Index to the Methodist quarterly review, including the Methodist magazine, and the Methodist magazine and quarterly review, 1818-1881, Part 16

Author: Pilcher, Elijah H
Publication date: 1884
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Phillips & Hunt; Cincinnati, Ohio : Walden & Stowe
Number of Pages: 688


USA > New York > New York City > Index to the Methodist quarterly review, including the Methodist magazine, and the Methodist magazine and quarterly review, 1818-1881 > Part 16


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- chapel committee, Manchester, England, report of, liv, 1872, 268.


WESLEYAN 134


Wesleyan Church in 1850, xxxii, 1850. 169.


- Methodist Church in Canada, minutes of the, xxxix, 1857. 660. - Methodism in Canada; Ryerson, xlix, 1867. 198.


- Methodism, centenary of, xxi, 1839. 358.


- Methodism, constitution of; Beecham, xxxiii, 1851. 172.


- Methodisin in England and America ; C. Elliott, xx, 1838. 1. - Methodism on the Congleton Circuit, xxxviii, 1856. 648.


- Methodism; George Smith, xxxix, 1857. 662.


- Methodism, xxiii, 1841. 482.


- Methodism, union of, xiv, 1832, 1; founder of Methodism died 1791, 3; conditions of prosper- ity, 4; abettor of discord, 7; principle and practice of a con- sistent member, 9; Methodism will survive, 11; to get correct notions of Methodism, 13.


West, the, (T. M. EDDY. ) xxxix, 1857, 280 ; influence of Method- ism on the civilization of the west, 280; growth of western cities, 281; Methodist pioneers in the west, 284; doctrines preached, 283; ethical teach- ings, 287; social influence, 288; Methodist books, 289; educa- tional institutions, 291.


Western Methodism, romance of; Raybold, xxxi, 1849. 339.


Westminster assembly of divines, history of; Hetherington, XXXV, 1853. 607.


- assembly of divines, (DANIEL CURRY, ) xxx, 1848, 577 ; a not- able point in history, 577; ref-


ZOROASTRICHE


ormation in England, 578; long parliament, 580; character of the body of divines, 584; the lords with the assembly, 586; the Presbyterian party, 588; the assembly convened July 1, 1643, 589; form of Church gov- ernment, 596; the confession, 597; Alexander Henderson, 600; their work accomplished, 602.


Yezidis, or worshipers of the devil, xxxi, 1849. 587.


Young workers in the Church; Neely, Ixiii, 1881. 570.


Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte, Iviii, 1876, 536, 720; lix, 1877, 348, 539, 723; 1x, 1878, 161, 727; Ixi, 1879, 367, 568; Ixii, 1880, 367, 565, 753; Ixiii, 1881, 169, 760.


Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism, (J. N. FRADENBURG,) Ixiii, 1881, 61; one of the oldest religions of the world, 61; Persians not classed as idolaters, 61; their scriptures called Zend-Avesta, 62; their sacred writings were very voluminous, 62; Gathas contain his doctrine in purity, 67; little known as to his life. 69; lived not later than 1000 B.C., 69; religion strictly mon- otheistic, 69; Zoroastrians di- vided into Magi and Zendiks, 75; they are monogamists, 75; divided into conservatives and liberals, 76; they are not fire- worshipers, 77.


Zoroastriche studien; Wendesh- mann, xlvi, 1864. 142.


-


.


ABELARD


135


ASTRONOMY


-


PHILOSOPHICAL.


Abelard, his position in philosophy, xxxV, 1853. 345.


Adam and the Adamite; M'Caus- land, liii, 1871. 153. Esthetics; Bascomb, liv, 1872. 356. - in college education. (See Edu- cation, Esthetics in college.) Alchemy and the alchemists, xxxviii, 1856, 468; objects of the alchemists, 472; theory of the transmutation of metals, 472; the philosopher's stone, 473; obscurity of the alchem- ists, 476; their modes of pro- cedure, 476; their incidental discoveries, 479; the art not yet renounced, 484.


Algebra, treatise on; Strong, xlii, 1860. 528.


American literature ; Cleveland, xl, 1858. 664.


Analogical reasoning, method and province of, xxxvii, 1855. 360. Analytical processes; Gill, lviii, 1876. 386.


Anarchy, intellectual, of the present day, xxxiv, 1852. 339.


Anatomie comparée, xlv, 1863. 29. Anatomy of invertebrated animals, manual of; Huxley, Ix, 1878. 387.


- of the human body, xxvii, 1845. 160.


- Lectures on; Hunter, i, 1818. 59, 97.


-- Physiology and hygiene, a text- book of; J. C. Draper, xlviii, 1866. 481.


Ancient life, the, history of the earth ; Nicholson, Ix, 1878. 372. - literature, illustrated, history of ; Quackenboss, Ixi, 1879. 189.


- philosophy, lectures on the his- tory of; Butler, Ixi, 1879. 591. Anglo-Saxon race, the, its history, character, and destiny. (DEX- TER A. HAWKINS,) Ivili, 1876, 87; four periods in its history, 90; civil polity of the Saxons,


102; characters of the language, 105; mental and physical char- acteristics, 110.


Animal life, studies of; Lewis, xlii, 1860. 691.


Antiquity of man. (See Man.) Aristotle, logic of, xxxviii, 1856. 527.


- his paradox on philosophizing, xxxiii, 1851. 216.


- Philosophy of. xxxiii, 1851. 189. Arithmetic; Loomis, xxxviii, 1856. 489.


- (JOHN WHEELER,) xlvi, 1864, 233; its early rise, 234; its sys- tem of notation, 235; older writers, 237; provisional nota- tion, 238; other improvements, 240.


- (See also Miscellaneous.)


Art, its laws and the reasons for them, for general education; Long, liii, 1871. 691.


Arts, mystic, in our own day, (J. T. CRANE, ) xxx, 1848, 202; man- ner of writing history, 203; the works quoted, 203; James Ay- mar and his wonders, 205; the hazel twig, 207; rod to discover treasure. 208; instances of in- cantation, 209; most common kinds of divining, 211; the term "amulet," 213; cure of fevers, 215; divining " doctor," 216; care of burns, 223.


Asia, central, religions and philos- ophies of; Gobineau, xlviii, 1866. 466.


Assent, an essay in aid of gram- mar of; Newman, lii, 1870. 462.


Association, American philological, second annual session of, liii, 1871. 356.


Assyriens, textes principes elemen- taires, des, xliv, 1862. 162.


Astronomy, xvi, 1834. 108.


- of the ancients; Lewis, xliv, 1862. 498.


ASTRONOMY


136


BACON


Astronomy, Herschel's outlines of, | (PROF. HACKLEY, ) xxxiii, 1851, $32; present state of the science, 32: divisions of, 33; astronom- ical instruments, 36; precision required in, 36; correction of errors in, 38; incorrectness of first impressions, 39; the transit instrument, 40; the mural cir- cle, 43; the equatorial instru- ment, 45; throwing light on history, 48; heat of the sun strongest iu southern hemi- sphere, 49; spots in the sun, 50; the Ross telescope, 51; variable stars, 58; binary or double stars, 59; clusters of stars and nebu- læ, 61; Lord Ross's spiral sys- tem, 62; confutation of La Place's nebular theory, 63.


- Elementary ; Mattison, xxxi, 1849. 338.


- Outlines of; Herschell, xxxiii, 1851. 32.


- Practical; Loomis, xxxvii, 1855. 480.


- Treatise on; Loomis, xlvii, 1865. 618.


-- Applications of photography to. (Sce Photography.)


- and geology compared; Orma- thwaite, liv, 1872. 690.


- and kindred subjects, lectures on ; Kavanaugh, Ixi, 1879. 404.


- Parallax in, xxxiii, 1851. 35.


- Popular; Newcomb, 1x, 1878, 764; Ixi, 1879. 155, 247.


- Popular, (J. T. CRANE, ) Ixi, 1879, 247; Professor Newcomb's work, 247; system of the world his- torically developed, 248; prac- tical astronomy, 249; the solar system, the sun, 254; the plan- ets, 259; the stellar universe, 267.


-- Primary ; Mattison, xxxiii, 1851. 323.


- Progress of ; Loomis, xxxiii, 1851, 169; xxxviii, 1856. 645.


- Recreations in ; Warren, Ixi, 1879. 789.


Atmosphere. the, Ivi, 1874. 166.


- Constitution of the; Johnson, xxii, 1840. 110.


Atmosphere, on the relations of, vi, 1823. 331.


Atmospheric and oceanic currents, (L. DUBOIS,) xliii, 1861, 206, 374; researches of Lieutenant Maury, 207; currents in the at- mosphere, 208; nearly all the large rivers are in the northern hemisphere, 208; Maury's theo- ry of the winds, 209; influence of solar heat on the wind, 211; two classes of wind, 212; quan- tity of annual rain, 214; course of the trade-winds, 215; advan- tage of meteorological science, 217; submarine currents, 374; saltness of the sea, 375; an open polar sea, 380; the gulf-stream, 383; influence of marine cur- rents on climate, 385.


Athenæuin, German, xliv, 1862. 333.


Babel, the problem of, (A. B. HYDE, ) liii, 1871, 79; analysis of words, 82; classification of words, 85; Humboldt's three morphologic- al classes of words, 86; change- fulness of languages, 89; con- sciousness the sent of language, 94; confusion of tongues a mi- raculons touch on conscious- ness, 96.


Bacon, the, of the nineteenth cent- ury : Comte, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxV, 1833, 329, 489; true cory- phæus of the new reform, 329; Ionic school of philosophy, 332; relation of Socrates to his age; 332; philosophy of Greece, 332; Italic school of philosophy, 334; Pythagoras founded the Italian school, 334; the Eleatic school, 335; Gorgias the first of . the sophists, 336; dominion of sophistry. 337; Socrates and the sophiists, 339; Platonism, 341; Abelard's career, 345; relations of Abelard to Roscellinus, 346; mission of Abelard, 349; influ- ence of Bacon's labors, 351 : Abelard had fallen into an error, 353; Francis Bacon relieved the diffiulty of the sixteenth cent- ury, 489; instauration contem-


BACON


Bacon-continued.


plated by Bacon, 490; man- ner of the proposed reform, 491; Descartes, 493; Christian spirit of Bacon, 494; depend- ence on previous forms of philosophy, 495; conditions of the new reform, 496; Comte's claim to be the Bacon, 497; pos- itivism of Comte, 498; Comte's claim signally fails, 500; staud- ard of morality, 501; · defi- ciencies of positive philosophy, 505; the Baconian philosophy, 508; Aristotelian philosophy, . 509; reform needed in æsthetic science, 510; we want some- thing more than positivism, 512; instauratio marima, 512. Bacon's essays; Head, 1, 1868. 480. Bacon. . (See also under Biography.) Belief, principle and certainty of, distinguished, xxxiv, 1852. 32. Belles-lettres, xxxix, 1857. 154, 336, 500.


Bibliotheca philologica; Engelmann, XXXV, 1853. 486.


Bilder aus dem Thierleben; Vogt, xlvii, 1865. 29.


Biology, principles of; Spencer, xlviii, 1866, 479; liv, 1872. 5, 414.


Black arts, revival of the, xxxvi, 1854, 191; this age remark- able for delusions, 193; tend- ency illustrated by Mormon- ism, 195; credulity the nat- ural relation of the mind, 198; a little good may come from spiritualism, 205; claims of spiritualism, 205; rebound of the mind from extreme skepti- cism, 209.


Body and mind; Maudsley, liii, 1871, 341; liv, 1872. 5, 414. Botany, Ixiii, 1881. 551.


Brain and nerves, hygiene of the; Holbrook, Ixi, 1879. 198.


Britain, progress of liberal princi- ples in, xxxiii, 1851. 451. Brown, Thomas, philosophy of ; Ri- fhoré, xlviii, 1866. 28S.


Bulletin de l'academie royal des sciences, li, 1869. 94.


137


CIVILIZATION


Bulletin de la societie des sciences naturalles de Neuchatel, li, 1869. 94.


Causation, of; M'Cosh, Hume, and Brown, xxxiv, 1852. 46S.


Cause and effect, connection of, xxxiii, 1831. 51.


Cerebration; Carpenter, lv, 1873. 516.


Chautauqua literary and scientific circle, memorial day of the, Ixi, 1879. 404.


Chemistry, the new; J. P. Cooke, Ivi, 1874. 353, 513.


- Draper, xxviii, 1846. 629.


- Arrangements discovered by, vi, 1823. 55.


- Class-book in; Youmans, xlvi, 1864. 171.


- Elements of, xxiv, 1842. 638.


- Elements of; G. Fownes, xli, 1859. 676.


- as exemplifying the wisdom an.1 beneficence of God, xxvii, 1845. 640.


- Manual of; J. Johnston, xxiii, 1841, 156; xxxix, 1857. 159.


- A text-book of; Cooly, lii, 1870. - 162.


- Text-book of; H. A. Draper, xlviii, 1866. 484.


Chinese, classical literature of, lix, 1877. 305.


Cicerones de natura deorum, de divinatione, de fato; Klotz, Ixi, 1879. 404.


Civilization, history of; Buckle, xliii, 1861. 685, 692.


- in modern Europe, history of, xxiii, 1841. 45.


- Origin of, and primitive state of man; Lubbock, Ivi, 1874. 340. - Vestiges of, xxxv, 1853, 213: ætiology of history, 213; Aris- totle recognized the claims of his predecessors, 213; much to admire and much to condemn in the book, 214; a new philos- ophy, 214; style of the book, 215 ; it requires close attention, 215; its simplicity only appar- ent, not real, 216; some latent truth in the book, 218; analo-


138


CIVILIZATION


Civilization-continued.


gies and analogical reasoning, 220; the author has fallen into great errors, 221; analogy and etymology, 227; started from a wrong stand-point to estab)- lish his theories, 231; error in renouncing Baconian induction, 232; the work consists of two parts, theory and application, 236; premises of the book, 238; the system is novel, 244; unten- able speculations, 246.


- Vestiges of, reviewed, xxxiv, 1852, 136; first-fruits of posi- tive philosophy, 136; the task of the book, the scientific theo- ry of nature, 136; attacks on the clergy, 137; attack on his- torians, 137; sense and science, 139; threefold arrangements of the work, 140; analysis of mo- tive, 142; declares all knowl- edge to be limited to phenom- ena, 143.


Civilisations. le Genie des; Trottet, xlv, 1863. 339.


Classical Greek literature, history of: Mahaffy, Ixii, 1880. 604.


- literature of the Chinese, (R. H. MACLAY, ) lix, 1877, 305 ; names and subject-matter of the nine classics, 306; characters of the four sages of China, 310; lead- ing features of their philosophy, 311; the classics: pure in love, 316; wonderful moral effects of the classics, 317.


Classics, utility of the, in educa- tion, xxxiii, 1851. 219.


Coleridge and his philosophy, xxxviii, 1856. 174, 181, 184, 333.


College life, its theory and practice; Olin, xlix, 1867. 633.


Colleges, our, (PROFESSOR HARRING- TON,) Ixi, 1879, 626; their gen- eral drift in favor of religion, 626; influence of college life ad- verse to piety, 627; demand that colleges exert religious power, 628; college professors should be Christians, 631; re- ligious instruction appropriate


CONSERVATION


in colleges, 636; Christian mis- sion of the college should be aggressive, 639.


Comedy, ethics of Latin. (See Eth- ics.)


Comment on parle a Paris; Madame Peyrace, xxxix, 1857. 160.


Communism and socialism in their history and theory; Woolsey, Lxii, 1880. 386.


Comte, M., and Saint Simon, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxiv, 1852, 9, 159. 329; comparative character. 22; error in the positive philos- ophy, 29; fallacy in his states and periods. 169; rank among modern philosophers, 15; infi- delity and rejection of meta- physics, 170; results of, 193; unaided and independent per- severance, 18; instauratio nova received, 329; personal history, 16; review of positive philoso- phy, 9, 169; character and su- premacy. 194, 196; plan of pos- itive philosophy, 24, 29, 194, 196; illogical in its conclusions, 184; science, review of the, 136; introductory to speculations, 19; neglect of this work by En- glish and American writers, 4, 10; xxxv, 1853, 497, 500; claims tested, 497; standard of moral- ity, 501; signal failure, 500; ambition and failure, 507; ex- clusion of logic and metaphys- ics, 505; philosophy not uni- versal, 510; relations to Bacon, 510; philosophy, 513.


- Philosophy of; G. F. Holmes, xxxiii, 1851, 211; xxxiv, 1852, 9, 169; 1, 1868. 185.


- he rejects Christianity in toto, xxxiii, 1851. 209.


- (See also Bacon of the Nineteenth; Faith and science; Generaliza- tion ; Instauratio; Positive.)


Conservation, correlation, and ori- gin of vital, physical, and men- tal forces, (J. S. JEWELL,) liv, 1872, 5, 414; definition, 6; phys- ical force the source, 9; opin- ions of various writers, 10; va- rious forms of chemical force


139


CONSERVATION


Conservation-continued.


capable of conversion, 12 ; defini- tion of terms, conservation, 14; correlation, 15; evolution-force, 16; terms force and motion not to be confounded, 19; unitica- tion of force and matter, 21; examination of evidence of the correlation of forces, 24; facts, 25 ; no living organism yet pro- duced from dead matter, 415; combining agent, 428; asser- tions and imaginings, 431; Spencer reviewed, 435.


Conversation; Peabody, xxxviii, 1856. 164.


Cormenen, de, Comte-Redu, xxxi, 1849. 43.


Correlation and conservation of forces; Youmans, xlvii, 1865, 141; liv, 1872. 5.


- of physical and vital forces; Barker, lii, 1870. 477.


Cosmic philosophy, the, (B. P. BOWNE,) Iviii, 1876, 655; what is it to know? 657; theory of relativity, 660; scientific theory, 663; doctrine of evolution, 664; instability of the homogeneous, 665; instability of the hetero- geneous, 666; is the doctrine atheistic? 669; intelligence needed, 670; personality of first cause, 673.


Cosmology, a rational; Hickok, xli, 1859. 172, 324.


Cosmos, the; Humboldt, xxviii, 1846, 329; xxxiii, 1851. 664. Course of nature, the; Newcomb, Ixi, 1879. 155.


Creation, the development of, on earth; Strange, Iviii, 1876. 747. - History of; Haeckel, lix, 1877. 176.


- A series of supernatural growths, (TAYLER LEWIS, ) xlvii, 1865, 207; difference between idea and conception, 208; figures in the Bible, 210; the literal mode of interpretation, 213; the first day, 214; the firmament, 216; the swarming waters, 217; Mil- ton's fancies, 220; the divine artificer, 221; nature from the


DARWIN


beginning, 224; things seen made from things unseen, 225; the things unseen are realities, 225 ; the forces and laws of nat- ure, 228.


Creation, sketches of; Winchell, lii, 1870. 303.


- Wisdom and goodness of God manifested in, i, 1818. 178.


- Wonders of, i, 1818. 423, 463. Crise philosophique, la ; Jauet, xlvii, 1865. 599.


Criticism, essay on general ; Renou- vier, xxxvii, 1855. 150.


Critique; Kant, xxxviii, 1856. 161. Cross-fertilization, on; Darwin, lix, 1877. 717.


Culture and discipline of the mind; Abercrombie, xxi, 1839. 240.


Curiosity or meddlesomeness; Plu- tarch, xxxiii, 1851. 467.


Currents and counter-currents; Holmes, xliii, 1861. 518.


Cyclopædia of illustration and edu- cation ; Schmidt, xlix, 1867. 435.


Dante, (A. B. HYDE, ) xxxiv, 1852, 49; divina comedia, 49; the vis- ion, on hell, purgatory, and par- adise, 49; no book has had more attention than the vision, 50; only four true epics. Ili id, Æneid, Vision, and Paradise Lost, 51; characteristics of epic poetry, 51 ; Italy from the tenth to the fourteenth century, 52; patriotism in time of Dante, 53; . Bæthius the last scholar of the ancient world, 54 ; Lingua Tos- cana, the, established by Dante, 54; monasticism in Ireland, 54; leading dialects of the Latin language, 54; little known of Dante's carly life, 54; sketch of his life, 54; intellectual char- acter, 57; his works, 58; analy- sis of the vision, 58; influence on Italian literature, 65.


- Carey, xxviii, 1846. 158.


- Translation of; Carlyle, xxxi, 1849. 507.


Darwin and administrative nihil- ism, more criticisms on; Hux- ley, liv, 1872. 685.


DARWIN


140


ECLIPSE


Darwin ein Kornisch-tragischer Ro- man; Jung, Ivi, 1874. 526. Darwinis chen Theorien, die, und ihre stellung, etc .; Schmid, Ixiii, 1881. 197.


Darwinism ; Whitney, lv, 1873. 345. - Ixiii, 1881. 197, 571, 753.


- what is it? Hodge, Ivi, 1874. 514. - (See also Evolution.)


Da Vinci, Leonardo. (Sce Bio- graphical.)


Deaf-mutes, report on institutions for; Clark, lii, 1870. 416.


- The training of, (B. K. PIERCE, ) lii, 1870, 416; difficulties in teaching deaf-mutes, 417; Abbe de l'Espee's system, 418; origin of the American system of in- struction, 420; Pedro Ponce de Leon, teacher of articulation, 423; Jacob R. Periera taught mutes to read audibly, 424; John Paul Bonet, constructor of mute alphabet, 424.


- (See also Europe.)


Delitzsch mentally hears; G. Smith, Ixiii, 1881. 748.


Development hypothesis, the ; M'Cosh, lix. 1877. 196.


Devoir, sur le ; Jules Simon, xxxvii, 1855. 157.


Dictionary, alphabetical, of the Foochow dialect, China; Mac- lay, liii, 1871. 169.


- The Waverly; Rogers, Ix1, 1879.198. Differential and integral calculus; Church, xxxiii, 1831. 170.


Discipline, mental; Clark, xxix, 1847, 630; xxx, 1848, 361; xxxiii, 1851. 165.


- Clark's mental, (S. M. VAIL,) xxx, 1848, 361; two grand top- ics are acquisition and commu- nication, 362; qualification for ministers, 363; present plan of training ministers, 366; ob- jections to going to school to learn to preach, 368; Paul probably graduated at the Jew- ish schools, 373; theological schools founded early in the history of the Church, 375; topical course of theological study, 378.


Discoveries, annual of scientific; Wells, xxxiii, 1851, 333; xl, 1858, 498; xli, 1859, 493; xlii, 1860, 342; xliv, 1862, 530; xlv, 1863, 525 ; xlvi, 1864, 522 : xlvii, 1865, 614; xlix, 1867, 472: 1, 1868, 473; lii, 1870, 470; liii, 1371. 522.


Divine government. (See Govern- ment.)


Dream-psychology of Andre Del- rieu, lv, 1873. 519.


Dreamer, the poet and the, x1, 1858. 267.


Drugs as an indulgence, (J. T. CRANE,) x1, 1858, 551; mental and physical excitability. 552; the author and the speaker, 554; the control of excitability, 557; natural and artificial stim- ulants, 558; hasheesh and its effects, 559; opium and its effects, 562; alcohol and its effects, 564.


-


as an indulgence, xli, 1859. 188.


Dynamics, on the, principles and philosophy of organic life; M'Elroy, li, 1869. 484.


Earth, the, chapters from the phys- ical history of; Nicoles, Ixii, 1880. 595.


- Descriptive history of the phe- nomena of the life of the globe; Reclus, liv, 1872. 163.


- and man, the story of; Dawson, Ivi, 1874. 163.


Economy, American political; Bow- en, lii, 1870. 482.


- Elements of political ; Wayland, xix, 1837, 405; xxx, 1848. 637. - Political, xxx, 1848, 380; prog- ress in the order of the world, 381; M'Culloch's definition of, 381 ; production, 382 ; the right of property, 385 ; distribution, 387 ; consumption, 389.


Eclipse, the total, of the sun, 1869, observation on ; Himes, lii, 1870. 324.


- The total solar, of August 7, 1869, report on ; Sands, liii, 1871. 98.


EDUCATION


141


Elucation, xv, 1833. 107.


- Richter, xxxi, 1849. 145.


- H. J. Smith, xxv, 1843. 162.


- Address on, (ROBERT EMORY,) xvii, 1835. 439.


- Address on, (E. S. JANES,) xxii, 1840. 401.


- Dupanloupe, de l', xlix, 1867. 111.


- Evangelical theory of, xlvi, 1864. 161.


- genius of American institutions, (B. HAWLEY, ) Ixiii, 1881, 635 ; Justin Morrell in United States Senate, 636; Burnside's bill in Congress, 637; early history, 639; times of the reformation, 639 ; Harvard, Yale, William and Mary Colleges, 640; Mas- sachusetts and New York in early times, 643; public libra- ries, 644 ; Presbyterian Church, 644; Columbia College estab- lished, 644; Methodist disci- pline, 645; common schools, 651 ; religion and schools, 651; Tourgée's plan, 353 ; convent in Belgium, 554.


- Importance of early and relig- ious, v, 1822. 139.


- xxxii, 1850, 282; spirit of the present age, 282 ; its value with- out religion, 234 ; labors of the Methodist Episcopal Church in extending. 286.


- Spence, xliii, 1861. 348.


- in Catholic and Protestant coun- tries compared, xxxvii, 1855.410.


- in the city and county of New York, Ixi, 1879. 604.


- Esthetics in college, (GEORGE F.


· COMFORT, ) xlix, 1867, 572 ; the gradation of our schools, 573; fragmentary universities, 575 ; history of collegiate studies in America, 577 ; plans of classifi- cation, 580; objects to be se- cured by æstlietic culture, 581 ; its value, 584 ; means by which it may be obtained, 586 ; plan of instruction, 587 ; necessity of museums, 589.


- among the freedmen, (S. G. AR- NOLD,) 1x, 1878, 43; Jefferson's


EDUCATIONAL


views, 44; prompt activity of the Church for the benefit of freed men, 46; freedmen'sschools in 1863-1866, 48; schools in District of Columbia, 50 ; work of the American missionary society, 53; schools of higher instruction, 56; Fisk Univer- sity, 59 ; present status of freed- men, 65.


- Report of commissioner of, for 1876, Ixi, 1879. 403.


- Report of board of education for the city of New York, 1873, Ivi, 1874. 522.


- Report on, (supplement, 1;) D. A. Hawkins, Ivi, 1874. 357.


- Science of, address on; W. Fisk, xiii, 1831. 419.


- Science of; J. Ogden, xli, 1859. 673.


- by the state, shall it be exclusive- ly secular? (C. II. PAYNE, ) Ixii, 1880, 299; ends sought in our system of common-school edu- cation, 299; complete secular- ization of education unphilo- sophical, 301 ; moral welfare of the nation demands education, 304; moral training the work of the state, 307; theory of pure secularism in education revolutionary, 311; shall the state become unqualifiedly æs- thetic? 313.


- System of, in Prussia, xx, 1838. 467.


- Universal, means and end of ; Ira Mayhew, xxxix, 1857. 160. - (See also Germany.)


Educational and juvenile, xxxix, 1857. 159.


- institutions of New England, the higher, (D. DORCHESTER, ) liv. 1872, 181, 399; New England theological schools among the earliest of the country, 181 ; college statistics in 1830, 1850, and 1870, 182; Yale, Brown, and Dartmouth, 183; the Ver- mont colleges, 184; Williams and Amherst, 184; colleges in Maine and Connecticut, 185; students in Wesleyan Univer-


EDUCATIONAL


142


ESSAYS


Educational-continued.


sity per year for forty years, 186; students in colleges in New England from out of New England, 187; classification of students from New England, 188; religious denominations and the colleges in New En- gland, 188; decline of collegi- ate education in New England, 190 ; increase of population, in- crease of foreign born, consid- ered, 192; tabular statistics of scientific departments, 399 ; re- ligious condition, 402; theo- logical institutions, 403 ; Methi- odist academies, 408.


- question, the; Naville, Iviii, 1876. 538.


Egyptian chronology, (JAS. STRONG, ) lx, 1878, 197,462; a difficult prob- lem, 197; monumental records and their use, 198; historical documents and their value, 202 ; disagreements and their proba- ble canses, 208; Manetho's numbers not trustworthy, 218; probable reconstruction, 462 ; the " Hycsos " and the Israel- ites, 471 ; synchronisms, 478. Eleatic school of philosophy, xxxV, 1853. 335.




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