, 

 39-47 ; of like things and like 

 relarions, 45, 3. 154, 4. 65; 

 based on genetic kinship, 2. 378- 

 385, 388; of species, 388-391 ; 

 and reasoning, i. 45, 3. 154, 

 162; and perception, 156. 



Climates, origin of earth's, 2. 320; 

 interdependence of, 321. 



Codfish, multiplication of, 3. i6. 



Coexistence and non-coexistence, 3. 

 172. 



Coextension, and noa-coextension, 3. 



Cognition, and classification, I. 15 ; 

 involves recognition, i. 17, 39, 

 3. 145, 156 ; discrimination in, 

 I. 19, 40, 3. 150 5 how it arises, 

 176. 



Coherence and integration, 2. 220. 



Cohesion, 2. i 54. 



Cointension and non-cointension, 3. 

 172. 



Colours, of animals and insects, 3. 

 29-39} of plants, 40. 



Comets, 2. 297, 3, 265. 



Common-sense philosophy, i. 113. 



Community, and its environment, 

 Ixx, 3. 289, 296 } more than an 

 organism, 331. 



Comparative Method, 4. 327. 



Comparison in the sciences, 2. 81, 

 86. 



Competition and progress, 4. 34. 



Comte, Auguste, xxi, xliii ; his weak, 

 ness as a psychologist, i . 119- 

 2. 94, 3. 106 } aberrations of 

 opinion, i. 193-205; abstinence 

 from reading, 201 ; his sanity, 

 209 ; and Spencer, 241, 2. 62, 

 104; his historic sense, 1. 244, 

 275 ; law of the three stages, 

 M8, 3- 349.4- 3^8, 339; classi- 

 fication of the sciences, 2. 4-43, 

 60 ; his great contribution to phi- 

 losophy, 63, 67 ; his idea of the 

 limits of philosophy, 92, 102 ; 

 and sociology, Ixxiii, 3. 341, 371 ; 

 legal stage of progress, 352 ; re- 

 ligion of humanity, 4. 239 ; his 

 advance toward a dynamical view, 

 341 j reorganizing of society, 343. 



Concomitant variations, 2. 76, 86. 



Concrete sciences, Comte's, 2. 4, 

 43 ; Spencer on, 45-47, S°' 



Condillac, E. B.de I. 173. 



Condorcet, M. J. A. N. C. Marquis 

 de, 2. 99. 



Connature and non-connature, 3. 

 172. 



Conscience, 4. 126, 140. 



Consciousness, I. 22-30 ; its direct 

 warrant for the existence of its 

 states, 93 ; and neural undula- 

 tions, lix, 2. 335, 4-, ^77 ; gov- 

 erned by law of evolution, 2. 243 j 

 and molecular motion in the brain, 

 336, 3. 216, 274-278; an 

 orderly succession of changes, 

 173, 226 ; as a series of psychical 

 shocks, 1 79-191, 4. 279; law 

 of its states, 3. 215 j rise of, 227. 



377 



