CONTENTS.

[CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.]

Design of this Essay

The question stated

Suggested by some existing tendencies in England

Comparison with other countries

Test of this comparison

The absent quality specifically defined

History and decay of some recent aspirations

Illustrations

Characteristics of one present mood

Analysis of its causes

(1) Influence of French examples

(2) Influence of the Historic Method

(3) Influence of the Newspaper Press

(4) Increase of material prosperity

(5) Transformation of the spiritual basis of thought

(6) Influence of a State Church

[CHAPTER II. OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR]

Questions of a dual doctrine lies at the outset of our inquiry

This doctrine formulated

Marks the triumph of status quo

Psychological vindication of such a doctrine

Answered by assertion of the dogmatic character of popular belief

And the pernicious social influence of its priests

The root idea of the defenders of a dual doctrine

Thesis of the present chapter, against that idea

Examination of some of the pleas for error

I. That a false opinion may be clothed with good associations

II. That all minds are not open to reason

III. That a false opinion, considered in relation to the general

mental attitude, may be less hurtful than its premature demolition

IV. That mere negative truth is not a guide

V. That error has been a stepping-stone to truth

We cannot tell how much truth has been missed

Inevitableness is not utility

[CHAPTER III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.]

The modern disciplina arcani

Hume's immoral advice

Evil intellectual effects of immoral compromise

Depravation that follows its grosser forms

The three provinces of compromise

Radical importance of their separation

Effects of their confusion in practical politics

Economy or management in the Formation of opinion

Its lawfulness turns on the claims of majority and minority over one another

Thesis of the present chapter

Its importance, owing to the supremacy of the political spirit in England

Effects of the predominance of this spirit

Contrasted with epochs of intellectual responsibility

A modern movement against the political spirit

An objection considered

Importance to character of rationalised conviction, and of ideals

The absence of them attenuates conduct

Illustrations in modern politics

Modern latitudinarianism

Illustration in two supreme issues

Pascal's remarks upon a state of Doubt

Dr. Newman on the same

Three ways of dealing with the issues

Another illustration of intellectual improbity

The Savoyard Vicar

Mischievousness of substituting spiritual self-indulgence for reason

[CHAPTER IV. RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.]

Compromise in Expression

Touches religion rather than politics

Hume on non-resistance

Reason why rights of free speech do not exactly coincide with rights of free thought

Digression into the matter of free speech

Dissent no longer railing and vituperative

Tendency of modern free thought to assimilate some elements from the old faith

A wide breach still remains

Heresy, however, no longer traced to depravity

Tolerance not necessarily acquiescence in scepticism

Object of the foregoing digression

The rarity of plain-speaking a reason why it is painful

Conformity in the relationship between child and parent

Between husband and wife

In the education of children

The case of an unbelieving priest

The case of one who fears to lose his influence

Conformity not harmless nor unimportant

[CHAPTER V. THE REALISATION OF OPINION.]

The application of opinion to conduct

Tempering considerations

Not to be pressed too far

Our action in realising our opinions depends on our social theory

Legitimate and illegitimate compromise in view of that

The distinction equally sound on the evolutional theory

Condition of progressive change

A plea for compromise examined

A second plea

The allegation of provisional usefulness examined

Illustrated in religious institutions

In political institutions

Burke's commendation of political compromise

The saying that small reforms may be the worst enemies of great ones

In what sense true

Illustration in the Elementary Education Act

Wisdom of social patience

The considerations which apply to political practice do not apply to our own lives

Nor to the publication of social opinions

The amount of conscience in a community

Evil of attenuating this element

Historic illustration

New side of the discussion

Is earnestness of conviction fatal to concession of liberty to others?

Two propositions at the base of an affirmative answer

Earnestness of conviction consistent with sense of liability to error

Belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead to intolerance

The contrary notion due to juristic analogies in social discussion

Connection between the doctrine of liberty and social evolution

The timid compromisers superfluous apprehension

Material limits to the effect of moral speculation

Illustration from the history of Slavery

Illustration from French history

Practical influence of a faith in the self-protecting quality of a society

Conclusion

[NOTE TO PAGE 242.]