[331] James Ward, “Present Problems of Psychology,” in (American) Philosophical Review, 1904, p. 607. J. Volkelt, Kant’s Erkenntnisstheorie, p. 241.
[332] In a Letter of 1772, Briefe, ed. Berlin Academy, Vol. I, 1900, p. 126.
[333] H. Jones, A Critical Account of the Philosophy of Lotze, 1895, pp. 102-104; 106, 107; 108, 111.
[334] The Present Problems, pp. 606, 607.
[335] J. Volkelt, Erfahrung und Denken, 1886, p. 485.
[336] James Ward, “On the Definition of Psychology,” in Journal of Psychology, Vol. I, 1904, p. 25.
[337] There is a good description of this doctrine in H. Höffding’s Sören Kierkegaard, Stuttgart, 1896, pp. 100-104.
[338] Höffding’s Kierkegaard, pp. 119, 120.
[339] Ibid. p. 123.
[340] See Works, ed. London, 1898, Vol. II, pp. 299-306.