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 18
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Knowledge, book of useful ; Cooley, xxviii, 1846. 155.
- human, ground of. (See Ground of human.)
- Pursuit of, under difficulties, xiv, 1832. 150.
Language and alphabetical char- acters, origin of, xv, 1833. 212.
-- A comparative grammar of the Anglo-Saxon ; T. March, lii, 1870. 630.
- Dictionary of the English ; Web- ster, xlvii, 1865. 160.
- Elements of the Hebrew ; Jones, lii, 1870. 482.
Language, the English, xxvi, 1844, 543 ; its beauty and power to be considered, 543; euphonisms are resorted to, 544; beautified translation of the Lord's prayer, 544; passion for high-sound- ing epithets, 547; the pulpit not entirely free from it, 548 ; comparison of the English with others, 553; perfection is not claimed, 554.
- The English ; Latham, xxxi, 1849. 140.
- The English; Fowler, xxxiii, 1851, 171 ; xxxviii, 1856. 311.
- The growth of, (D. H. WHEEL- ER,) li, 1869, 228; Müller, Marsh, and Whitney ranked to- gether, 228; meaning and im- port of growth in language, 230 ; linguistics not to be classed among physical sciences, 233; language is an "institution, 234; unconsciousness of lin- guistic growth, 236; language not to be studied independent of history, 239.
- and history, (DAVID H. WHEEL- ER,) lix, 1877, 5; language gives us sure chronological data, 7; popular speech of primeval nations utterly lost, 11; conditions of linguistic growth uncertain, 16 : language an unsatisfactory test of devel- opment, 22.
- Lectures on ; Müller, xliv, 1862, 528; 1, 18GS. 5.
- Lectures on the English ; Marsh, xliv, 1862, 180 ; li, 1869. 228.
- Lectures on the science of ; Mül- ler, xlvii, 1865. 473.
- Life and growth of; Whitney, Iviii, 1876. 566.
- Modes of teaching, xxviii, 1846. 93.
The natural revolutions of, xxxix, 1857, 576; increasing simplicity of, 578 ; the Sanskrit, 580 ; the Greek, 582 ; the Latin, 587; two hypotheses refuted, 591.
- Origin and growth of the En- glish ; Marsh, xlv, 1803. 168.
-
151
LANGUAGE
Language, origin and progress of, xxxi, 1849. 341.
- Outlines of the elements of the English ; Clarke, xlvi, 1864. 178. - Philosophical study of, xxxi, 1849. 250, 471, 620.
- The philosophy of ; Von Schlegel, 1, 1868. 5.
- Phonetic diversities of, xxxi, 1849. 260.
- The Sanskrit, (A. B. HYDE, ) xlix, 1867, 353 ; recent discoveries in India, 353: development of comparative philology, 354; character of the Sanskrit, 355 ; literature of the Sanskrit, the Veda, 356 ; period of the Sutras, 360; Buddha, the history of, 361; oral preservation of the Vedas, 365; probable contact of the Hindu and Jewish mind, 366; study of the Sanskrit in this country, 367.
-- Science of ; Sayce, Ixiii, 1881. 387. - and the study of languages ; Whitney, 1, 1868, 483 ; li, 1869. 228.
- and style, progressive principles of, xxxi, 1849, 87.
Languages, the Hebrew and Greek, affinity of, (JAMES STRONG,) xlvii, 1865, 430; identity of roots, 431 ; monosyllabic roots, 439 ; primitive tenses, 440; verb inflections, 441; decleusional endings, 442; vowel changes, 442.
Latin dictionary ; Harper's, (J. W. MARSHALL,) Ixii, 1880, 533 ; ori- gin of the term dictionary, 534 ; early history of lexicography, 536; history of Latin diction- aries, 541; comparative value of leading modern Latin dic- tionaries, 550.
- lexicography, (J. W. LINDSEY,) xxxiv, 1852, 38; Balbus's Ca- tholicon was the first, 1460, 38; Calepin prepared an improved Latin dictionary, 1502, 38 ; Thesaurus Latinæ lingua, 39; qualifications necessary to pro- duce a lexicon, 40; Freund's worterbuch, 40; object of the
LIBERTY
lexicographer, 41 ; principles to be observed in lexicography, 42: Freund's method, 43; Freund's Latin authors, 46; prevalence of concrete forms in Latin, 47.
Latin lexicography, (S. D. HILLMAN.) xli, 1859, 341; lexical studies among the Greeks, 342; lexi- cography among the Romans, 342; Origines sive etymologiæ, of great value, 344 ; in the Mid- dle Ages, Balbus, 345 ; Thesau- rus eruditionis scholasticæ of Faber, 347; Latin lexicogra- phy in England, 349 ; of Amer- ican works, 350; two systems have been in use, 353; the lin- guistic elements, 354; exeget- ical element, 356; statistic ele- ment, 357 ; Crooks and Schem- Andrews, 358.
- words, analysis and formation of ; Smally, lxii, 1880. 204.
Law, the science of ; Amos, lvii, 1875. 163.
Laws of discursive thought ; M'Cosh, lii, 1870. 467.
Leben, der werth des ; E. Dühring, Ix, 1878. 386.
Lee, Bishop, mentally heard by his son, Ixiii, 1881. 749.
Leibnitz, plausible fallacy of his peculiar doctrines, xxxiv, 1852. 13.
Lessons from nature as manifested in mind and matter; Mivart, lix, 1877. 183.
Letters, arts, and sciences, national institute of, 1, 1868. 636.
Levana, the doctrine of education ; Richter, xxxi, 1849. 145.
Liberal principles, progress of, xv, 1833. 439.
- principles, progress of, (WARD BULLARD,) xxxiii, 1851, 446; little recognized before Christ's time, 448: cannot prevail ex- cept in a virtuous community, 456; war opposed to liberty, 456.
Liberty, principles of, not derived from Greece and Rome, xxxiii, 1851. 635.
LIFE
152
MALTHUSIANISM
Life, hints for a comprehensive | Logic, lectures on; Hamilton, (GEO. theory of; T. S. Coleridge, xxxi, 1849. 146.
- The mystery of; Beale, liv, 1872. 5, 159, 414.
- The science of ; Wythe, Ixii, 1880. 781.
- Theories of ; Beale, (J. H. WYTHE,) Ivi, 1874, 297; their influence on religious thought, 207; gen- eral harmony of theories, 297; materialistic theories, 298; Beale's vital theory, 304.
Light, origin, and propagation of, according to Moses, i, 1818. 145.
Literary items, xl, 1858. 172, 340, 508.
- men, health and longevity of scientific and. (See Health.)
Literature, American; Cleveland, xl, 1858. 664.
- American, compendium of; xli, 1859. 676.
- Ancient, manual of ; Quakenbos, Ixi, 1879. 189.
- classical, compendium of ; Cleve- land, xliii, 1861. 531.
- English, history of; Craik, xlvi, 1864. 352.
- Childhood, (W. H. BARNES, ) xxxix, 1857, 381; demand for it, 384; the time for learning, 385; imagination in, allowed, 387; engravings for childhood, 392.
- Letters on French, xxxviii, 1856. 145, 298.
- Modern, xxxix, 1857. 383.
Logic; Mill, xxviii, 1846. 333.
- Deductive and inductive; Bain, Ivi, 1874. 519.
- Elements of; Tappan, (PROFESS- OR HACKLEY, ) xxvii, 1845. 280.
- Elements of; True, xliii, 1861. 350.
- for high-schools; Schuyler, lii, 1870. 467.
- history of; Blakey, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxviii, 1856, 505; is it a science or is it an art? 511; relation of Socrates to logic, 521; logic of Aristotle, 527.
M. STEELE,) xliii, 1861, 533; new interest on the subject, 533; topics of Hamilton's lect- ures, 534; is logic a science or an art? 535; Hamilton' defini- tion, 536; utility of logic, 537; divisions of logic, 538; axioms and postulates, 541; pure logic a science of quantity, 544; ground of the divisions of syl- logisms, 547; Hamilton's views of inductive reasoning, 550; figure of syllogism, 551; mod- ified logic, 553; what is truth ? 554; various sources of error, 555; proper method of reading, 556.
- The science of; Scott, Ixii, 1880. 596.
- A system of, rationative and in- ductive; Mill, Ivii, 1875. 165. - and the utility of mathematics; Davies, xxxiii, 1851. 218.
Logik, geschichte der, in Aben- lande, xliv, 1862. 333.
- Unfangsgrunde der; Warren, xlv, 1863. 149.
Longevity, health and, of scientific and literary men. (See Health.) Lotze, Herman, (W. L. GOODING,) lxiii, 1881, 312; German thought, 312; Lotze's birth, 313; works, 313; professor of philosophy at Göttingen, 313; a teleologist, 314; immanent action, 316; his philosophy, 317; hyloistic doctrines, 321; atomic theory, 322; thoughts of God, 323.
Lucretius, (PROF. HARRINGTON, ) Iviii, 1876, 64; outline of his philosophy, 66; theory essen- tially one of development. 69; compared with modern philos- ophers, 70; theory of mind and soul, 74; literary merit, 78. Lumiere, la, les causes et ses effects ; Becquerel, liii, 1871. 98.
Maine. (See under Biographical.) Malthusianism, Darwinism, and Pessimismn; Bowen, Ixii, 1880. 16.
153
MAMMOTH
Mammoth, epoch of, and apparition of man; Southall, 1x, 1878. 563.
Man, active and moral powers of ; Dugald Stewart, xxxiii, 1851. 665.
-- The antiquity of, (S. D. HILL- MAN,) xlvi, 1864, 41; fossil hu- man remains, 41; Danish peat and shell mounds, 42; Swiss lake dwellings, 43; alluvial plains of the Nile, 46; valley of the Somme, 48; cave evidence, 53; the pre-Adamite man, 55.
- antiquity of, Sir Charles Lyell on the, (THOMAS HURLBURT, ) xlvii,
. 1865, 559; the peat bogs of Denmark, 560; the Nile pottery, 562; the New Orleans skeleton, 565; the Natchez skeleton, 567; river chronometry, 573.
-- Antiquity of, Iviii, 1876. 534.
- Antiquity of, evidence of the; Lyell, xlvi, 1864. 41, 169.
-- Antiquity of evidences of the. (See Geological Evidences.)
-- and apes; Mivart, Iviii, 1876. 750.
- The black; Bird, lii, 1870. 151.
- The constitution of; Finley, lii, 1870. 159.
- The descent of; Darwin, liii, 1871. 348.
- a development from brute, lvi, 1874. 134.
- Early traces of; De Mortillett, Ixii, 1880. 200.
- Essay on; Pope, 1, 1868. 149. - and his motives; Dr. G. Moore, xxx, 1848. 639.
.- Natural history of; Pritchard, xxxiii, 1851. 346, 348.
- The recent origin of; Southall, Ivii, 1875. 513.
- The tripartite nature of; Heard, lii, 1870. 306.
- Vestiges of spirit history of ; Dunlap, xli, 1859. 104.
Man's place in time, (JAMES C. SOUTHALL, ) Ixiii, 1881, 205; M. Boucher de Perthes and Dan- ish archeologists, 205: M. Desnoyer's reports, 206; Pro- fessor James Geikie's "great
MATTER
ice age," 207; Dawkins and Winchell, 208; antiquity of rel- ics found, 211; Professor Daw- kins's argument, 211; Win- chell's conceit about the lost continent, 217; change of color, 223; change of form, 224: Pro- fessor Whitney's conclusions, 226; man the same in the earli- est ages, 227; Mr. Bancroft's testimony, 229; Alfred Russel Wallace's position, 231.
Man's descent from the monkey, on; Hanne, Ixi, 1879. 758. Mankind, physical history of; Prit- chard, xx, 1838. 471.
Material phenomena, (JOSEPH CUM- MINGS.) xxxiii, 1851, 9; our ig- norance of the nature of matter, 9; most philosophers ignore God, 13; divine agency in the phenomena, 15; they must be referred to an intelligent agent, 18; divine agency partially ad- initted by Agassiz, 22.
Materialism and spiritualism ; Leb- lais, xlvii, 1865. 599.
Materialistic school, reply to the authors of the; Janet, xlvii, 1865. 128.
Mathematics analyzed and defined, xxxiv, 1852. 193.
- as an educational instrument, (A. SCHUYLER,) lii, 1870, 65; preliminary view, 65; mathe- matics defined and classified, 66; the mathematical field broad, 71; utility of its prac- tical application, 72; objections to its study answered, 74.
- Use of, in education, xxxiii, 1851. 218, 222.
Matter, an inquiry into the nature of. (J. W. ARMSTRONG,) Iv, 1873. 640; repellent force under pressure, 641; attractive force of, 642; ever seeking equilib- rium, 643; experiments in liq- uid, 644; immaterial nature of, 646; additional facts concern- ing, 647; propositions concern- ing, universally accepted, 650. - and miud, impossible to prove existence of, xxxiii, 1851. 195.
MECHANISM
154
Mechanism in thought and morals; Holmes, liii, 1871. 344.
Meditation the function of thought, liii, 1871. 689.
Memory, the faculty of, i, 1818. 227.
Mensuration; Haswell, xli, 1859. 172.
Mental disease, responsibility ; Maudsley, Ivii, 1875. 164.
- improvement, philosophy of, self-education, xxx, 1848. 474. - phenomena, singular, lxiii, 1881. 748, 749.
- philosophy; T. C. Upham, lii, 1870. 472.
- philosophy; Haven, xli, 1859, 240; xlii, 1860. 175.
- science; Moses Smith, xxxvii, 1855. 476.
- science; Bain, li, 1869. 149.
- unsoundness; Wheaton, xxxvii, 1855. 630.
Mesmerism, xxxviii, 1856. 148.
Metaphysics, error of modern sys- tems of, xxxiii, 1851. 215.
- Lectures on; Hamilton, xli, 1839. 488.
- of science, the; Winchell, Ixii, 1880. 357.
- of Watson's institutes. (See In- stitutes.)
Microphone, the; Du Moncel, Ixii, 1880. 203.
Microscope, evenings with the; Gosse, xlii, 1860. 339.
Mind and body; Bain, Iviii, 1876. 744.
- Institutions of the, inductively investigated ; M'Cosh, liv, 1872. 165.
- in the lower animals; Lindsay, Ixii, 1880. 731.
- and matter distinct, i, 1818. 378. - moves matter only by matter, lv, 1873. 632.
- Psychology and pathology of ; Maudsley, xlix, 1867, 624; 1, 1868. 185.
-- On the power of the, over nature, (B. F. COCKER, ) lii. 1870, 29, 221; power of man modifying the geography of the globe, 36; influence of the mind ou the
MORAL
physiognomy of the earth, 40; influence of mind on the pliy- sique of man, 42 ; power of mind over the mechanical forces of nature, 221; the influence man has over the vegetable life of the globe, 224; influence of man on development and hab- its of animals, 226.
Mind, practical views of, xxvi, 1844. 243.
Mississippi river, physics and hy- draulics of; Humphrey and Ab- bott, li, 1869. 94.
Mittheilungen über das unterrichts- werer Englands und Scotlands ; Voigte, xlix, 1867. 611.
Modern philosophy, from Descartes, Schopenhauer; Browne, Ix, 1878. 558.
Moral philosophy; Winslow, xxxviii, 1856. 494.
- philosophy ; Sidney Smith, xxxii, 1850. 656.
- philosophy; Sawyer, xxviii, 1846. 332.
- philosophy of the institutes of theology, by R. Watson, (B. F. COCKER,) xlvi, 1864, 5, 181; the two schools of philosophy, 5; philosophy and theology, 8; source of the idea of right and wrong, 10; not all derived from revelation, 12; ground of inter- nal evidence of the divinity of the Scriptures, 13; moral dis- tinctions intuitively apprehend- ed, 15; proven from universal consciousness, 17; Watson as- serts the contrary, 20; errors in his argument, 24; moral stand- ards not fluctuating, 26; defini- tion of moral agent, 182; the nature and authority of con- science, 183; influence of cult- ure, 187; fundamental ideas of reason, 188; specific relations we sustain to moral beings, 190; practical ethics, 190; conclu- sion, 198. (See also Institutes.)
- philosophy ; Joseph Haven, xlviii, 1866. 631.
- science; L. P. Hickok, xxxix, 1857. 143.
៛
155
MORAL
Moral science; Hopkins, xlv, 1863. 179.
- science, elements of ; Wayland, xlviii, 1866. 164, 324, 631.
- science, history of; Blakey, Ixi, 1879. 5.
Moralia; Plutsrch, (W. S. TYLER,) xxxiii, 1851, 457; character of his writings, 457; his morals, 458; tranquillity of mind, 465; love of riches,. 469; virtue and vice, 470; moral virtue, 471; progress in virtue, 473; vice produces misery, 474; when self-praise is offensive, 474; against the doctrines of Epi- curus, 477 ; against the stoics, 478.
Morality, elements of; Whewell, xxviii, 1846. 151.
- Essay on principles of ; Dymond, xviii, 1836. 219.
Morals, catechism of Christian, xxviii, 1846. 332.
Mountains, formation of, after the flood, vi, 1823. 455.
Mystery, philosophy of, xxviii, 1846. 152.
Mysticism, xlii, 1860, 78; Louis Claude de Saint Martin, 80; influence of Boehm's writings, 82; controversy with Garat, 84; writings of Saint Martin, 87; his doctrines on cosmology, 89; his doctrines on government, 90.
- (JAMES E. LATIMER,) 1x, 1878, 412; the spiritual world a real- ity, 413; objective point of mysticism, 414; value of the study of mysticism, 416; mysti- cism of great practical interest, 421; mystic revival needed, 425.
Mystics of the fourteenth century, essay on the; Neander, xxxV, 1853. 105.
- Hours with the, (J. F. HURST.) xlii, 1860, 277; mysticism de- fined, 281; mysticism in connec- tion with paganism, 282; in connection with Christianity, 285; St. Bernard, 286; Eckart and Tauler, 288; Jacob Boelmi,
NEBULAR
Rosecrusians, 291; Madame Guyon, 293; George Fox, 204. Mystichen erscheinung die, der menschlichen natur, xliv, 1862. 330.
Mythology; Dwight, xxxi, 1849. 148.
Natural selection, contributions to the theory of; Wallace, lii, 1870. 620.
- science, an address on, (W. II. ALLEN,) xx, 1838. 429.
- theology, (H. M. HARMAN,) xlv, 1863, 181; infidel theory of development, 183; origin of plants, 184 ; spontaneous gener- ation, 185; development into beings of a higher order, 187; perfection of the earlier species, 189; Darwin's "natural selec- tion," 190; proofs of change, 193; Darwin at variance with geologists, 195 ; the human race of recent origin, 196 ; man de- rived from the ape specie, 199; evidence of design in nature, 202.
Naturalismus, system und geschich- te des; Lowenthal, xlvii, 1865. 29.
Nature, evidence of design in, Ivii, 1875. 665.
- and life; Pappillian, Iviii, 1876. 374.
- Manifestations of design in, xxxiii, 1851. 112.
Neander's Christian ethics; Erd- mann, xlvii, 1865. 136.
Nebula and clusters of stars, xxxiii, 1851. 61.
Nebular hypothesis and modern Genesis, (S. PARSONS, ) lix, 1877, 127; origin of the nebular hy- pothesis, 129; the cometary system, 130; satellites and " Kirkwood's analogies," 136: the spectræ of the nebula, 137; hypothetical nebula in its rela- tion to molecular science, 141 ; origin of rotary motion, 143; ring formations and equilibri- um of revolving spheriods, 145; actual velocities, 147; relation
NEBULAR
156
ORIGIN
Nebular-continued.
of orbital and rotary motion, 149; directions and perturba- tions of planetary motions, 151; stable equilibrium of the solar system, 154.
Neolithic implements found in gravel beds in California, Ixii, 1880. 745.
Nerves, hygiene of the brain, and the cure of nervousness; Hol- brook, Ixi, 1879. 198.
Nervous system, functions of the; Smith, xxiii, 1841. 164.
Neue darstellung des sensualismus ; Czołbe, xlvii, 1865. 29.
Nibelungen lied, the, (ANDREW TEN BROOK,) xlvi, 1864, 619; com- pared with the Iliad, 619; deri- vation of its materials, 622; origin of its present form, 624; story of the epic, 625; illus- trated by frescoes at Munich, 633; continued comparison with the Homeric poems, 636; influ- ence of Christianity, 638.
North Americans of antiquity; Ixii, 1880. 186.
Notices preliminaires; Dupont, li, 1869. 94.
Object teaching in primary educa- tion, (VIRGINIA C. PHOEBUS,) xlv, 1863, 646; the principle involved, 647; the acquisition of words, 648; the ideas of form, 651; the idea of number, 650; the ideas of geography, 652; reading, 654.
Observing faculties, the; Burton, xlvii, 1865. 323.
Organic life, on the dynamic princi- ples and philosophy of; M'Elroy, li, 1869. 704.
- unity in animals and vegetables, (CHARLES MARTINS, ) xlv, 1863, 29; different kinds of anatomy, 30; law of symmetry in ammals and vegetables, 31 ; transforma- tion of organs, 35; constancy of connection, 39; the balance of organs, 42; Goethe's metamor- phosis of plants, 45; De Can- dolle on symmetry, 47; con-
struction of the animal and vegetable type, 51.
Organization, epitome of human, xxii, 1840. 373.
Origin and destiny of man, the; Thomas, lix, 1877. 743.
- of man, recent, (EDMUND AN- DREWS,) Iviii, 1876, 581; meg- alithic monuments and tumuli, *, 583; the lake dwellings. 586; the Kjökken Möddings or shell heaps, 590; the bone caves, 592; solutre, 600; gravel and peat in the valley of the Somme. France, 601; the fluvial period, 610.
- of man, recent, (EDMUND AN- DREWS, ) lix, 1877, 29; the mam- moth, 29; recent changes in physical geography, 32; rela- tion of stone, bronze, and iron, 36; ruins of Troy. 39; peat mosses, 41; mud of the Missis- sippi, 43; mud of the Nile, 45; the cones of the Tinière, 46; recent date of the glacial age, 48; age of the lower beach, 49; antiquity of man in Amer- ica, 51; mound builders, 52; skull from California, 54.
- of man, recent, the; Southall, Ivii, 1875, 513; lviii, 1876, 581, 715; lix, 1877. 29.
-- of man, " Westminster Review," on the recent. (JAMES E. SOUTH- ALL,) lix, 1877, 225; probable reason for early disuse of met- als, 231; theory of three ages practically a delusion, 233; ex- tinct animals, 245; changes in physical geography, 249.
- of man, recent. (See Westmin- ster.)
- of species; Darwin, xlii, 1860. 335.
- of species; Darwin, (W. C. WILSON.) xliii, 1861, 605; the author's antecedents, 605: in- . terest excited by the work, 60; various definitions of species, 608; Agassiz's categories of re- lationship, 610; Darwin's theo. ry, 611; an old, an oft-repeated doctrine, 613; Darwin's princi-
ORIGIN
157
PHILOSOPHY
Origin-continued.
ple of natural selection, 617 ; ar- gument adduced in its support, 620; geological objections, 625. - of species. (See also Evolution.) Orthoepy, Roman; Richardson, xli, 1859. 674.
Orthography, analytic; Zachos, xli, 1859. 673.
- International convention to
amend English, lix, 1877. 375. Oxford University a relic of the past, (P. SCHAFF,) xxxviii, 1856, 270: the birthplace of Puseyism, 270; list of its col- leges, 273; the college build- ings, 274; the students, 275; government and instruction, 276; recent reforms in, 278.
Paleolithic period, the, lv, 1873, 140; topography of, 141; im- plements of, 141.
Paleoliths, indoctrination of work- men concerning, lv, 1873, 486; illimitable quantity of, 486; no improvement in the manufact- ure of, 487.
Paleontology, researches in; Bar- rande, Ixiii, 1881. 160.
Personality, the idea of, absolute; Hanne, xlviii, 1866. 146.
Perception, mental, Ixiii, 1881, 749. Pessimism, Hartmann's; Dorner, Ixiii, 1881. 165
Phædon; Plato, (D. fIOLMES, JR.,) xxviii, 1846, 554; dialogue on the immortality of the soul, 554; Aristotle is in contrast with Socrates, 555; Plato's style is captivating, 557; arguments not satisfactory, 557; the argu- ments, 558; man was made to know the truth, 559; all things produced by contraries, 559; argument from remembrance, 561; argument from reason and revelation, 563; testimony of the Holy Scriptures, 571. Pherumènes, les, physique la vie; Gavarret. liv. 1872. 5, 414.
Philological proof of the original unity of the human race; Johnes, xxxiii, 1851. 346, 348.
Philology, antiquarian, xxxviii, 1856. 78.
- Comparative, not a science, xxxi, 1849. 621.
- The early errors and recent prog- ress of, Ixiii, 1881, 670; history of the discarded philology, 671; what is the science of comparative philology? 671.
- Modern; Dwight, xlvii, 1865, 159; 1, 1868. 5.
-- Outlines of comparative ; Debere, xxxvi, 1854. 154.
Philosopher, Dick's Christian, xvii, 1835. 138.
- Every day, in town and country, xlvi, 1864. 179.
- and Italian, anecdote of, ii, 1819. 300.
Philosophical 4 science, encyclo- pædia of; Ritter, xlv, 1863. 337.
- classics; Berkeley, Ivi, 1874. 692.
- works of Upham, xviii, 1836, 287; xxiii, 1841. 161.
Philosophie, Baader's grundjuge der societäts; Hoffmann, xlix, 1867. 611.
- Fichte's; Loewe, xliv, 1962. 502.
- Die, au geschichte; Rochwell, Ixi, 1879. 193.
- Positive; Pelarin, xlix, 1867. 111.
Philosophische dogmatik; Weisse, xlv, 1863. 149.
Philosophy, ancient, lectures on the history of; Butler, Ixi, 1879. 591.
- Jacobi, xxxiii, 1851. 192, 194.
- Kant, xxxiii, 1851. 194.
- Stuart, xxxiii, 1851. 324.
- as absolute science; Frothing- ham, xlvii, 1865. 162.
- of Saint Augustine; Naurisson, xlvii, 1865. 451.
- of Bacon, xxix, 1847. 22.
- Biographical history of; Lewes, xli, 1859, 513; xlviii, 1866. 485. - British, recent; Mason, xlviii, 1866, 636; xlix, 1867. 138.
-- of Christian morals, (S. COM- FORT,) xxvii, 1845, 220; sketch of the life of the author of the book reviewed, 220; three
PHILOSOPHY
158
PHILOSOPHY
Philosophy-continued.
classes of writers on moral phi- losophy, 221; Mr. Spaulding's theory, 223; two grand ques- tions in moral philosophy, 228; virtue is a state of mind, 220; effect of the fall on the consti- tution of man, 230; all morality resolved into religion, 232.
- Comprehensiveness of Aristotle's, XXXV, 1853. 509.
- Elements of natural; Gale, xx, 1838. 239.
-- Elements of natural; W. H. C. Bartlett, xxxiii, 1851. 319.
- Elements of natural; Loomis, xli, 1859. 167.
- An epitomized history of, xxiv, 1842. 324,
-- Eclectic moral, xxix, 1847. 323.
- Familiar lectures on natural; Mrs. Phelps, xx, 1838. 240.
- and faith, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxiii, 1851, 185; struggle of philoso- phy with faith, 186; develop- ment of, 188; definition of, - 189; speculative wants a valid foundation, 192; necessity of postulates in, 196, 200, 206; errors of modern systems of philosophy, 215; a natural de- velopment of the mind, 216.
- of faith ; Cobb, xxxvi, 1854. 321. - The final; Shields, Ix, 1878. 185. - The first principles of; Renwick, XXV, 1843. 163.
- Sir William Hamilton's, (O. S. MUNSELL,) xliii, 1861, 447; is our knowledge limited to the finite? 448; four prominent the- ories, 448; Sir William Hamil- ton's theory, 448; new theory of causation, 450; radical errors of Hamilton's system, 450; (1) peculiar definition of the ab- solute and infinite, 450; (2) iden- tification of formal limitation, 454; (3) identification of cogni- tion and conception, 455; rela- tion of his theories to revela- tion, 461; distinction between reason and faith, 462; Hamil- ton's practice and theory incon- sistent, 465.
Philosophy, outlines of Sir William Hamilton's; Murray, liii, 1871. 172.
- History of; Henry, xxiv, 1842. 378.
- History of; Morell, xxxiii, 1851. 185.
- History of; Lewes, x1, 1858. 153.
-- History of; Ueberweg, liv, 1872. 164.
- History of; Bridel, Ixiii, 1881. 763.
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