INDEX 



"The measure of a man's life," 

 etc.. quotation from Plutarch, 

 p. 182. 



The Problem of Happiness and 

 its Physical Aspects, see Phy- 

 sical Aspects of the Problem 

 of Happiness. 



"The wealth of mind," etc., 

 quotation from Lucian, p. 82. 



The Will and the Way, title of 

 chapter VII, p. 121 seq. 



"The wise man will not sin," 

 etc., quotation from Pere- 

 grines, p. 243. 



Theognis (6th Century B.C.), 

 Greek philosopher, quoted to 

 the effect that satiety kills 

 more than famine, p. 26. 



Theophrastus, lamented at 107 

 years that he must die, p. 267. 



"There is a great difference be- 

 tween one who is learned and 

 one who is not," etc. Plato, 



40. 



P- 4 



"There are two sentences in- 

 scribed upon the Delphic 

 oracle," etc., Quotation from 

 Plutarch, as chapter- heading 

 for "Self-knowledge," p. 134. 



"There is a child within us to 

 whom death," etc. Plato, 

 p. 256. 



"There is good reason to hope 

 that death is a good" Soc- 

 rates, p. 256. 



"There is no thought in any 

 mind, etc., quotation from 

 Emerson, to introduce "The 

 Will and the Way," p. 122. 



"There is one wav of attaining," 

 etc. Bulwer Lytton, p. 229. 



Thinking, during sleep, probably 

 continues, modified only in 

 degree, p. 13; creative, is 

 man's sublimest privilege, p. 

 119. 



Thoreau, Henry D. (1817-1862). 

 American nature-lover, writer, 

 and philosopher, his cynical 

 comment on human stupidity, 

 p. 15; quoted to the effect 

 that most reformers clip at the 

 twigs of the tree of evil instead 

 of striking at the root, p. 142. 



"Those who know not wisdom 

 and virtue," etc.. quotation 

 from Plato, supplementing 

 chapter on "How to Think, 

 p. 120. 



Threshold of senility, not defi- 

 nitely fixed, but begins to be 

 approached in the fifth dec- 

 ade, the man who has passed 

 it may still be an important 

 producer, p. 1 70 seq. 



"Thrice happy, ' according to 

 Emerson, is the man born 

 with a bias toward useful 

 pursuits, p. 130. 



"To be rich," etc. Emerson, 

 p. 184 



Tobacco, a contribution of the 

 western hemisphere, p. 33; 

 most of its habitues are prac- 

 tically its slaves, p. 36; a 

 practical suggestion regarding 

 its use, p. 37; its non-use by 

 athletes in training, p. 37. 



Tragedians of Greece, the three 

 greatest, lived in the same 

 epoch, p. 153. 



Truth, the realm of, not a bar- 

 ren land, but a land of natural 

 miracles, p. 235. 



Tubercle bacilli, danger from, 

 accentuated by improper 

 breathing, p. 13. 



Turnebus, Adrian (1512-156$), 

 French critic, his tireless in- 

 dustry, p. 156. 



Turnvereins, motto of, "A sound 

 mind in a sound body," a 

 valid one, p. 44. 



Vaccination, Jenner's method in 

 demonstrating its preventive 

 power explicated, pp. 106, 112. 



Vanity over personal traits of 

 body or mind, its illogicality, 

 p. 260. 



Ventilation, usually not con- 

 sidered by builders or pur- 

 chasers of private dwellings. 

 p. 30; inefficient, may disturb 

 sleep and cause dreams, p. 67. 



Verbal memory, examples of 

 extraordinary, pp. 85. 86; 

 Huxley's defective, p. 87. 



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