THE SCIENCE OF HAPPINESS 



pleasure and pain, p. 2 ; quoted 

 (from Plato's Ph&do), on the 

 body as a source of trouble, 

 p. 58; (in Plato's Phcedo), 

 quoted as to the value of wis- 

 dom, p. 100. 



Socrates and Plato, quoted 

 about death, chapter-heading 

 to "How to Die," p. 256. 



Solacers of appetite, tea, coffee, 

 alcoholic beverages, and to- 

 bacco, p. 33 seq. 



Sound bodies, advice of Pythag- 

 oras concerning, p. 39; title 

 of chapter III, p. 39 seq. 



Spencer, Herbert (1820-1903), 

 British philosopher, whose 

 writings began to expound a 

 doctrine of evolution before the 

 publication of Darwin's " Ori- 

 gin of Species;" comment on 

 his alleged avoidance of read- 

 ing, p. no ii. 



Sports, physical, healthy boy 

 takes to them naturally, p. 47; 

 competitive, their value in 

 stimulating physical devel- 

 opment, p. 52; athletic, not- 

 withstanding their benefits, 

 may become vicious if pur- 

 sued too persistently, p. 56. 



Stability of will, an example of 

 its value, p. 127-8. 



Stanton, Elizabeth Cady (1815- 

 1902), American lecturer, be- 

 gan study of music at seventy, 

 p. 98. 



Stephenson, Robert Louis ( 



), British man of letters, 

 cited as having achieved suc- 

 cess through infinite toil, p. 



J 55- 



Stomach, normal person should 

 have an empty stomach on 

 retiring, p. 76. 



Stone, Edmund, British math- 

 ematician, anecdote concern- 

 ing, to show the possibilities 

 of self-culture, p. 160. 



Struggle for existence, less and 

 less a physical struggle, p. 46; 

 more difficult but also more 

 fascinating in the centres of 

 population, p. 138. 



Success, largely dependent upon 

 stability of will-power, p. 123; 

 attained in one direction usu- 

 ally implies capacity to suc- 

 ceed in other directions as 

 well, p. 137; if it fails to come 

 before middle age, may it be 

 attained later? 167 seq. 



Successful men, the value of 

 their example, if properly in- 

 terpreted, p. 114; often make 

 mistakes, but recover from 

 them quickly, and learn from 

 experience, p. 142. 



Suffering, its universality, p. 6. 



Superstition, how instilled into 

 the minds of children, unwit- 

 tingly, by parents, p. 234 seq. 



Sympathetic books compared to 

 human companions, p. 109. 



Synthetic mind, the, its capacity 

 to reason, p. 104. 



Tea and Coffee, more harmful 

 than often supposed, pp. 

 35-36; non-use of by athletes 

 in training, p. 37. 



Thackeray, Wm. M. (1811-1863) 

 English novelist and humorist, 

 his habit of precise thinking, 

 p. 14. 



Thales, one of the earliest of 

 Greek philosophers, the max- 

 im "know thyself," here as- 

 cribed to Thales, has been 

 ascribed also to sundry other 

 of the wise men of antiquity; 

 the maxim elucidated, p. 136. 



"The care to live well," etc. 

 Epictetus, p. 255. 



The Coming Generation, title of 

 chapter XIV, p. 229 seq. 



' ' The exchange of one f ear, ' ' etc. , 

 quotation from Socrates, p. 

 100. 



"The good man prolongs his 

 life," etc. Martial, p. 182. 



"The man of understanding," 

 etc., quotation from Plato, p. 

 20. 



"The manly part," etc., quota- 

 tion from Emerson, used as a 

 chapter- heading for "How to 

 Work," p. 148. 



[348] 



