INDEX.
- Aesthetic
- Aesthetics [200]
- Affection
- Altruism [96]-[7], [167]
- Analytic judgments [7], [29], [33]-[4], [35], [220]-[1]
- Appreciation [189]-[90], [200], [204]-[5], [221]
- Approval [131]
- Approve [60]
- Approbation [171]
- Appropriate, inappropriate [192], [199], [204]-[5], [209], [211], [220]
- defined [190]
- Aristotle [4]
- Art
- Autonomy [127]
- Bad [5], [27], [28], [95], [140], [143], [157], [178], [181], [188], [209], [210], [213], [214], [216], [218]
- ‘Based on’ [38], [49], [54], [114], [115], [118], [120], [122], [144]
- Beauty
- Being, dist. from existence [110]-[11]
- Belief, value of [193]-[200], [208], [210]-[11], [212], [219], [224]-[5]
- Benevolence, Sidgwick’s ‘principle of Rational’ [102]-[3]
- Bentham [145]
- Bradley, F. H.
- Butler, Bishop [86], [206]
- Casuistry [4]-[5]
- Causal judgments
- Causal relations [31]-[3], [34]-[6]
- Chastity [158]
- Classical style [215]-[16]
- Christ
- Christian Ethics [178]
- Clifford, W. K. [40]
- Cognition
- Commands, confused with moral laws [128]-[9], [141]
- Common sense [224]
- Compassion [217], [219], [220], [225]
- Conduct, relation of to Ethics [2]-[3], [146], [180]
- Conscience
- Conscientiousness [218]
- Contempt [211], [217]
- Corporeal beauty [203]-[4]
- Courage [217]
- Crimes [161]
- Criterion
- Cruelty [209]-[11], [218]
- Darwin [47]
- Definition, nature of [6]-[9], [18]-[20]
- Desirable, meaning of [65]-[7], [73]
- Desire, cause and object of [68]-[70], [73]-[4]
- Duty
- = cause of or means to good [24]-[5], [105], [146]-[8], [167], [180], [223]
- fuller definitions of [148], [161], [180]-[1], [222]
- incapable of being known [149]-[50], [181]
- mainly negative [218]
- object of psychologicalintuition [148]
- relations to expediency [167]-[70], [181]
- not self-evident [148], [181]
- self-regarding [168]
- Egoistic Hedonism [18]
- Egoism, as doctrine of end [18], [96]-[105], [109]
- Egoism, as doctrine of means [96]-[7], [105], [167]
- Emotion
- Empirical [39], [111], [123]
- Empiricism [103], [124]-[5], [130]
- End = effect [32]
- End = good in itself [18], [24], [64]-[6], [72], [73], [79]-[81], [83], [85], [94]-[5], [184], [216]
- End = object of desire [68], [70], [71], [72]
- Enjoyment [77], [96], [188], [208]
- Envy [211]
- Epistemology [133], [140]-[1]
- Ethics
- Eudaemonist [175]
- Evil [153], [156], [158], [160], [186], [193], [205], [207]-[14], [224], [225]
- Evolution [46]-[8], [54]-[8]
- Evolutionistic [46], [50], [52], [54], [58]
- Existence
- Expediency [167]-[70], [181]
- God [82], [102]-[4]
- Good
- indefinable [6]-[16], [41], [79], [110]-[11], [142]-[4]
- = means to good [21], [24]
- the Absolute [183], [184], [186]
- the Human [183], [184], [186]
- mixed and unmixed [208], [209], [214], [215], [217], [219]-[20], [224]
- my own [97]-[9], [101], [170]
- ‘private’ [99]
- the [8]-[9], [18]
- ‘Universal’ [99]-[102]
- Will [174]-[5], 179 n. [2], [180]
- Green, T. H. [139]
- Guyau, M. [46]
- Habit [171], [175]-[6], [177]
- Hatred [211], [214]
- Health [42]-[3], [65], [157], [167]
- Heaven [115], [174], [183], [185], [195]
- upon Earth [186]
- Hedonism [39], [52], [59]-[63], [90]-[1], [96], [108]-[9], [174]
- Hegel [30], [34], [110]
- Heteronomous [127]
- Higher [48]-[9], [78]
- Hobbes [97]
- Honesty [175]-[6]
- Hypothetical laws [22], [155]
- Ideal
- Idealistic [130], [205]
- Imagination, value of [193], [194], [196], [197], [210], [219], [220], [221], [224]
- Imperative [128]
- Industry [157], [167]
- Intention 179 n. [1]
- Interest [102]
- Intrinsic
- Intuition
- Intuitionism
- Lasciviousness [209]-[10]
- Law
- Legal [126], [128]
- Leibniz [125]
- Life [15], [46], [50], [52], [156]
- Logical
- Love
- Lucian [45]
- Lust [209]-[10], [218]
- Lying [154]
- Mackenzie, Prof. J. S. [114], [120]
- Material qualities, value of [204], [205]-[7], [221], [225]
- Matter, value of [205]-[7]
- Meaning, ‘to have no’ [31], [34]-[5]
- Means = cause or necessary condition [18], [21]-[3], [89], [180]
- Mental
- Mercy [178]
- Metaphysical [39], [58], [110]-[15], [139]-[40]
- Method
- Mill, J. S. [145]
- Moral
- Motive [67], [70], [177], [178]-[80]
- Murder [148], [151], [154], [156]-[7], [178]
- Natural
- Natural = normal [42]-[4], [58]
- Natural = necessary [44]-[5], [58]
- Naturalism [20], [40], [58], [144]
- Naturalistic
- Nature [40]-[1], [110], [111], [112]
- Nature, life according to [41]-[2], [113]
- Nature, value of [188], [193], [195], [200], [206]
- Necessity
- New Testament [177], [178], [179]
- Object
- Objective [82], [201]
- Obligation
- Obligatory [25], [148], [170]
- Organic relation, unity, whole
- Ought
- Pain [64], [65], [210], [212]-[4], [217], [222]-[3], [225]
- Particular [3]-[4]
- Perception [111], [112], [134], [136]
- Pessimism [51], [53], [156]
- Plato
- Pleasure [12]-[13], [16]
- consciousness of [87]-[91], [109], [212]
- as criterion [91]-[2], [108]
- and desire [68]-[71], [73]-[4]
- and ‘pleasures’ [79]
- ‘quality of’ [77]-[81]
- value of [39], [46], [50]-[4], [59]-[66], [71]-[2], [74]-[5], [79]-[81], [83], [85]-[96], [144], [146], [171], [173], [174], [188], [205], [212]-[14], [222]-[3]
- Pity [217], [221]
- Positive science [39]
- Possible action [150]-[1]
- Practical [216], [221]
- Practice [2], [20]
- Praise [171]
- Preference [77]-[9], [131]
- Promises [157]
- Property, respect of [157]
- Propositions, types of [123]-[6]
- Prove [11], [65], [66], [74], [75]-[7], [99], [112], [137], [141], [143], [145], [169], [181]
- Prudence [168]
- Psychological [11], [130], [140], [148]
- Punishment [164]
- Reason [143]-[4]
- Representative art [193]
- Reward [174]
- Right [18], [24]-[5], [105], [146], [180], [216], [218], [223]
- Romantic style [215]-[16]
- Rousseau [42]
- Sanctions [159], [164]
- Secondary qualities [206]
- Self-evidence [143], [144], [148], [181]
- Self-realisation [113], [114], [120], [188]
- Self-sacrifice [170]
- Sensation [134]
- Sensationalist [130]
- Sidgwick, Henry [145]
- value of beauty [81]-[4], [85]-[7]
- on Bentham [17]-[19]
- rationality of Egoism [99]-[103]
- ‘good’ unanalysable [17]
- Hedonism [59], [63], [64], [81]-[7], [91]-[6], [108]-[9]
- ‘method’ of Intuitionism [59], [92]-[4]
- value of knowledge [82], [86]
- neglects principle of organic wholes [93]
- pleasure as criterion [91]-[2], [94]-[5]
- quality of pleasure [77], [81]
- value of unconscious [81]-[4]
- Sins [161]
- Spencer, Herbert [46], [48]-[58]
- Spinoza [110], [113]
- Spiritual, value of [205]-[6]
- Summum Bonum [183], [205]
- Stoics [41], [110]
- Synthetic [7], [58], [143]
- Taste, error of [192]-[3], [211]
- Taylor, A. E. [60]
- Temperance [157], [168]
- Theodicies [220]
- Tragedy [219], [221]
- Truth
- Tyndall [40]
- Ugly [208], [209]-[11], [214], [216]-[19], [221]
- Ultimate end [51], [83], [85], [96]-[7], [99]-[102], [183], [189]
- Unity [222]
- organic, see ‘[Organic]’
- Universal
- Universalistic Hedonism [103]
- Useful [106], [146], [167]
- Utilitarianism [63], [96], [99], [104]-[7], [109]
- Utopias [183], [186]
PRINTED IN ENGLAND BY J. B. PEACE, M.A.
AT THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
FOOTNOTES
[1] ‘The Origin of the Knowledge of Right and Wrong.’ By Franz Brentano. English Translation by Cecil Hague. Constable, 1902.—I have written a review of this book, which will, I hope, appear in the International Journal of Ethics for October, 1903. I may refer to this review for a fuller account of my reasons for disagreeing with Brentano.
[2] Methods of Ethics, Bk. I, Chap. iii, § 1 (6th edition).
[3] Methods of Ethics, Bk. I, Chap. iv, § 1.
[4] Ἔρωτες, 436-7.
[5] See Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction, par M. Guyau. 4me édition. Paris: F. Alcan, 1896.
[6] Data of Ethics, Chap. II, § 7, ad fin.
[7] The italics are mine.
[8] A. E. Taylor’s Problem of Conduct, p. 120.
[9] My references are to the 13th edition, 1897.
[10] My italics.
[11] 481 C-487 B.
[12] Ethical Studies, p. 232.
[13] p. 53.
[14] p. 55.
[15] pp. 56-7.
[16] p. 58.
[17] p. 12.
[19] pp. 27-30, 36.
[20] The italics are mine.
[21] Prof. J. S. Mackenzie, A Manual of Ethics, 4th ed., p. 431. The italics are mine.
[22] Prolegomena to Ethics, p. 178.
[23] This sense of the term must be carefully distinguished from that in which the agent’s intention may be said to be ‘right,’ if only the results he intended would have been the best possible.
[24] Kant, so far as I know, never expressly states this view, but it is implied e.g. in his argument against Heteronomy.
Transcriber’s note
- Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.
- Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made consistent when a predominant usage was found.
- Blank pages have been skipped.
- Footnotes have been renumbered and moved to the end of the book.