FOOTNOTES:
[195] Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, Vol. i. p. 8.
[196] Encyclopädie der philosophischen Wissenschaften (4th edit.), Berlin, 1845, § 249.
[197] Lehrbuch der Naturphilosophie, Jena, 1809.
[198] Ueber den Willen in der Natur (2nd edit.), Frankfurt a. M., 1854, pp. 41-43.
[199] Spencer, Autobiography, Vol. ii. p. 50, London and New York, 1904.
[200] Autobiography, Vol. ii. p. 100.
[201] Cf. my letter to him 1876, now printed in Duncan's Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer, p. 178. London, 1908.
[202] The present writer, many years ago, in his Psychology (Copenhagen, 1882; Eng. transl. London, 1891), criticised the evolutionistic treatment of the problem of knowledge from the Kantian point of view.
[203] Life and Letters, Vol. II. p. 37.
[204] Ibid. p. 232.
[205] The new science of Ecology occupies an intermediate position between the biography of species and the biography of individuals. Compare Congress of Arts and Science, St. Louis, Vol. v. 1906 (The Reports of Drude and Robinson) and the work of my colleague, E. Warming.
[206] Cf. my History of Modern Philosophy (Eng. transl. London, 1900), i. pp. 76-79.
[207] "Herrschaft und Knechtschaft," Phönomenologie des Geistes, iv. A., Leiden, 1907.
[208] The Descent of Man, Vol. i. Ch. iii.
[209] The works of Westermarck and Hobhouse throw new light on many of these features.
[210] New York and London, 1893.
[211] Paris, 1879.
[212] English literature and society in the eighteenth century, London, 1904, p. 187.
[213] Cf. my paper, "The law of relativity in Ethics," International Journal of Ethics, Vol. i. 1891, pp. 37-62.
[214] Life and Letters, Vol. I. p. 310.
[215] Ibid. Vol. II. p. 177.
[216] Life and Letters, Vol. 1. p. 306.
[217] Life and Letters, p. 307.
VIII
THE INFLUENCE OF DARWIN UPON RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
By P. N. Waggett, M.A., S.S.J.E.