INDEX 



Conservatism and social progress, 4. 

 38. 



Contingent truths defined by Mr. 

 Lewes, I. 85. 



Contract and status, 3. 324. 



Cooperation of the parts of an organ- 

 ism, 2. 220. 



Copernicus, truth of an hypothesis, 



2. 128 n. 



Corporate responsibility in tribal sys- 

 tem, 4. 22. 



Correlation of forces, 2. 1 5 3. 



Correlation of growth, 3. 22, 95. 



Correspondence, constituting physical 

 and psychical life, 3. 128, 129 j 

 extending in time and space, i. 

 50, 3. 130, 4. 67 ; in specialty, 



3. 136 ; in complexity, 138, 4. 

 82 ; in definiteness, 79 ; in gener- 

 ality, I, 52, 4. 81 5 in integration. 



Cosmic theism, xciii, 4. 231-261, 



367. 

 Cosmism, defined, i. 64, 134-138, 

 272, 4, 250 5 and positivism, ix, 



1. 136, 271,2. 102-116; and 

 anthropomorphism, ix, i. 269, 4. 

 257 J scope and methods of, Iv, 



2. 1 1 7-1 2 1 ; idea of God in, 

 xciv, 4. 250-260. 



Cotta, Bernhard von, classification of 

 sciences, 2. 45 n. 



Coulomb, C. A. de, electric equili- 

 brium, 2. 25. 



Cousin, Victor, 1. 173. 



Creation, doctrine of, 4. 1 79, 324. 



Crime and punishment, 3. 274 n. 



Cuvier, G. L. C. F. D., classifica- 

 tion of species, 2. 387. 



Darwin, C. R., geological distribu- 

 tion, 2. 405 ; discovery of natural 

 selection, 3. 4 ; colours of ani- 

 mals, 39 ; variations in species, 

 51 ; and psychology, 192 ; grega- 

 riousness, 4. 129 j moral sense, 

 140. 



Darwinian theory, introduction of, 

 Ixii J objections to, 3. 46-71. 



Darivinism and other Essay s^ 3. 3. 



Datum objective to God, 4. 223 n., 

 252, 256. 



Day, lengthening of, 2. 304. 



Deanthropomorphization, lii, i. 260, 

 3. 360, 4. 230 ; in the sciences, 

 2. 15-19; Comte's treatment 

 of, 114; of the idea of God, 4. 

 306. 



Deductive method, i. 165 ; and 

 subjective, 1 68-1 71 ; in mathe- 

 matics and metaphysics, 170. 



Deity. See God. 



De Maistre, Joseph, 4. 331. 



Demokritos, sense of touch, 3. 131. 



Demonstration, what it consists in, 



1. 91, 2. 146. 



Derivation hypothesis, arguments for, 



2. 378-404 ; and Darwinian the- 

 ory, 3. 9- 



Descartes, Rene, I. 53 ; his test of 

 truth, 145 ; compared with Bacon, 

 168; his followers, 169; final 

 causes, 4. 190 n. 



Design, argument from, and scientific 

 study, 4, 187. 



Desire and volition, 3. 261, 269. 



Difference and No-Difference, I. 

 130. 



Differentiation, defined, 2. 219, 

 244-247 ; and integration, 229, 

 236. 



Diffusion and aggregation, 2. 192. 



Discrimination, element of, in know- 

 ledge, I. 15, 17, 39-46. 



Dissolution, and evolution, 2. 187- 

 203 ; defined, 201 ; of solar sys- 

 tem, 303. 



Dogs, races of, 3. 13 j instincts, 

 220. 



Domestication, variations in animals 

 under, 3. ll. 



Dymond, Jonathan, 4. 144. 



Dynamical and statical habits of 

 thought, 4. 171, 322. 



Ear, structure of the human, 3. 89 ; 

 an organ developed by direct adap- 

 tation, 91. 



378 



