Prophetic intimations of a higher 
existence, in the capabilities of 
Understanding, 98. 
Proportion, and form, the most 
obvious ideas of touch and sight, 
173; proportion suggested by 
hearing, 173; science of, 174. 
Propositions, what are true, 196; 
difference in the character of, 
205. ; 
Ilpds zt, 863. 
Providence, 124. 
gozy, 1. 
Purpose, 323; MSR, 110; its 
symbolical analysis, 122. 
Pythagoras, three elements in the 
soul, 17; his dvds resembles 
Motivity, 31. 
Quality, 427; a category of Spon- 
taneity, 350; one of Aristotle’s 
categories, 363. 
Quantitative division of faculties, 42. 
Quantity, 427; a category of Mo- 
tivity, 344; of Aristotle, 363. 
Questions to aid the nomenclature 
of faculties, 125. 
Rational phenomena the principal 
objects of metaphysical investi- 
gation, 43 ; conceptions, a source 
of positive knowledge, 222 ; ideas 
not derived from Sense or Self- 
consciousness, 224; conclusions 
uniform and irresistible, 225; 
faith, 256. 
Rationality,  subjective-objective, 
33 ; its faculties adapted to every 
method of acquiring knowledge, 
71; three ways of attaining its 
end, 72; secondary faculties of, 
118 ; affects Motivity indirectly, 
150; not subjective in tendency 
nor objective in origin, 157, 158; 
never pure, 161; scientifically 
deduced from necessary relations, 
162 ; refers to objective neces- 
sity, 340; gives Totality, 347; 
Negation, 354; Relation, 358 
sqq; Cause and Hffect, 361; 
the highest, latest, and most 
imperfectly developed of the 
Conscious forms, 356; difficulty 
VoL. x11.—75 
GENERAL INDEX. 
of its study, 357; its logical an- 
tecedence, 417. 
Rauch, latent Consciousness, 159. 
Real knowledge, 369. 
Reality, 428; only in an Under- 
standing, 315; a category of 
Spontaneity, 339; of Space and 
Time, empirical, 399; but the 
same as the reality of other ob- 
jects of our knowledge, 400; 
of Space and Time, proved by 
motion and change, 400; con- 
sists of the aggregate of proper- 
ties, 401; subjective or objec- 
tive, 402; objective has two 
sides, 402; empirical, a repre- 
sentation of the true, 402; rests 
on Necessity, 425; depends on 
the ideal, 431. 
Reason, 17; Divine, 101-4; su- 
bordinate to Faith, 191; and 
faith, harmonious but distinct, 
241; antagonisms of, not legiti- 
mate, 243, 271. 
Reasoning, precision necessary in, 
182; possible only about what 
can be defined, 182; from the 
relative to the Absolute, futile, 
250. 
Receptive faculty, 106. 
Recognition of physical objects, 
159. 
Recollection, 124. 
Reflection, 124. 
Reform, how effected, 149. 
Regulative faculty, 104, 106. 
Reid, mutability of faculties, 40,41; 
definition of Desire, 49; Senti- 
ment, 04; Instinct, 56; Will, 
64; Perception, 78; Judgment, 
86; primitive beliefs are inspi- 
rations, 191; variety of divisions, 
276. 
Relation, 858, 428; a category of 
Rationality, 858; one of Aris- 
totle’s categories, 363 ; a phase 
of condition, 422 ; limits nothing 
but conception, 456. 
Relations of antecedents and con- 
sequents, four, 23; fundamental, 
of philosophy, 24; of the sub- 
591 
jective, in time, 26, 30; do not 
change the subjective nature of 
faculties, 36; of O to S, incom- 
prehensible, 100; the obscu- 
rity increased by supposing me- 
dia which are neither material 
nor immaterial, 100 ; ideal, fixed 
and necessary, 125 ; mathemati- 
cal, why self-evident, 174; dif 
ferent, lead to difference of opin- 
ion, 194; of S and O, suscepti- 
ble of infinite modifications, 434; 
require attention to the condi- 
tions of the problems, 434; ex- 
plain speculative.errors, 436. 
Relative infinity, examples of, 256; 
danger of fallacy in reasoning: 
from, 250, 261; involved in 
Hamilton’s “contradictions,” 
262; may be reasoned about, 
262. 
Relativity, the basis of analysis and 
synthesis, 22; essential to Con- 
sciousness, 41; developed in 
three forms, 333. 
Reliance on authority necessary, 
197 ; on teachings of the spirit- 
ually illuminated, 237. 
Reminiscence, 106. 
Representation, 322. 
Representative faculty, 106. 
Reproductive faculty, 106. 
Resolution, 323; SSR, 110; dif 
ferent modes of regarding, 117; 
symbolical analysis of, 122. 
Respect, MRR, 110; symbolical 
analysis of, 122. 
Responsibility, not attached to mo- 
tives, 148; belongs to Sponta- 
neity, 148; its ground, 190. 
Retention, 124. 
Retentive faculty, 106. 
Revealed facts the source of the 
comprehensible, 232. 
Revelation, 8; direct, 9; mediate, 
10; the source of convictions of 
the Understanding, 101; perfect 
and continual, 191; in primitive 
beliefs, 191; in irresistible opin- 
ion, 196; infallible, but partial, 
197; its authenticity a fit subject 
