[441] "Fragments of Science," p. 64.
[442]Ibid. p. 38.
[443] "On the Relation of God to the World," pp. 187-201.
[444] See Coleridge, "Works," vol. i. pp. 152, 263; Hamilton, "Metaphysics," vol. i. p. 40.
[445] Fleming, "Vocabulary of Philosophy," in loco.
[446] See Jevons, "Principles of Science," vol. ii. p. 440; Spencer, "First Principles," p. 128.
[447] Carpenter, "Mental Physiology," p. 692; see Lewes, "Problems of Life and Mind," vol. i. p. 336.
[448] Essential properties "are those which admit neither of intension nor remission of degrees."—Newton, Regula Tertia Philosophandi, "Principia," lib. iii
[449] Maxwell, "Theory of Heat," p. 310; and also in Nature, vol. ii. p. 421.
[450] By "causes" is here meant nothing more than all the antecedent conditions. The statement makes no real distinction between "causes" and "conditions." "We can not predicate of any physical agency that it is abstractedly the cause of another." "Causation is the will of God."—Grove, "Correlation and Conservation of Forces," pp. 15, 199.