Index to the Methodist quarterly review, including the Methodist magazine, and the Methodist magazine and quarterly review, 1818-1881, Part 17

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 17


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Elements, the, ii, 1819. 292, 331. Emotions, the, and the will ; Bain, 1, 1868. 185.


- The ; M'Cosh, Ixii, 1880. 388. English grammar ; Whitney, Iviii, 1876. 764.


- language, the ; Fowler, x1, 1858. 335.


- language, the, (J. M. LINDSAY, ) xliii, 1861, 254 ; rise of English literature, 255; Alfred's labors to promote learning, 256 ; effect of the Norman conquest, 257; transition from Anglo-Saxon to English, 258; effects of the study of classic literature, 259 ; influence of the present version of the Bible, 261; preponder- ance of Saxon words, 263; the Latin and Greek elements in our language, 264.


- language, the, Ixi, 1879. 559.


English language, lectures on the ; Marsh, xlii, 1860. 352.


- language, origin, progress, and destiny of; Weisse, lxi, 1879. 396.


- literature, hand-book of; Under- wood, liii, 1871. 532.


- literature, masterpieces of; Swinton, Ixii, 1880. 604.


- orthography, international con- vention to amend, lix, 1877. 375.


- Our spoken, (D. H. WHEELER.) lii, 1870, 526 ; our Americanism not a dialect, 526 ; loss and re- newal of sounds of language, 530 ; deficiency of our written notation, 531; dialectic abbrevi- ations, 535; independence of theory, 540.


- thought in the eighteenth cent- ury, (PROF. WINCHESTER, ) Ixiii, 1881, 246 ; growing sympathy with its temper and methods, 247; tendency to exalt the log- ical reason, 247; superficiality in thought, 248; practical rather than speculative, 250; critical and distinctive rather that constructive, 251; illus- trated, 251; by Locke, Berke- ley, and Hume in philosophy, 255; by Bentley, Clarke, War- burton, Butler, et al., in tlieol- ogy, 257 ; in ethical discussions - and, 261; in polite literature, 265 : tendencies to reaction at the close of the century, 268.


-- tongue, remarks on the ; Adam Clarke, viii, 1825. 191.


- university life and university re- form, (PHILIP SCHAFF,) xxxviii, 1856, 270 ; character of English universities, 272; antiquity of English universities. 272; uni- versity life, 274; Oxford Uni- versity reform bill, 278.


Eschatology ; Oswald, 1, 1868. 602. Essays ; Abercrombie, xxviii, 1846. 392.


- de philosophie et d'histoire relig- euse ; Nicholas, xlv, 1863. 503. - Political ; Goodwin, xxxix, 1837. 152.


-


143


ESSAYS


Essays and reviews; F. Hodgson, xxxix, 1857. 311.


- and reviews ; Whipple, 1, 1868. 5. -- sketches and letters; Thomson, xxxix, 1857, 219; philosophy and logic, 222; poetical taste, 224 ; style of, 229.


Ethics, Neander's Christian ; Erd- mann, xlvii, 1865. 136.


- of Latin comedy, the, (PROFESSOR HARRINGTON,) lii, 1870, 562; comedy a fine setting for ethics, 563; prevailing notion of the age, 564; a supreme being rec- ognized, 564; correctness of the moral sentiment of Romans, 568; broad gulf between theo- retical and practical virtue, 570. - Natural ; Savage, Ixiii, 1881. 745. - The new, (J. P. LACROIX, ) Ix, 1878, 631 ; based on Arminian principles, 632 ; relation of body and soul, 633; human freedom, 634 ; the fall of man, 644; nat- ure of moral law in man, 645 ; the moral motive, 646.


- Platonic. (See Wüttke.)


- of sincerity. (See Sincerity.)


Ethnology, latest results of, (trans- lated from the German, ) xxxii, 1850, 531; races of men and their ramifications, 531 ; pliys- ical and linguistic distinctions, 531 ; Blumenbach the first scien- tific ethnologist, 533: Cauca- sian race, 537; Indo-Germanic stock, 538 : Indian branch of it, 538; the Persian branch, 539 ; the Greco-Latin branch, 540 ; the Celtic or Gallic branch, 541 ; the Germanic branch, 543; the Lithau-Sclavonic branch, 549; the American stock, 553; the Iberian stock, 553 ; the Illyrian stock, 554 ; the Thracian stock, 554; the Etruscan stock, 555; the Semitic stock, 555 ; the Fin- nish stock, 557; the Caucasian group, 562; the North African stock, 563 ; the Mongolian race, 564; Mongolian stock, 565 ; the Chinese stock, 566; the Tungu- sian stock, 566; the Siberian stock, 567; Siberian-American,


EVOLUTION


568; Indo-Chinese, 568; the Negro race, 568 ; the American race, 569 ; the Malay race, 570. Etudes de politique et de philoso- phie religieuse; Guerrault, xlv, 1863. 503.


Etymology, dictionary of English ; Wedgewood, xliv, 1962. 694.


- The science of, x1, 1858. 478.


Europe, art, scenery, and philoso- phy in; Wallace, xxxvii, 1855. 322.


- Early man in; Rau, lviii, 1876. 553.


- History of civilization in ; Guizot, xx, 1838. 475.


- Intellectual development of ; J. W. Draper, xlviii, 1866, 48; Iviii, 1876. 579.


--- Liberalism in, (GEORGE F. COM- FORT,) xlviii, 1866, 256; diffi- culties in writing contempora- neous history, 256; progress of thought in Turkey, 258; Walla- chia, Russia, 259; Spain, Greece, 260 ; Switzerland, Hol- land, 261; Belgium, Scandi- navia, Italy, 262 ; France, 263; Germany, 264; classes of liber- als, their principles and pros- pects, 266; their opposition to Christianity, 270; conservative Christians, 272; England fall- ing behind, 274.


- Methods of instruction in deaf and dumb institutions ; Gallau- det, lii, 1870. 416.


- Two reports on institutions for deaf and dumb in; Day, lii, 1870. 416.


Evidence as to man's place in nat- ure; Huxley, xlv, 1863. 524. Evolution, the doctrine of; Win- chell, Ivi. 1874. 516.


- The ethics of. (BORDEN P. BOWNE,) Ixii, 1880, 430 ; mate- rialism defined, 430 ; Spencer a materialist, 432; relation of neurosis and psychosis, 436 ; mental states produce no phys- ical changes, 439; argument with Spencerians, 442 : specific features of Spencer's ethics, 445 ; defects of his theory, 449.


EVOLUTION


Evolution, direct evidence of, lix, 1877. 289.


-- Fallacies of, Ixi, 1879. 753.


- On the hypothesis of ; Cope, liii, 1871. 162.


- Virchow and; Tyndall, Ixi, 1879. 170.


- (See also Civilization; Cosmic; Creation; Cross fertilization; Development ; Hnxley ; Malthu- sianism; Man; Natural selec- tion ; Origin; Primeval; Prog- ress; Spencer and in Theologic- al ; Darwinism.)


Evolutionary creation, lvi, 1874. 482. Evolutionists, a problem for, lv, 1873. 523.


Faith and philosophy, relations of, xxxiii, 1851. 185.


- and science, Comte's positive philosophy, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxiv, 1852, 9, 169; time since the book was written, 9; Mill indebted to Comte, 11; en- comiums on his work, 12; plausible fallacy of the doc- trine of Leibnitz, 13; difficulty in criticising Comte's works, 13; only a partial review, 14; Comte sprung from a Catholic and royal family, 16; became deranged, 17; labors unappre- ciated, 19; brief time in writ- ing, 20; stricture on the pres- ent age, 21; Fourierism and Owenism, 22; social difficul- ties and disorders, 23; limita- tions of human knowledge, 24; looks to Bacon, 28; science is founded on observation, 29; three classes of human minds, 30; knowledge not reducible to a single form, 32; stages of historical progress, 34; early condition of society, 35; fallacy of distribution into states and periods, 169; Comte's irreligion, 170; his rejection of metaphys- ics, 171; metaphysics is charac- teristic of a crisis, 178; loosely recognizes logic, 180; profess- edly Comte rejects logie, 191; Aristotle, Bacon, Leibnitz,


144


FREEDOM


Kant, Hegel, and Mill, advo- cate logic, 182.


Faith, philosophy and. (See Phi- losophy and Faith.)


Final causes; Janet, Ixi, 1879. 786. Foot-prints of the Creator, the; Hugh Miller, Iviii, 1876. 386. Force; Moore, lix, 1877. 764.


- and matter; Büchner, liii, 1871, 516; liv, 1872. 5, 414.


Forces. (See also Correlation and Conservation.)


- The living; Thompson, xlviii, 1866. 324.


- in matter, lv, 1873. 641.


Forschung nach der materie, die; Huber, 1x, 1878. 386.


Fossil men and their modern ropre- sentatives; Dawson, Ixii, 1880. 748.


Fourierism, (D. W. CLARK,) xxvii, 1845, 545; sketch of Fourier's life, 545; his new theory, 546; he had great perseverance of character, 547; our mental his- tory is a sphynx's riddle, 549; Millerism and Fourierism, 550: " sciences are of a sociable nat- ure," 552; what is association? 554; philosophy of Fourierism, 555; St. Simon, 559; " true so- cial science is universal unity," 561; organic and practical as- pects of Fourierism, 563; the "dream," 573; moral and social aspects of Fourierism, 578; re- ligious aspects, 586.


France, mystical philosophy in; Frank, xlviii, 1866. 467.


Freedmen. (See Education among the freedmen, and under Miscel- laneous. )


Freedom, civil, xxxiii, 1851, 635; its divine origin, 633; influence in developing the higher nature, 637.


- of choice, the, (J. MILEY. ) Ixiii, 1881. 435; choice the rational election of an end, 434; motives stand as conditioning facts of choice, 435; action of impulse upon volition, 435; choice as the stronger motive at the time of chosing, 436; rationality of


-


FREEDOM


145


GERMAN


Freedom-continued.


choice, 437; choice, in its high- er sense, must be rational, 439; rational suspension of choice, 441; power of rational · agency, 442; immediate power of suspending choice, 444; mo- tive, the reason for choice, 447; power over motives, 449; the will as a usable faculty, 453; power over motives the necessary power of rational agency, 455; sufficient motives for required choice, 457; true freedom of choice, 461.


-of moral agents necessary to happiness, the, xxxiii, 1851. 303. - of the will. (See Will.)


French literature, letters on, xxxvii, 1855. 150, 469.


Generalization. Comte's, confuted, x1, 1858. 305.


Generations, spontaneous. Spontaneous.)


(See


Geographical and statistical science, XXXV, 1853. 249; American ge- ographical and statistical so- ciety, 249; science of statistics, 252; the two eyes of history, 254.


- studies; Ritter, xlvi, 1864. 167. Geography, ancient and mediaval; Anthon, xxxii, 1850. 158.


- ancient, manual of; L. Schmitz, xxxix, 1857. 671.


- Course of ancient ; Schmidt, xlii, 1860. 695.


- First book in; Smith, xxxvi, 1854. 464.


- and history, manual of ancient; Pütz, xxxi, 1849. 500.


- Manual of; Emmons, xlii, 1860. 530.


- Physical; Zornlin, xxxix, 1857. 338.


- Physical, of the seas; Maury, xxxvii, 1855. 477.


Geologic man, skeleton of, discov- ered, Iv, 1873. 522. Geological, Ixiii, 1881. 538.


- cosmology, xxv, 1843. 639.


- time, chain of life in; Dawson, Ixiii, 1881. 183. 10


Geological evidencesof the antiquity of man, (J. S. JEWELL, ) li, 1869, 94; Lacustrine habitations, 95; kitchen middens, 99; limestone caverns, 99; deltas, 101; river terraces, 103; the California fossil human skull, 105; conclu- sions, 119.


- record unbroken, Ixiii, 1881. 152.


Geology, xvii, 1835, 152; xix, 1837. 100.


- Alphabet of; Hall, li, 1869. 163. - Manual of ; Dana, xlv, 1863, 350; xlvii, 1865. 318.


- Popular; Hugh Miller, xli, 1859. 494.


-- Reputed early traces of man, xliii, 1861. 155.


- The science of; Randall, xxix, 1847. 633.


-- Stages of the earth's formation, xxxvii, 1855. 366.


- Text-books of; Dana, xlvi, 1864. 347.


- Dana's manual of; (JOHN JOHN- SON,) xlvii, 1865, 378; scientific labors, 379 ; influence of Lyell's "principles," 381; history of the earth in natural order of sequence, 383; division of his subjects, 386; physiographic geology, 387; lithiological geol- ogy, 389; historical geology, 390; American character of this work, 393; the antiquity of man, 397; Christian charac- ter of the work, 398.


- Principles of; Lyell, lii, 1870. 29.


- skepticism in, Ix, 1878. 527.


- The students' elements of ; Lyell, liii, 1871. 700.


- Studies in; Jolin Pye Smith, xxxvii, 1855. 398.


Geometry; Hackley, xxix, 1847. 635.


- Docharty, xxxix, 1857. 338.


German conversation, a manual of; Comfort, Iiii, 1871. 700.


- Easy lessons in; Woodbury, Iviii, 1876. 196.


- New method of learning; Wood- bury, xxxiii, 1831. 168.


146


GERMAN


German principia, the, Ixii, 1880. 204.


- reader; Heydenreich, xl, 1858. 157.


- reader to succeed the German course ; Comfort, liii, 1871. 356.


- universities, xxxviii, 1856, 305 ; German gymnasia, 305; higher


· education in Germany, 305 ; preparation required for the universities, 305; lecture sys- tem, 306 ; mode of instruction, 308.


- gymnasia and English public schools, xxxvii, 1855, 509; German and English schools compared, 509; Cousin on, in Germany, 510; Dr. Weisse on English public schools, 510; moral aim of education in En- gland, 511; practical bias of education, 513 ; classical studies in English schools, 513; mode of pursuing them in Germany, 515; best mode of teaching composition, 517 ; use of math- ematics in education, 519; moral tendency of education in England, 520; history as an instrument in education, 521 ; lying punished severely in En glish schools, 525; practical character of education in En- gland, 527; general results, 528.


- philosophy, materialism; ration- alistic school ; from the French of the Revue des Deux Mondes, xlvii, 1865, 29, 186 ; Hegel, 31; Schopenhauer, 34; Moleschott, 35; Büchner, 37; authors of the spiritualistic school, 38 ; princi- ples of the new materialistic school, 40 ; of matter, 42; time the great creator, 43; antago- nism of the doctrine of final causes, 45; the rationalistic school, 186 ; qualities of matter, 187 ; nature of sound, 188 ; nat- ure of light, 189; force, 191; origin of life, 103 ; spontaneous generation, 194 ; eternal germs, 198; thought a function of the


GRAMMAR


brain, 199 ; brain the condition of thought, 201 ; personal iden- tity, 202; mutability of the or- ganized body, 204; cause of this relapse of materialism, 206. German philosophy, xliii, 1861. 312. Germany, female education in, lv, 1873. 695.


- Education in, lv, 1873. 694.


- Its universities, x1, 1858. 503. Geysers. (See Iceland.)


Globe, remarks on the surface of the, iv, 1821. 299.


"Government," M'Cosh's "divine," (A. T. BLEDSOE, ) xxxiv, 1852, 458; an entire and harmonious scheme, 459; for what the world was created, 460; cause of the creation of man, 461; the greatest-happiness princi- ple, 463; difficulty in moral government, 465; afloat on a dark sea, 467 ; liberty and neces- sity, 468 ; M'Cosh a rigid neces- sitarian, 468; a stanch liber- tarian, 469 ; on both sides, 472 ; his book has merits, 474.


Grammar; Stuart, xxv, 1843. 23.


- Principles of ; Barton, xxxviii, 1856. 311.


- Egyptian ; Tattam, xlv, 1863. 673.


- Works on the English ; Fowler, Ixiii, 1881. 254.


- English, Latin, Greek, princi- ples of, xxv, 1843. 484.


- of the English language ; Hazen, xxiv, 1842. 483.


- English, and the English lan- guage, xxxvi, 1854. 368.


- of the English language, a philo- sophical, xx, 1838. 239.


- English ; Whitney, Iviii, 1876. 764.


- Improved, of the English lan- guage ; Frazee, xxvi, 1844. 639.


- A student's French, 1x, 1978, 764; Ixi, 1879. 198.


- German and English; Woodbury, xxxi, 1849. 342.


- Greek ; Kühner, xxvi, 1844. 627. - of the Greek language; Anthon, xxvii, 1845. 161.


- Greek ; Krüger, xxxi, 1849. 600.


GRAMMAR


147


HEAT


Grammar, Greek, Buttman's; Dr. | Greek ethics, Wüttke on, (translat- Robin-on, xxxiii, 1851. 488.


- Greek , Schirlitz, xlv, 1863. 674. - Greek, for beginners ; Waddell, lii, 1870. 162.


- A compendious Greek ; Crosby, liv, 1872 180.


- Hebrew; Bush, xxi, 1839. 35, 461.


- Hebrew; Nordheimer, xxiii, 1841. 485.


-- Hebrew, introductory ; Davidson, Ivi, 1874. 356, 531.


- Hebrew ; Gesenius, xxix, 1847. 162.


- Hebrew ; Green, xliv, 1862. 176.


- Hebrew ; Professor Ewald, (in German,) xlvi, 1864. 143.


- Hebrew, new ; Gustavus Beckel, lix, 1877. 569.


- Latin ; Harrison, xxiii. 1841. 637.


- Latin, exposition of the laws of; Dr. G. Harrison, xxxiv, 1852. 478.


- Latin ; Zump, xxviii, 1846. 478.


- Latin, elementary ; Fischer, Iviii, 1876. 764.


-- Latin ; Schmitz, xxxi, 1849. 505.


- Latin, elementary ; Schmitz, xxxiv, 1852. 482.


-- Latin ; Harkness, xlvi, 1864, 697; xlvii, 1865. 156.


- A Sanskrit; Whitney, Ixii, 1880. 395.


- Syriac ; Uhlemann, xxxvii, 1855. 626.


- Uhilemann's; Hutchinson, lvii, 1875. 355.


- (See also English.)


Gravity not inherent in matter, xxxiii, 1851. 15.


Greece, education in, and the uni- versity of Otho, (HENRY M. BAIRD,) xliv, 1862, 377; Amer- ican schools in Athens, 379; establishment of the university, 381 ; comparative importance of its departments, 382; number and character of the professors, 383 ; their religions stand-point, 385; the style of instruction in use, 385 ; character of the stu- dents, 388; the library, mu- seum, 389; the preparatory schools, 389.


ed by PROFESSOR LACROIX.) lii, 1870, 573 ; Plato : general prin- ciples, 573; basis and nature of virtue, 574; the four Platonic virtues, 577 ; the Platonic state, 578; the Platonic family, 580; caste, 581; ethical progress, 582; religious defectiveness, 584; Aristotle : general princi- ples, 585; nature and kinds of virtue, 587 ; defectiveness of the Justinian principle, 589; the several virtues, 590 ; solidarity, 592; the state, 593; slavery, 594 ; Greek ethics at its highest, 595.


- and Roman mythology ; Hart, XXXV, 1853. 471.


- literature, classical, history of ; Mahaffy, Ixii, 1880. 604.


- Affinity of the Hebrew and. (See Languages, the Hebrew.)


Ground and method of human knowledge, xxxvi, 1854, 287; book by M. Cournot, 287; author thinks philosophy too much neglected, 287; critical method, 288; knowledge in general, 288 ; errors, 289; rea- son employed ambiguously. 290; order of things in time, 291 ; philosophical probability, 293; induction in its primary form, 295; the outer world, 301; blunders of M. Cournot, 312 ; the sciences, 313.


Habit and intelligence in connec- tion with matter and force, liv, . 1872. 5, 414.


Habitations lacustres des temps an- ciens et moderns; Troyon, li, 1869. 94.


Hamilton, Sir William, discussions and philosophy of, xxxvi, 1854. 148.


Heat as a mode of motions; Trn- dall's, (W. C. WILSON, ) xlvii, 1865, 49; various theories of the nature of heat, 50: origin of the dynamic theory. 52; ex- periments demonstrating doc- trines, 54; quantitive demon-


148


ILLYRIAN


HEAT


Heat-continued.


stration of the equivalent of heat, 57 ; application to physic- al force, 59 ; theory of the radi- ation of heat, 60 ; correlation of sound, heat, light, and chem- ical action, 62 ; gravitation, 63. - considered as a mode of motion ; Tyndall, liv, 1872. 5, 414.


Health and longevity of scientific and literary men, xxvi, 1844, 605 ; they have a mean duration of life, 605 ; Burton's descrip- tion of scholars, 605 : Sir Walter Scott, 606; Lucian's men of eighty to one hundred years of age, 607; arts and sciences favor- able to longevity, 608; average duration of life and order of longevity, 609; longevity in English registration, 610; Dr. Madden's errors, 612 ; influences favorable and unfavorable to longevity, 614; longevity of female authors, 619 ; longevity of medical men, 619; table of expectation of life, 622; Chris- tianity increases longevity, 624. Heavens, the starry, contemplation of, i, 1818. 17.


Hebrew, affinity of the, and the Greek languages. (See Lan- guages, the Hebrew.)


- course, new, easy, and complete ; Bowman, Ixi, 1779. 592.


-- Scriptures, grammatical analysis of selections from, xxi, 1839. 237.


Heredity, a psychological study of its phenomena; Ribot, Iviii, 1876. 373.


- Responsibility in parentage ; Platt, lix, 1877. 580.


Historical position, our, as indicat- ed by nature and philosophy, (PROFESSOR WILSON,) xIviii, 1866, 5; westward course of history and nature, 6; history of the individual and of the race compared, 7; three great original innate ideas, 7; three great epochs in history, the Asiatic, 9; the European or second epoch, 10 ; the American


or third epoch, 13; its physical characteristics, 15 ; its political organization, 15 ; its Christian- ity, 18; the responsibility of our destiny, 19.


History, ætiology of, reviewed, xxxiv, 1852. 136.


- Philosophy of, xxiv, 1842, 42, 383; xxviii, 1846. 152.


Home and social philosophy, xxxiv, 1852. 369.


Hora Anglicana, English languages, observations on, xvi, 1834. 381. Humboldt. (See in Biographical.) Human intellect, the; Porter, li, 1869. 146.


- races, plurality of the; Quater- fages, xlvii, 1865. 124.


- race, unity of the. (See Unity of the Human.)


- rights must be clearly understood to be enjoyed, xxxiii, 1851. 455. - will, the, Edwardian; W. C. Richardson, Ixi, 1879. 557.


- will, philosophy of the, xxiii, 1841. 381.


Humility, the, nobleness of, xvii, 1835. 476.


Huxley and evolution, (A. WIN. CHELL,) lix, 1877, 289 ; objec- tions to preliminary positions of, 292; argument in favor of evolution from material conti- nuity, 296; ulterior questions waived by Huxley, 300.


Hybridity; Morton, xxxiii, 1851. 351.


Iceland, the geysers and boiling springs of, v, 1822. 19.


Idiocy and imbecility, 1x, 1878. 154. Ignorance, philosophy of ; Mansell and Hamilton, xIv, 1863. 153. Illyrian literature, (G. F. COMFORT,) xlv, 1863, 74; origin of the Sclavic race, 75; geographical position, 76; the Cerillian al- phabet, 78; bards and music of the Montenegrins, 80; diffi- culty of collecting their poetry, 81; their emotional character- istics, 82; specimens of their poetry, 83 ; political character- istics, 88; epic poetry, 90.


149


INDUCTION


Induction, on ; Di Vinci, xl, 1858. 185.


- Philosophy of, (C. K. TRUE,) xxxvi, 1854, 431; Cousin's ex- position of, 432 ; Dr. Whewell's view of, considered, 433 ; Mill's view of the subject, 434; Hume's remarks on, 437.


Inductive science; Whewell, xl, 1858. 479.


Inquiries, modern ; Bigelow, 1, 1868. 153.


Insane, retreat for, at Hartford, Conn., annual reports of, 1845 and 1846, lii, 1870. 636.


Instauratio nova, reviewed, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxiv, 1852, 329 ; new schemes of philosophy since 1800, 330; sociology, 332; Comte the second Bacon, 335 ; funda- mental vice of the nineteenth century, 337; dissent from Kant's philosophy, 338; intel- lectual anarchy of the day, 339; origin of theological diffi- culties, 343; error of recent forms of philosophy, 346 ; diffi- culties from neglect of logic, 347; the great problem, 348 ; limitation of Kant's iuquiries, 351; induction, logic of, M. Comte, 352; application of sci- ence and philosophy to prac- tice, 355; Whewell's unac- knowledged indebtedness to Comte, 357.


Institutes, metaphysics of Watson's, (B. F. COCKER,) xliv, 1862, 181; the empirical school of philosophy, 182; the transcen- dental school, 183; Watson a disciple of the empirical school, 184; his metaphysics exclude natural theology, 185; exist- ence of God is purely a truth of revelation, 187 ; the "a poste- riori " argument, 189; the "a priori" argument, 190 ; on his theory we cannot logically


. prove the existence of God, 191; nor the truth of the Bible, 192; hence, natural theism is impos- sible, 194 ; refutation of his ar- guments, 196; there must be al


INTUITIONS


"first cause," 197; belief in God as developed in the human intelligence, 198 ; the science of natural theology recognized by Paul, 207. (See also Moral Phi- losophy.)


Intellectual cultivation, (E. OTHIE-


MAN,) xxii, 1840, 256 ; the pres- ent age favorable for mental culture because of, 256 ; I. The free operation of proper motives shown by, 257; (1) the preva- lence of correct views of science, government, and religion, and, 258; (2) the practical freedom of inquiry and enterprise, 260; II. The occasions which tend to stimulate mental culture, name- ly : 261 ; (1) the state of civil society, 262; (2) the state of arts and sciences, 263; (3) the moral state of the world, 265; III. The means and aid afforded for mental improvement, 269.


- development of Europe, history of; Draper, xlvi, 1864. 164.


- philosophy ; Mahan, xxviii, 1846. 479.


- powers, on the ; Reid, xxxiii, 1851. 394.


Intellectuelle, de la Hante educa- tion ; Dupanloup, xlix, 1867. 111.


Intoxication, arts of, review of Dr. Crane's work, (WILLIAM J. GILL,) liii, 1871, 414; temper- ance literature, its elements of power, 414; physiological and psychological effects of various intoxicants, 416; history, rise, and effects of tobacco, 416; alcoholic poison. 418 ; alcohol an anesthetic, 422.


Intuitionalism ; B. Frankland, xliii, 1861. 674.


Intuitions, the grand primary, ac- cording to Theodore Parker, lv, 1873. 386.


- M'Cosh on the, (JOHN DEMPSTER,) xhii, 1861, 267; intuitions in- ductively considered, 267; Kant's antinomies. 268; proof of an intuitive faculty, 270; . views of Descartes, Leibnitz,


INTUITIONS


150


LANGUAGE


Intuitions-continued.


Reid, 271; Kant and Brown, 272; Cousin and Hamilton, 273; superior accuracy of M'Cosh, 273; distinction be- tween sensation and perception, 274; qualities cognized apart from their substance, 276 ; po- tency of intuitive convictions, 278; the causal judgment, 280; principles on which Dr. M'Cosh proceeds, 282.


- of the mind, inductively investi- gated ; M'Cosh, xlii, 1860, 344 ; xlviii, 1866. 449.


Iuvisible, the science of the; Le- veque, xlvii, 1865. 600.


Journal of nervous and mental dis- eases, the, lviii, 1876. 758. Jurisprudence, topics of ; J. C. Hurd, xxxix, 1857. 149.


Kant and Kantism, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxvii, 1845, 43; reformns at- tempted by Bacon and Des- cartes, 43; their principles in - the hands of Hume, 43; Im- manuel Kant was born 1724, · 44; attended college, took his master's degree, 44; gave spe- cial attention to metaphysics, 44; course in philosophy, 45; love for his native place, 46; his grand postulate, 47 ; Kant's categories, 49; Kant's great merit, 53.




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