SUMMARY. 579 
CHAPTER III.—Suporpinate Facunriss, pages 486-494. 
Three cuides to nomenclature, § 108—List of secondary faculties, 110—Their assignment, 111—Comparative 
analysis of special faculties, 115—Homogeneous classification, 122—Questions for determining fitness of 
names, 123—Tertiary faculties, 124—The first essay tentative; difficulties of classification, 125—Diagram of 
Elementary forms of Consciousness, 126. 
CHAPTER IV.—Puitosopsy or Consciousness, pages 494-503. 
Personality not physical, § 127—Only phenomena can be studied, 128—Mind more intelligible than matter, 128 
—Hssential and accidental attributes, 129—Fichte, Cousin, and Hamilton, 130—Discouragements of super- 
ficial. philosophy, 184—Advantages of system, 136—Is the Mind always conscious? 137—Steps in Know- 
ledge, 142—Accountability, 147—Control of Motivity, 150—Free Will, 153—Tendency of Spontaneity, 
155—And Rationality, 157—Steps to perception, 159—Rapidity of volition, 160—Solid foundation of 
Psychology, 161. 
CHAPTER V.—KNoWLeDGE AND Farru, pages 504-513. 
Object of science, § 163—Demonstration, 164—Difference in character of propositions, 170—Sensual Know- 
ledge the most obvious, 171—Mathematics, the science of form and proportion, 174—Do our senses deceive 
us? 177—Sourees of error illustrated, 178—Mathematical fallacies, 182—Sensations indubitable, 183—Use 
of judgment in vision, 184—Deception, 186—Revelation, 191—Hrror is based on truth, 194—Revelation, 
infallible but partial, 197—Spivitual perception, 198—Culture of faculties, 201—Imperfect development of 
spiritual nature, 204—Authority, 205—Theorems may become axioms, 206—Demonstrations of Divine Ex- , 
istence, 209—Selfevidence the test of truth, 211. 
CHAPTER VI.—Cuaracter AND Limits oF BELIEF AND CERTAINTY, pages 514-522. 
Distinction of knowledge and belief, § 212—Demonstrability not the only test of certainty, 214—Metaphysical 
science possible, 217—The senses must be believed, 218—Facts of consciousness, 220—Apperceptions of 
reason, 222—Limits and characteristics of knowledge, 227—Differences in extent of knowledge, 229— Axioms 
discovered slowly, 230—Intuition the basis ot knowledge, 233—Knowledge is clear and distinct, 235—Faith 
is natural, 237—Dogmatism should be avoided, 2839—Harmony of faith and reason, 240—Revelation ade- 
quate to our needs, 242. 
CHAPTER VII.—RarionaL ANTINOMIES, pages 522-527. 
Possible antagonisms of Faith, none of Reason, § 243—Paradoxes from improper use of terms, 244—The Abso- 
lute, 247—Defined by Hamilton, 248—Hegelian Zero, 249—Source of contradictions of the Absolute, 250— 
Kant’s skeptical method, 251—His first Antinomy, 202. 
CHAPTER VIII.—ExaminaTIon oF ANTINOMIES, pages 527-534. 
Ambiguity of the terms “ world” and “‘infinite,” § 253—Achilles and the tortoise, 255—Other ambiguities of 
Kant, 256—Hamilton’s “Contradictions,” 261—Their leading ambiguity, 262—Mill’s criticism of common 
maxims, 264—His views examined, 268—Modifications of Force, 269—All paradoxes can be solved, 271. 
CHAPTER IX.—Basts oF Onrotoey, pages 535-541. 
Faith, the ground of objective knowledge, § 272—Analogy, 273—Subjective source of all things, 274—Ontology, 
or Transcendental Philosophy, 275—Reasons for objective trichotomy, 276—Approaches to a universal lan- 
