Edinburgh, November 1838.
CONTENTS.
PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS.
SECTION I.
NATURE AND IMPORTANCE OF THE SCIENCE OF THE
MORAL FEELINGS.
| Division of the Mental Powers into Intellectual and Moral | [1] |
| Harmony which ought to exist between these classes | [3] |
| Causes by which this harmony is interrupted,—and means of counteracting them | [3] |
| Interest of the science of the Moral Feelings | [5] |
| Peculiar sources of Knowledge bearing upon it, from the light of Conscience, and of Divine Revelation | [7] |
SECTION II.
FIRST TRUTHS IN THE SCIENCE OF THE MORAL
FEELINGS.