INDEX 



write Cosmic Philosophy, xxi, 

 cxxxix ; development of his opin- 

 ions, xxiii, ciii, cxii, cxxxiv. 



Force, persistence of, I. 59, 2. 142, 

 4. 235 ; our conception of, i. 

 230, 254. 



Forces, correlation of, I. 58, 2. 

 155-158. 



Foresight, 3. 362, 4. 17, 73, 86. 



Fossilization, 3. 54-58. 



Fourier, Joseph, law of conduction, 



2. 30 ; theory of heat, 143. 

 Frankland, the moon, 288 n. 

 Frazer, J. G., cxliv. 



Freeman, E. A., evolution of society, 



3. 317, 319; military strength, 



4. II. 



Free-will, Ixviii, I. 78 ; and soci- 

 ology, 3. 241-279 } arguments 

 for, 255,267, 271. 



French Commune, 4. 335. 



Froude, J. A., on the science of his- 

 tory, 3. 245. 



Galilei, Galileo, I. 49, 52, 2. 22 ; 

 planetary motion, i. 157; velo- 

 city, 159 ; relative motion of parts 

 and of the whole, 2. 160. 



Galton, F., 4. 50 n. 



Gaudry, Albert, transitional forms, 



3-59- . . ^ 



Generalization, so-called limits of, 



2. 130. 



Generosity, 4. 146. 



Genesis of Language, essay on, 

 quoted, 3. 50. 



Geogony, 2. 51. 



Geographical distribution and evolu- 

 tion, 2. 404. 



Geological succession, 2. 392. 



Geology, a concrete science, 2. 47 ; 

 geologic rhythms, 173. 



Geometry, illustration drawn from, 



3- H5- 



Germ-theory, Ixii, 2. 346. 



German language and realism, i. 

 181. 



Giddings, on Fiske's theory of in- 

 fancy, Ixxxi. 



Glacial epoch, 4. 62'. 



God, existence of, as affirmed in 

 Cosmic Philosophy, Ixxxix, I. 

 ^55, 272, 4. 177, 180, 250- 

 260 ; as inscrutable, xciii, 4. 132, 

 206, 233, 247 ; as quasi-psychi- 

 cal, xcvi, civ, cxii, 4. 288 ; prim- 

 itive idea of, cxH, 4. 299 ; be- 

 nevolence of, 225, 3065 how far 

 knowable or unknowable, 317. 



Goethe, J. W. von, quoted, I. i, 

 4. 163, 296 ; anecdote of St. 

 Petersburg, I. 178 ; and biology, 



2. 32, 228, 3. 3 ; on Deity, 4. 

 228. 



Gravitation, law of, I. 158-160. 



Gravity, 2. 154. 



Greek philosophy, i, 32, 63. 



Gregariousness and sociality, 4. 128. 



Grimm, Jacob, i. 262. 



Grove, W. R., I. 58 ; modes of 

 motion, 2. 25 ; experiment in ac- 

 tinism, 157. 



Habit, dynamical explanation of, 3. 



210 ; physical, 216. 

 Haeckel, E. H., Bathybius, 2. 354; 



classification of species, 388, 3. 



72. 

 Hall, Sir James, produces artificial 



marble, 2. 83. 

 Hamilton, Sir William, I. 35, 1145 



causation, li, i. 218 ; psychology, 



3. 108 ; perception, 166 ; pleasure 

 and pain, 4. 108, 



Harmonic tones, 3. 182. 



Hartley, David, I. 1 72. 



Hastie, W., Kant's Cosmogony ^ IvH. 



Hearing, and adaptation, 3. 89—91 ; 

 origin and development of, 131. 



Heat as a mode of motion, 2. 155. 



Hedonism, 4. 124, 311. 



Hegel, G. W. F., 1. 75, 98, "*; 

 and doctrine of relativity, 134; 

 truth, 145 ; subjective method, 

 152; identity of contradictories, 

 172, 182; unintelligibleness of, 

 176, 181 5 his philosophy, 178} 

 and Comte, 211, 244 n. 



380 



