INDEX, 



616 



fponlence in time, 3. 370; also avast 



integration of correspondences, ii. 373. 

 Experience, how far it can tell us of the 



future, i. 49, 53. 

 Experience - philosophy inadequately 



stated by the Eiigliah school from 



Hobbes to Mill, i. 287 ; ii. ICO. 

 Experiential origin of necessary truths, i. 



56. 

 Eyes of vertebrates and moDusks, iL 53, 



59. 



Falling bodies, law of, i. 108. 



Family-groups, importance of their first 

 establishiDcnt, ii. 295. 



Fatahsm, ii. 185. 



roeling, si^nsation and emotion, ii. 117. 



Ferrier, Prof., i. 75, 79 ; ii.__173, 283. 



Fetishism, origin of, i. 157 ; defined, i. 

 168 ; psychological interpretation of, 

 i. 179 ; how out.t;rown, i. 180. 



Feudal institutions, wherein different 

 from institutions of primitive races, ii. 

 222 



Fevers, i. 198. 



Flchte, J. G., i. 48, 52, 76. 



"Fictions," legal, their civilizing func- 

 tion, ii. 279 ; scientific anti legal, i. 273. 



Final causes, logical aspect of the doc- 

 trine, ii. 383. 



First Cause, i. 7. 



Fishes, brain of, ii. 133. 



Flowers and insects, ii. 28. 



Fly-catcher, ii. 149. 



Force, persistence of, i. 40, 283 ; ii. 414. 



Forces, correlation of, i. 40, 290 ; affords 

 no support for materialism, ii. 440. 



Foresight, ii. 92, 247, 3u3. 



FossiUzation a rare occurrence, ii. 38. 



Fourier, J., his law of conduction, i. 206. 



France as illustrating national aggrega- 

 tion, ii. 217. 



Frankland on the effects of the moon's 

 cooling, i. 382. 



Free-will, the popular arpniment for, ii. 

 173 ; not really a dilficult problem, ii. 

 174 ; tricks of language upon which 

 the absurd paradox is founded, ii. 188. 



Freeman, E. A., ii. 217, 235. 



Frequent phenomena generalized sooner 

 than thfjsc that are infrequent, i. 210. 



Fresnel, i. 130. 



Froude, J. A., ou the science of history, 

 iL166. 



Galileo, i. 34, 107, 109, 201, 204 ; his 

 law that the relative motions of parts 

 are not altered Vjy the motion of the 

 whole, i. 2U5. 



Galton, P., ii. 288. 



Galvanism, i. 206. 



Gaudry's discoveries of "transitional 

 forms " near Athens, ii. 41. 



Gemeinde, ii. 21 (i. 



General terms, lack of, in barbarous lan- 

 guages, ii. ^03. 



Generation, spontaneous, — the question 

 really at issue, i. 426. 



Genesis, sciences of. i. 222. 



Gens and 7^'"^, ii 216. 



Geogeny, scope of, i. 220. 



Geologic rhythms, enormous complexity 

 of, i. 304. 



Germ-theory, i. 420. 



German language never purged of it« 

 realistic implications, i. 123. 



Glacial epoch, date of, i. 304 ; ii. 295. 



God, how far unknowable, i. 15 ; iL 412, 

 470. 



Goethe's discoveries in morphology, i. 

 1] 3 ; his anecdote about the founding 

 of St. Petersburg, i. 121 ; his interest 

 in the controveisy between Cuvier and 

 Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, ii. 3 ; bis views 

 concerning the quasi-humanity of God, 

 ii. 409. 



Gravity, cohesion, and chemism, i. 291. 



Greek philosophy, i. 23, 43. 



Gregariousness, origin of, ii. 341. 



Grimm, J., his demonstration of the 

 fetishistic origin of mvths, i. 177. 



Grove, W. R., i. 40, 20.3, 293. 



Gustatory sensations, how compounded, 

 ii. 128. 



Habit, dynamical explanation of, ii. 144. 



Haeckel, E., i. 450 ; ii. 26, 397. 



Hall, Sir James, produces artificial 

 marble, i. 242. 



Hamilton, Sir W., i. 78; his theory of 

 causation, i. 148 ; his theory of the in- 

 verse variation of perception and sensa- 

 tion, ii. 114 ; his theory of pleasure and 

 pain, ii. 327. 



Hannibal, wny powerless against Rome, 

 ii. 262. 



Harmonic tones, ii. 125. 



Hartley, i. 117. 



Harvey's discovery of the circulation of 

 the blood, i. 113. 



Hegel, i. 24, 43, 48, 52, 67, 77, 92, 99, 

 104 ; his theory of the identity of con- 

 tradictories, i. 119 ; why he is so hard 

 to imderstand, i. 120 ; his contempt for 

 verification, i. 121 ; his preference lot 

 the Ptoleni.aic astronomy, i. 122 ; de- 

 L L 2 



