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 19
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-- History of scholastic; Kaulich, xlv, 1863. 337.
- of the human will, xxiii, 1841. 381.
- of the infinite ; Calderwood, xliii, 1861. 503.
- Intellectual; Mahan, xxviii, 1846. 479.
- Introduction to the study of ; Gerhart, x1, 1858. 329.
- of life and philosophy of lan- guage; Von Schlegel, xxx, 1848. 161.
- Locke's, xxv, 1843. 609.
- Locke's and Cousin's, communi- cation on; Dr. Beasley, xxiv, 1842. 615.
-- of magic; Thompson, xxix, 1847. 321.
- of mathematics; Comte, xxxiii, 1851. 485.
- Mental; Upham, xviii, 1836, 287; xxiii, 1841. 263.
- of metaphysics and general science, xxxix, 1857. 142. 321.
- Moral; Haven, xlii, 1860. 175.
- Moral and political; W. Paley, xiv, 1832. 479.
- Natural; Jolinston, xxxii, 1850. 334.
- Natural; Quackenboss, xli, 1859. 676.
- Natural; Hooker, xlv, 1863. 531.
- natural, discourse on; Sir W. Herschel, xxxiv, 1852. 352.
- natural, injurious tendency of many works on, xxxiii, 1851. 30.
- A new German treatise on, xxxiii, 1851. 502.
- A new system of; Spencer, xlvi, 1864. 690.
.
PHILOSOPHY
159
PHYSIOLOGY
Philosophy, positive. (See Comte.) [ Physical geography of the seas;
-- Principles of; Bierbower, lii, 1870. 307.
- Proverbial ; Tupper, xxx, 1848. 478.
-- Recent British ; Masson, xlviii, 1866, 630; xlix, 1867. 138.
- of religion; Caird, lxiii, 1881. 162.
- Representation of the Platonic ; Philo, xxxi, 1849. 550.
- Revealed, xxviii, 1846. 414.
- St. Augustine and his; Flottes, xliv, 1862. 682.
- The Scottish, biographical, ex- pository, critical ; M'Cosh, Ivii, 1875. 155.
- speculative, historical view of, xxx, 1848. 478.
- Strictures on Uphamu's mental, (W. M'K. BANGS, ) xviii, 1836. 229.
- Vocabulary of ; Flemming, xliii, 1861. 168, 673.
- (See also Cosmic; Ignorance ; Intellectual ; Mental ; Moral ; Mystery ; Plato; Religion ; Spencer ; Wesley.)
Phonetic wordbook, analytic and ; J. C. Zachos, xli, 1859. 673. Phonograph, the ; Du Moncel, Ixii, 1880. 203.
Phonographic works ; Putnam, xxxviii, 1856. 648.
Photography to astronomy, the ap- plication of, (GEORGE B. MER- RIMAN,) li, 1869, 392; celestial photography originated in America, 393 ; time required to produce celestial photographs, 395 ; results of lunar photogra- phy, 397; value of solar pho- tography, 398; planetary pho -. tographs, 401; mapping the sidereal heavens, 403; superior value of photographic methods, 405; improved celestial photo- graphic instruments, 403.
Phrenology and fact, xxix, 1847. 554.
- Uncle Sam's recommendation of, xxiv, 1842. 474.
Physical geography ; Zornlin, xxxix, 1857. 333.
Maury, xxxvii, 1855. 477.
- science, x1, 1858. 651.
- world, unity of the. (Sec Unity of the physical.)
Physics, first principles of ; Silli- man, xli, 1859. 167.
- New method of, (R. S. RusT.) xxxvi, 1854, 102; conservation in science, 103; style of the work reviewed, 105; battle against Newtonian mathemat- ics, 106; only one force, 107; denies the principle of attrac- tion, 109 ; reverent spirit of the work, 112.
- New theory of, xxxvi, 1854. 102. Physiological journal, xxxix, 1857. 670.
Physiologische briefe ; Giessen, 1856, xlvii, 1865. 29.
Physiology and calisthenics; Miss Beecher, xxxviii, 1856. 493.
- of common life ; Lewes, xlii, 1860. 167.
- Draper's, (GUNNING S. BEDFORD.) xxxix, 1857, 419 ; difference be- tween the philosophy of school- men and exact science, 420; the action of the eye, 422; Roger Bacon, 423; the voice, 426 ; dreams, 427.
- Elements of; Huxley, 1, 1868. 324.
- Human ; Draper, x1, 1858. 140.
-- and hygiene, a treatise on ; Dal- ton, li, 1869. 163.
- Notes upon. xli, 1859. 241.
- The principles of ; Carpenter, Ivi, 1874. 505.
- and psychology, limits between, (J. S. JEWELL,) 1, 1868, 185; tendency to base psychology on physiology, 186 ; external view, how induced, 191; internal
· view, how induced, 193; sensi- bility or sensation, 196 ; service which physiology may render to psychology, 202.
- of the soul and instinct as distin- guished from materialism ; Paine, liv, 1872. 339.
- Vegetable and animal ; Goadby. xl, 1858. 662.
PLANETS
160
REASON
Planets, variety in the physical con- [ Principia. basis of social science ; Wright, Iviii, 1876. 580.
stitution of, xxxiii, 1851. 53. Plants, the forces which produce the organization of, xxvii, 1845. 159.
- The movements of ; Darwin, Ixiii, 1881. 551.
Plato, apology of, and Crito, xlii, 1860. 353.
- Philosophy of; Michelis, xlii, 1860. 318.
Platonic ethics. (See Wüttke.)
Platonism, its influence on early Christianity, xxxi, 1849. 438. Poetry and philosophy, studies in; Shairp, Ixi, 1879. 5.
Political essays; Goodwin, xxxix, 1857. 152.
- economy. logic of; De Quincy, xlii, 1860. 175.
- economy. (See also Economy, political. )
- science ; Woolsey, Ix, 1878. 561. Politics, law, and general morals, xxxix, 1857. 150, 335, 497, 667. Polylingual journal, xxxix, 1857. 670.
Positivism, Christianity and ; M'Cosh, liii, 1871. 503.
Positive philosophy; Comte. (See Faith and science; Comte ; Vestiges of civilization.)
- religion, the, or the religion of humanity, (G. F. HOLMES,) xxxvi, 1854, 329; Comte's re- ligion, 329; discord between two parts of positivism, 333; religion an essential element of society, 337; examination of positive religion, 338; object of positive adoration, 342; M. Comte unfortunate, 345: par- allelism between humanity and God, 349; destination, 354.
Plutarch's moralia. (See Moralia. ) Pre-Adamites; Winchell, Ixii, 1880. 766.
Prehistoric nations ; Baldwin, li, 1869. 469.
Primeval man, a refutation of Dar- winism ; Argyll, lv, 1873. 169, 170.
Principles, first ; Spencer, liv, 1872. 5, 156, 414.
Problem of problems, the, and its various solutions ; Braden, lix, 1877. 563.
Progress, the, from brute to man, Ivi, 1874. 134.
Prolegomena logica ; Mansell, xliii. 1861. 169.
Protoplasm; Beale, liii, 1871, 159 ; liv, 1872. 414.
-- As regards ; Stirling, lii, 1870, 631; liv, 1872. 5, 414.
Psychologie ; Essen, xxxvii, 1855. 162.
Psychology; Munsell, liii, 1871. 520.
- Spencer, liv, 1872. 5, 414.
- Cousin, xxiii, 1841. 336.
- Elements of; Cousin, xxxix, 1857. 142.
- or a new system of mental phi- losophy, xxiv, 1842. 324.
- Schmucker, xxv, 1843. 52.
- or view of the human soul, xxv, 1843. 479.
Public institutions, department of, Chicago, lii, 1870. 324.
- opinion, our relations to, (E. C. WINES, ) xxxvi, 1854, 860; a man known by the company he keeps. 361; form anopinion from principle, 363; must have some- thing external to rest on, 364.
- opinion, origin of revolution in, (E. O. HAVEN, ) xlviii, 1866, 485 ; theory of individual de- velopment as applied to the race, 486 ; influence of the ma- terial elements, 488; the crea- tive element of mind, 490; nu chanical causes, 491 ; supe- riority of mind to matter, 494.
Radical reform, criticism on the phrase of; Hare, Note, xxxviii, 1856. 172.
Rationalism, English movement, xxxix, 1857. 129.
- Forerunners of modern, until Luther; Balan, 1, 1868. 459.
Principia of political science ; R. J. Reason, is God cognizable by? Wright, lix, 1877. 366. (ALEXANDER WINCHELL,) liv,
161
REASON
Reason-continued.
1872, 442; analysis of Dr. Cocker's work, 442 ; the idea of God general, 446 ; a priori den- onstration, arguments poste- riori, 447; arguments from consciousness, 448; atheistic theories - Greek philosophy, 449; argument from common consent, 459 ; direct revelation, immediate intuition, 461; æti- ological argument, 462; hom- ological and ontological argu- ment, 468.
- human, theory of; Bailey, xxxvii, 1855. 156.
Reasoning, Bailey's theory of, xxxiv, 1852, 547; second London edi- tion of the book, 547; general irreligion of the book, 569.
Reform, philosophy of, xxviii, 1846. 481.
Reformer, the true, xxxviii, 1856.172. Religion, philosophy of; Caird, Ixiii, 1881. 162.
- Philosophy of ; Morell, xxxii, 1850. 349, 510.
- and science, 'relations of, Ixiii, 1881. 581.
Religious thought, limits of ; Man- sell, xli, 1859. 491.
Responsibility, limits of human, xx, 1838. 240.
Revista de la universidad de Mad- rid, Ivii, 1875. 177.
Revue positive, la, 1, 1868. 120.
Rhetoric and literary criticism, ele- ments of, xxvii, 1815. 162.
- The elements of ; De Mill, lx, 1878. 572.
- Philosophy of, xxv, 1843. 512.
Sanskrit language. (See Language, the Sanskrit.)
Schopenhauer's werken lichtstralen, aus, xliv, 1862. 160.
Schools, New York state, (DANIEL CURRY,) Ivi, 1874, 181; early interest by the legislature, 186 ; first free-school movement un- successful, 191 ; free-school sys- tem finally established, 193; controversy concerning relig- ion, 197; Bible-reading ques- 11
SCIENTIFIC
tion considered, 200; normal- school plan, 207; interference of politics, 212.
Schools, common, system of the state of New York, history of ; Randall, Ivi, 1874. 181.
Science, advantages and pleasures of, xiv, 1832. 29.
-- Application of natural, to animal and vegetable world, xiv, 1832. 25.
-- and art, lectures on ; Lardner, xxxi, 1849. 669.
-- Elements of moral; Wayland, xxx, 1848. 637.
- de l'esprit, la ; Huett, xlvi, 1864. 500.
- Fragments of ; Tyndall, liv, 1872. 5, 156, 414.
- and industry, annual record of, for 1873, lvi, 1874, 520; for 1874, 1vii, 1875, 522; for 1875, Iviii, 1876. 751.
- and industry, annual record for 1876; Baird, lix, 1877, 560 ; for 1877, Ixi, 1879. 175.
- Progress of, x, 1827. 221.
-- Plea for liberty of ; Froscham- mer, xliii, 1861. 677.
- and religion, relations of; Cal- derwood, lxiii, 1881. 581.
- for the school and family ; Hook- er, xlvii, 1865, 322; 1x, 1878, 764; Ixi, 1879. 197.
- Testimony of modern : Cabell, xli, 1859. 161.
- for the young, heat ; Jacob Ab- bott, liii, 1871. 531.
Sciences, the circle of the; Orr, xxxvi, 1854. 475.
Scientific conference at Chautauqua, (WILLIAM WELLS, ) lix, 1877, 57 ; importance of scientific in- struction to Christian workers, 58; early success of scientific lectures, 59 ; venture at Chau- tauqua assembly, 60; Chautau- qua lectures, 61.
- discoveries and religious views ; Mayer, Ix, 1878. 730.
- discovery, annual of. (See Dis- coveries. )
- journals, lili, 1871. 98.
- memoirs ; Draper, Ixi, 1879. 197.
.
163
SPELLING
SCIENTIFIQUE
Scientifique, l'atheisme ; Laurentie, lii, 1870. 5.
Scientists, half hours with modern ; Huxley, liv, 1872. 356. Self-education ; De Gerando, xlii, 1860. 346.
Senses, the, and the intellect ; Bain, 1, 1868. 185.
- Knowledge imparted by the, lim- ited, xxxiii, 1851. 10.
Sincerity, the ethics of, (J. C. GRANBERRY,) Ixii, 1880, 625 ; reason and conscience as guides. 627 ; does sincerity justify ? 631 ; sincerity defined, 633; lack of sincerity, how shown, 635; re- sponsibility for belief, 640; Saul the Pharisee, and Paul the Christian, 641.
Slavery, philosophy and practice of ; W. A. Smith, xxxix, 1857. 497.
- (See also under Ecclesiastical ; Miscellaneous ; Theological.)
Sleep, view of, physiology and psy- chology of; Lemoine, xxxviii, 1856. 145.
Social science ; Collins, xxxvi, 1854. 461.
- science; Carey, (G. M. STEELE.) lv, 1873, 357 ; man is the object of, 359; doctrine of value in, 360 ; doctrine of land and rent, 364; errors of the Malthusian theory regarding, 369 : errors of J. Stuart Mill, 370; distinction between trade and commerce, 376 ; producer and consumer, 380.
- statistics ; Spencer, xlviii, 1866. 485.
Socialism and social reform in Ger- many ; Trumpelmann, Ix, 1878, 730; Ixi, 1879. 570.
Sociology, xliii, 1861. 510.
Solar system, the, phenomena and order of, xxv, 1843. 160.
- system, planets in; Sir Richard Phillips, xi, 1828, 385; fifty- eight thousand major planets, 386; other planets may be dis- covered, 386.
- system, the ; J. R. Hind, xxxiv, 1852. 481.
Solar system, the, xxviii, 1846. 635. Somnambulism ; Lemoine, xxxviii, 1856. 147.
Sovereignty, the principles of, xxxvii, 1855, 41; mode of treating social science, 42; three developments of government, 44; origin of monarchy, 40; origin of the caste system, 46; political constitutions of
Greece, 52; various tendencies of monarchy, 60; political sys- tem of Hyppodamus, 62; Aris- totle's criticism on politics, G5; Socratic system of politics, 60; Plato's political system, 68; Aristotle's political system, 71.
Space and matter, perception of ; Walter, Ixii, 1880. 594.
Spanish language, course with ; Monsants and Languellier, lviii, 1876. 195.
Species, origin of. (See Evolution and Origin of species.)
- Derivation of; Barranda, lxiii, 1881. 160.
- Preservation of, by concealment, lxiii, 1881. 153.
- The genesis of; Mivart, liii, 1871. 513.
Spectrum analysis, (RUSH EMORY.) liii, 1871, 98, 204; continuous spectra, 99; description of the spectroscope, 99; method of comparing spectra, 103; appli- cation to the heavenly bodies, 104; constitution of the sun- spots and perturbations, 104; spectra of the planets and moon, 208; spectra of the fixed stars, 209; nebulæ, 212; determina- tion of the motion of the heav- enly bodies, 214 ; new chemical elements discovered, 215.
- analysis ; Huggins and Lockyer, liv. 1872. 356.
Speculative phylosophy and Chris- tian theology. connection be- tween, xviii, 1836. 164.
Speech, families of ; Farrar, lviii, 1876. 564.
Spelling, English, reform learning, Ixiii, 1881. 363.
SPENCER
163
TRAGEDY
Spencer, Herbert, philosophy of; | Table-talk; Rogers, xxxviii, 1856. Bowne, Ivi, 1874. 510. 487.
- Herbert, philosophy of ; Bowne, (PROFESSOR MARTIN, ) Ivii, 1875, 97, 451; evolution, 98; "laws of the unknowable," reviewed, 101; " laws of the knowable," 111; force, fundamental doc- trine of to-day, 456; persist- ence of force, 457; process of knowing, 464; his character- istics of the unknowable, 466; force described, 469.
Spirits, communications from ; Fer- guson, xxxviii, 1856. 318.
Spiritualism ; Dissaudier, xlviii, 1866. 288.
-- ancient sorcery; M'Donald, xlviii, 1866, 296; liv, 1872. 355.
- and necromancy ; Morrison, lv, 1873. 699.
- on trial ; Evans, Iviii, 1876. 580. Spontaneous generations, (transla-
tion by W. H. LARRABEE,) xlvii, 1865, 528 ; characteristics of in- fusions, 529 ; microscopic fungi, 531 ; experiment on their prop- agation, 532; theory of the heterogenists, 534; theory of the pan-spermists, 535; their experiments, 537; office of the microscopic beings, 546.
-- generation, xliii, 1861. 511. Sprachverwirrung zu Babel; Kaulen, xliv, 1862. 501.
Stage, the mimic; Baker, li, 1869. 161.
Stars, distance of the fixed, iv, 1821, 51; xi, 1828. 423.
Stone age; Thompson, lix, 1877. 335.
- age, implements of the, a de- markation ; Dawson, Ix, 1878. 367.
Storms, statistics of, philosophy of, xxi, 1839. 428.
Sun, the, lii, 1870. 473.
Supernatural in relation to the natural ; M'Cosh, xliv, 1862. 525.
Superstition and force; Lea, xlix, 1867. 157.
Sympathy, the power of, xvi, 1834. 238.
Teaching, Methods of ; Scott, Ixii, 1880. 796.
Telephone, the; Du Moncel, Ixii, 1880. 203.
Testimony of the rocks, the ; Hugh Miller, Iviii, 1876. 186.
Theorie und erfarung ; Kramer, Ix, 1878. 387.
Thought, elements of ; Isaac Taylor, xxxiii, 1851. 665.
- Oriental, influence on western, (W. H. WITHROW,) lii, 1870, 545; achievement of the Alex- andrian school, 546 ; pernicious system of monachism, 548 ; rev- enue of the Moors, their learn- ing, 552; some striking results of the crusades, 553; influence of the Jewish race, 556; influ- ence of the commerce of the east, 558.
- Private ; Beveridge, xxxix, 1857. 318.
- The theory of ; Davis, Ixii, 1880. 592.
Thunder, thoughts on, ii, 1819. 264. Times, signs of the, xxxv, 1853, 426; character of the present age, 427; the times as seen in the world of nature, 428; dis- coveries in science and new ap- plication, 429; triumphs in the domain of commerce, 429; ap- plications of steam, 430 ; learn- ing of the time, 431 ; magnetic telegraph, 431; the times as seen in the political world, 432; the times as seen in the religious world, 437; the growth of Russia, 437; in the de- partment of the Church, 439; duties of American patriots, 440; call for a higher type of Christian character, 442; en- couragements, 444.
Tragedy, Attic, and the modern theater, (S. D. HILLMAN.) x1, 1858, 341; nature of tragedy, 341 ; character of Attic tragedy, 342; characteristics of the Greeks, 344; instruction and aim of their tragedy, 347; its
.
TRAGEDY
164
WILL
Tragedy-continued.
moral and religious nature, 349 ; the manner of its repre- sentation, 351; tragedy of the present time, 352 ; its regenera- tion, 354.
- Ribbeck's remains of Latin, xxxviii, 1856, 76; a work of art not of genius, 80; an imitation of the Greek, S1 ; German com- mentators, 83; reason for the imitation of the Greek, 87; want of poetic element in the Latins, 87; earliest writers of tragedy, 90 ; commencement of them, 91; development of the Latin language, 93; peculiari- ties of verification, 98; attract . ive qualities of, 102; meager relics of, 106.
Training, physical, essay on, xvi, 1834. 458.
Trigonometry ; Loomis, xxxi, 1849. 146.
- Hackley, xxxiii, 1851. 324.
- Pierce, xliv, 1862. 177.
Understanding, on the; Wedge- wood, xxxi, 1849. 143.
Ungeschichte, die, der menscheit; Caspari, Ivi, 1874. 354.
Unity of the human race, (T. V. MOORE, ) xxxiii, 1851, 345 ; phil- ological proof, 348; flexibility and adaptability, 349; hybrids cannot propagate, 350; varie- ties in the, 356; varieties no ob- jection to original oneness, 364.
- of the human race ; Smyth, xxxiii, 1851. 166, 346.
- of the human race ; Owen, xxxvii, 1855. 167.
- of the physical world, (ALEXAN- DER WINCHELL, ) lv, 1873, 181; order and uniformity of the solar system, 184; extension of the laws of the solar system to the fixed stars, 191; table of elements recognized in the heavenly bodies, 205; Ivi, 1874, 70; primordial history of the solar system, 70; facts of suc- cession, 70; physical history of the earth, 87.
Universe, the true intellectual sys- tem of; Cudworth, xx, 1838. 473.
Vegetable and animal physiology ; Goadby, xl, 1858. 612.
Vestiges of the natural history of creation, xxxiii, 1851, 9; athe- istical principles of the work, 19; theory of development, 21. Virginia, fifthi annual report of su- perintendent of public instruc- tion, Iviii, 1876. 386.
Vision, wonders of, i, 1818. 302.
Vital and physical forces, correla- tion of; Barker, liv, 1872. 5, 414.
Voices of the soul answered in God ; Reid, xlviii, 1866. 151.
Volcano, reflections on a, vii, 1824. 25, 56, 98.
Vorlesungen über den menschen, xlvii, 1865. 29.
Wesley and modern philosophy, (GILBERT HAVEN,) Ixi, 1879, 5, 205; his influence and power, 6; contrast between systems of philosophy, 10; theologic con- ditions, 15; how he struggled with and overcame false philos- ophy, 16; his intuition, 18; ab- solute freedom of the will, 208; influences generated by Wes- ley, 214; influence of Method- ism on materialism, 219.
Wesleyan University-A. W. Smith, (G. P. DISOSWAY,) xlix, 1867, 93; early Methodist colleges, 93; opening of the Wesleyan University, 97; sketch of Dr. Smith, 100.
Will, on the; Tappan, xxv, 1843. 324.
- Arminian doctrine of the, xxxii, 1850. 91.
- Edwards on the, xlvii, 1865. 455. - The; Edwards, Whedon, and Hodge, Ixiii, 1881. 781.
- Examination of Edwards on the ; Bledsoe, (DANIEL CURRY.) xxviii, 1846, 598; Bledsoe's work full and complete, 598; Edwards's doctrine of the will,
-
-
WILL
165
WORLDS
.
Will-continued.
600; Bledsoe meets his funda- mental argument, 603; relations of feelings and the will, 605; foreknowledge and necessity, 608; Bledsoe's book, 612; Ed- ward's once studied as a text- book, 613.
- freedom of the, inquiry into Ed- wards on; Bledsoe, xxvii, 1845. 640.
- freedom of the, Arminian view of, xxxii, 1850. 90.
- Freedom of the, etc .; Coleridge, xxxvi, 1854, 34; philosophy and theology, 35; German metaphys- ical speculations, 35; writings valuable for suggestive quali- ties, 36, 37 ; on distinction of the understanding and reason, 40; nature of sin, 47; doctrine of original sin, 48; conversion and regeneration of the will, 50.
- Freedom of the ; D. D. Whedon, xlvi, 1864. 347.
- Freedom of the; Edwards and Whedon, xlvii, 1865. 455.
- Review of Edwards on the; Tap- pan, xxvi, 1844. 61.
- Lectures on ; Dr. Richards, xxxii, 1850. 84.
- Review of Whedon on, answered, (B. F. COCKER,) xlvii, 1865, 284; Calvinism and " philo- sophical necessity, " 285; defini- tion of will, 283; pluripotential power, 287; use of the term " necessity," 283; power of con- trary choice, 289; alleged ab- surdity answered, 290; charges of contradiction, 292; unanim- ity of Methodism, 296.
- Whedon on the, (B. F. COCKER,) xlvi, 1864, 595 ; embarrassments of the question, 596; statement of the question and definition of terms, 593; what is will? 600; Edwards's equivocal "certain- ty," 604; the causation argu- ment, 605; the psychological argument, 608; proposition concerning methods, 611: the theological argument, 616; the positive argument, 618.
Will. (See also Human will ; Phi- losophy of the human.)
Willing, causation and freedom of, two letters on; Hazard, lii, 1870. 139.
Wonders of the human body, lii, 1870. 635.
Word, one more; Neal, xxxviii, 1856. 313.
Words, the geology of, xxxvii, 1855, 566; origin of every-day words, 568; origin and history of words, 569; origin and his- tory of geographical names, 572; facts of history embodied iu names, 573; historical ele- ment of the English language, 573.
- Rambles among; Swinton, xli, 1859. 505.
- Secondary uses of, how they arise, xxxii, 1850. 261.
- and their uses; White, liii, 1871. 173.
- Their use and abuse; Matthews, Iviii, 1876. 580.
Works, magnificence and beauty of God's, i, 1818. 61.
World, comparative view of the an- imal, vi, 1823. 423.
- of mind, the; Isaac Taylor, xl, 1858. 328.
- Origin of the, according to rev- elation and science; Dawson, 1x, 1878. 367.
- System of the, its origin, (W. B. SLAUGHTER.) lix, 1877, 644; the nebular hypothesis, 645; what is the " nebular hy- pothesis ?" 649; origin of ro- tary motion, 653; direction of planetary motion, 654; actual velocities, 659; relation of orbit- al and rotary motion, 663; ac- celeration of rotary motion, 664. Worlds, the plurality of, xxxvi, 1854. 617.
- Plurality of. (J. LEAVITT.) XxxVii, 1855, 356; are the heavenly bodies inhabited? 358; "more worlds than one." 360: Dr. Lard- ner's view on, 363: HIngh Mil- ler, (foot note, ) 366; argument from analogy, 372; Sir David
WORLDS
166
ANSELM
Worlds-continued.
Brewster's argument, 374; the analogy of faith, 378.
Wuttke on pre-Platonie ethies, (translation by J. P. LACROIX.) li, 1869, 505; morals and ethies of heathen nations, 505; ethics of the Chinese, 510; Brahmins, 512; Buddhists, 514; Egyptians and Semitic nations, 515; Per- sians, 517; Greeks, 520; Socratic
philosophy, 524; later schools, 527.
Zoologie et paleontologie generales, nouvelles recherches, li, 1869. 94.
Zoology, comparative, structural, and systematic; Orton, Iviii, 1876. 562.
Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism; J. A. Fradenberg, lxiii, 1881. 61.
BIOGRAPHICAL.
Abbott, Benjamin, early preaching of, xxxv, 1833. 9.
- Life of, reviewed, xvi, 1834. 104. Abernethy, life of, xxxvi, 1854. 481. Ackerman, Elizabeth, memoir of, v, 1822. 446.
Acta Sanctorum, xlv, 1863, 676; xlix, 1867. 438.
Adams, John Quincy, life of; Sew- ard, (JAMES FLOY,) xxxii, 1850, 197; brief sketch of his career, 198; opposition to slav- ery, 201; his death, 209; his character and habits, 210.
-
-- John, death of, ix, 1826. 314. Addison, Joseph, life of, Alexander, lii, 1870. 152.
Adolphus Gustavus, hero of the reformation ; Lacroix, liii, 1871. 500.
Adorna, Catherine, life of; Upham, xxxi, 1849, 151; she was a Ro- man Catholie, 151; led a con- sistent life, 151.
Agard, Sally, life and death of, iv, 1821. 333.
Akers, Eliza S., life of, iv, 1821. 459.
Albert, Prince, early years of ; Gray, 1, 1868. 163.
Aleuin und sein Jahrhundert; Wer- ner, Ixi, 1879. 402.
Alexander III., pope. life of; Reut- er, xlii, 1860. 676.
- Archibald, (J. T. CRANE, ) xliv, 1862, 250; defective education,
251; his conversion, 252; doc- trinal views of his conversion, 255; enters the ministry, 257; presidency of Hampden Sidney College, 259; trip through New England, 260; accepts a call to Philadelphia, 264; professor in Princeton Theologieal Semi- nary, 265; his death, 267; sum- mary of characteristics, 267.
Allen, Elmore, death of, vi, 1823. 399. - Jobn, death of, vi, 1823. 38.
America, Mr. Wesley's missionaries to, memoirs of, xxv. 1843. 636. American biography; Jeremy Bel- knap, xxvi, 1844. 159.
- pioneers and patriots; J. S. C. Abbott, Ivii, 1875, 532; Iviii, 1876. 387.
- pulpit, annals of ; Sprague, xxxix, 1857, 325; x1, 1858, 499; xlii, 1860. 450.
Anderson, Margarette, memoirs of. iii, 1820. 330, 338,374, 414.
- Rev. Peyton, death of, vi, 1823, 399: ix, 1826. 448.
Andre. W. W .; Lord, xxxix, 1857. 397.
- Major, life of; Sargent, xliii, 1861. 529.
Andrews, Lewis, memoir of, iv, 1821. 91. 128.
Anselmof Canterbury ; Harris, XXXV. 1853, 179, 476; birth and edu- cation, 577; promoted to Can- terbury, 578; made archbishop,
-
-
ANSELM
167
ASKEW
Anselm-continued.
580; quarrel between him and William II., 581; inconsistency, 584; quarrel between him and Henry, 585; theology, 588; latest and maturest of his works, 591.
- Saint au Bec; Ragey, Ix, 1878. 385.
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