402 



Index 



Colorado, industrial war in, 229 



Columbus, Christopher, 132 



Commerce, and vital circula- 

 tion, 99; Phoenicians and, 

 196; piracy and, 214; and 

 philosophy of force, 255-7 



Communication, effect of 

 growth of, 96, 107; and 

 struggle against physical en- 

 vironment, 102 



Communist Alanifesto, 262 



Competition among individ- 

 uals, 8; progress due to 

 universal, 20 



Compulsion, may disappear, 

 viii; and militarism, 244 



Comte, August, 1 16-18 



Conflict, universal, necessary 

 to development, 8 



Confusion, in philosophy of 

 force: of war with victory, 

 127; of unity with despotism, 

 129; of statement of fact 

 and judgment, 136; see also 

 Errors 



Conquest, of nature, xi-xii; 

 evolution and, 1 1 ; force used 

 in conquest, 47; motives 

 underlying, 112; as means of 

 subsistence, 11 7-1 8; fear of, 

 abases human species, 151; 

 of races, 157; as complete 

 exploitation, 172; formation 

 of States by, 194; a limita- 

 tion of life, 201, 203; as 

 cause of barbarism, 202; 

 the Great War and desire 

 for, 226; of forces of nature, 

 233; injurious to conquerors, 

 354; desire for, obstacle to 

 world federation, 384; see 

 also Aggression, Colonies, 

 War, Territory 



Conscience, the supreme moni- 

 tor, 298; education of, 299; 

 and enlightened self-interest, 

 369; a factor in happiness, 

 370; and oppression of sub- 

 ject peoples, 370; social, 378 



Constantinople, 124 



Constitution of United States, 

 205 



Contiguity, association and, 

 103 



Co-operation, basis of society, 

 vii-viii; consequences of, 96; 

 basis of State, 195; advances 

 civilization, 210; philosophy 

 of, 215; international, 222; 

 principle of human, 235; of 

 social forces, 238; compul- 

 sory, 244, 260; see also 

 Mutual Aid, Association, 

 Interdependence 



Copernican system, 234 



Copernicus, 113 



Corinth, 199 



Cosmic order, 24 



Courage as a social virtue, 

 290-1 



Credit, Balkan War and inter- 

 national, 100 



Crime disadvantageous to 

 criminal, 357 



Crimean War, 26, 103 



Custozza, 43 



Cuvier, 114 



Danes, 147, 370 



Darwin, Charles, 23, 25, 141, 

 168, 230, 232, 237, 239, 268 

 ff-, 325, 330-1, 332 



Darwin's theory of social pro- 

 gress, chapter ix, 268-302; 

 misinterpreted, vi-vii, xviii, 

 xix, 6, 28, 32, 58; true theory 

 given in The Descent of 

 Man, 25, 268 note; distorted 

 into the philosophy of force, 

 31-51 ; rediscovery of, 34, 76, 

 269, 303 ; an integral part of 

 his theory of evolution, 271; 

 considers primeval man a 

 social animal, 272; advan- 

 tages of descent from a weak 

 species, 272-3; man owes 

 dominant position to social 

 habits, 274; moral law makes 

 society possible, 275 ; struggle 

 between societies, 277 ; moral- 



