[INDEX]
Absolute reality, [23], [27]
Absolutism, [97], [190];
Kant and, [99]
Abstract definition, [20]
Abstractions, [149]-[150], [174]
Absurdities, [10]
Achievements, [194]
Action, kind of, [80]
Adult life, [185], [186]
America, [41]
Amoeba, [91]
Animals, dramatisation in primitive life of man, [4]
Antiquity, [33]
Apprehension, [142]
Aquinas, [55], [106]
Argumentation, [31], [132]
Aristotle, [13], [17], [19], [55];
Bacon's charge against, [30]-[31], [36];
distinction in ends, [171];
experience, [79], [80];
forms, [105];
on change, [107];
on philosophy as contemplation, [109], [110];
on slavery, [191];
theory of the state, [44];
ultimate reality, [106]
Art, [34], [103], [211], [212]
Artisan, [15];
knowledge, [110]
Associations, [205];
voluntary, [203]
Astronomers, [65], [113]
Astronomy, [75]
Athenians, [13], [19]
Augustine, St., [111]
Authority, [48], [139], [195];
final, [161];
seat of, [160].
See also [Final good]
Bacon, Francis, [28], [81], [97];
criticism of the learning of his day, [29]-[30];
experience, [97]-[98];
"knowledge is power," [29];
summary of ideas, [29]
Being, perfect, [111]
Being and non-being, [107]
Beliefs and facts, [12]
Bentham, [166], [182], [188]
Bergson, [71]
Berkeley, [50]
Biology, [75], [84]
Bliss, [111], [112]
Bosanquet, [134]
Bradley, [107]
Bruno, [66]
Business, [41], [43], [183]
Butler, Bishop, [21]
Capital, [43]
Capital and labour, [191]
Capitalism, [41], [182]
Castes, material, [59]
Casuistry, [166]
Causation, [63]
Causes, [59], [60]
Certainty, [21], [22]
Change, ancient idea of, [57];
existing view, [113];
law of the universe, [61];
Plato and Aristotle on, [107];
progress and, [116]
Chemistry, [75]
Child life, [91]-[92], [184]
Christian mediaeval philosophy, [17], [19]
Christian theology, [111]
Church, [47];
universal, [45]
Classes, [75], [152], [155];
in the ancient conception of the world, [59]
Classic conception of philosophy, [17], [22], [24], [74], [105]
Classification, [152], [169]
Common sense, [100]
Communication at a distance, [118], [120]
Comte, Auguste, [10]
Conceptions, [81], [144], [145];
reconstruction in, moral, [161];
truth, [156]
Concrete cases, in morals, [161];
in social philosophy, [188]
Concreteness, [150]
Condillac, [81]
Conduct, [80];
right course, [163]
Conflict, [108], [138], [140];
of ends, [166]
Conscience, [46]
Consequences, investigating, [163]-[164]
Conservatism, [18], [33], [40], [100]
Constant, [61]
Contemplation, [109], [111]
Contract theory of the state, [45]
Control, [42], [64]
Co-operation in research, [37]
Cosmogonies and cosmologies, [9]
Cosmology, [70], [75]
Craftsmen, [12], [13]
Criteria, [77]
Crusades, [39]
Cults, [8];
consolidation, [9]
Custom, [17], [161]
Dante, [55]
Darwin, [75]
Deduction, [148]
Delusions, [139]
Democracy, [47], [186], [206];
of facts, [66];
significance, [209]
Demonstration, [20], [21], [31];
discovery vs., [32]
Descartes, [50]
Desires, [110], [111];
frustration, [104]
Details, [141]
Development, Aristotle's use of term, [57], [58]
Diagnosis, [142]
Direction, [176]
Disagreeable, [103]
Discipline, [103], [104], [184]
Discord, [108]
Discovery, contacts of 16th and 17th centuries, [39];
demonstration vs., [32];
logic of, [31], [33];
moral, [174]
Distance, [118]-[119], [120]
Doctrines, [8];
consolidation, [9]
Dogma, [145], [159]
Dreams, [119], [120], [139];
world of, [7]
Dualism, [173]
Duties and rights, [207]
Earth, ancient conception, [55];
relation to universe, [66]
Economic ends, [171]-[172]
Education, [125], [183], [209]
Efficient cause, [59], [60]
Emotion, [103], [210]
Empirical and rational, [81], [87]
Empiricists, [78], [82]
Ends, conflicting, [166];
fixed, [70];
intrinsic and instrumental, [170], [172]-[173];
means and, [72]-[73];
values, [175]
English empiricism, [99]
Environment, [10];
life and, [84]
Epistemology, [49], [70], [123], [126]
Errors, [35]
Esthetic and practical, [66]
Estheticism, [115]-[116], [117], [180];
science and, reconciling, [127]
Ether, [55], [56]
Ethical theory, [161]
Europe, nationalistic movement, [201];
social cause of intellectual revolution in 16th and 17th centuries, [38]-[39]
Evil, problem of, [177]
Evolution, in Aristotle, [58];
of the state, [200]-[201]
Existence, two realms, [22]
Experience, [32];
as a guide in science and moral life, [78];
basis of old notion of, [79];
changed conceptions, [77];
classic notion and modern, [81];
combined doing and suffering, [86];
evil result of unimaginative conception of, [100]-[101];
Greek, [79];
modern appeal to, [48];
new conception, [83];
Plato, [92];
principles and, [48];
self-regulative, [94]-[95];
true "stuff" of, [91]
Experimental method, [13]
Experimentation, [42]
Exploration, [39], [40]
Facing facts, [140], [141], [143]
Facts, [10], [98]
Falsity, [158]
Family principle, [189];
in the world at large, [61]-[62]
Fanaticism, [168]
Fancy. See [Imagination]
Fear, [40]
Feudalism, [43], [45];
of the universe in ancient conception, [59], [61]-[62]
Fighting, [15]
Final cause, [59], [60], [68]
[Final good], [161]-[162], [183];
existence of a single good questioned, [162]
Fine arts, [126]
Finite, [107]
Finite and infinite, [66]
Fire, [11], [56], [86]
Fixed ends, [165]
Flux, [57], [108]
Formal cause, [59], [60]
Forms of Aristotle, [105]
Free will, [196]
Freedom, law and, [207];
religious, [46]
Future, [48]
Future aim of philosophy, [26]
General notions, in morals, [161];
in social philosophy, [188]
Generalities, [174];
social affairs and, [198]
Generalisations, [10], [151]
Geology, [75]
German political philosophy, [200], [208]-[209]
German rationalism, [99]
Germans, system, order, docility, [98]-[99]
Germany, [19]
God, [10], [109]
Golden Age, [48]
Good. See [Final good]
Goodness, [179]
Greeks, [9], [13], [19], [66], [67], [126];
ethical theory, [161];
religion, [105];
science and arts, [93]
Growth, [184];
of knowledge, [31];
moral, [177]
Happiness, [179]
Healthy living, [166], [167], [177]
Heavens, ancient conception, [56]
Hegel, [19], [106], [189], [190];
conception of the state, [200], [201];
logic, [134]
Helvetius, [81]
Hierarchical order, [59]
"Higher" ends, [172]
Hindoos, [126]
History, Hegel's conception, [201]
History of philosophy, [25]
Hobbes, [88], [188]
Homo faber, [71]
Human aims, [42], [43]
Human life, "real" and "ideal," a live issue, [128]
Humanism and naturalism, [174]
Humanity, [206]
Hume, [50], [83], [89]
Hypotheses, [22], [145]
Hysteria, [139]
Ideal, changed conceptions, [103];
problem of relation to the real, [130];
real and, a human issue, [128]
Ideal realm, classic and modern conceptions contrasted, [118]
Idealism, [129];
epistemological, [49], [51];
theological, [50];
tragic kind, [129]-[130]
Ideality, one with reality, [111];
philosophic conception, [106]
Ideas of Plato, [105]
Idols, [36]
[Ills], [169];
philosophy and, [177]-[178]
Imagination, [211];
empirical knowledge and, [73], [74];
reshaping power, [103], [106]
Independence, [110];
social, [185]
India, [41]
Individual, [36], [45], [51];
concept as something given, [193];
in social and moral sense, [194];
social and, [199];
state and, [190], [191]
Individualism, [50];
political, [45], [46];
religious, [46];
religious and moral, [46]
Induction, [34]
Industrial revolution and scientific revolution, [38], [41]
Industry, movements, [47];
science and, [38], [41], [42]
Infinite, [66], [67]
Initiative [46], [209]
Innate ideas, [35], [82]
[Inquiry], [174];
free, [146];
impartial, [147];
methods in moral ills, [170]
Insincerity, [20]
Instability, [107]
Institutions, [196];
true starting-points of inquiry about, [197]
Instrumental ends, [171]
Intellect, [6]
Intellectual somnambulism, [140]
Intellectualism, [117]
Intelligence, [36], [51];
as inquiry into consequences, [163]-[164];
definition, [96]
Interest, [194]-[195]
International interests, [204], [205]
Intrinsic good, [170], [206]
Introspection, [196]
Invention, [39], [42], [49], [122]
Investigation, [147]
Ipse dixit method, [166]
Irresponsibility, [97]
James, William, [21];
Pragmatism, [38]
Judea, [9]
Judgment, [133];
moral, [176];
standards, [175]
Kant, [50], [83], [98], [206];
his philosophy and German character, [98]-[99]
Kinship, [62]
Knowledge, conception as beholding, [115];
degrees, [108];
empirical as organ of imagination, [73], [74];
existing practice, [112];
modern view of right way to get it, [113];
positive, [12];
positive vs. tradition, [16];
practical and operative, [121], [122];
sensations and, [87], [88], [89];
spectator conception, [112], [117]
"Knowledge is power," [29], [42], [51]
Law, [61], [64];
freedom and, [207];
reason and, [98].
See also [Final good]
Learning, Bacon's three kinds, [29]
Licentiousness, [163]
Life, [167], [211];
environment and, [84]-[85]
Literary culture, [39]
Locke, [35], [50], [81], [89], [152];
philosophic empiricism, [82]
Logic, a science and an art, [135];
apparatus, [20], [21];
character, [132], [134];
importance, [138];
in morals and politics, [138];
inconsistencies, [134];
new, [36];
of discovery, [33];
of discovery vs. that of argumentation, [31];
theory, chaotic state, [133]
Logical system, [9]
Lotze, [134]
Making a living, [211]
Man, perfectibility, [49];
primitive, [4], [5];
savage and civilized, [85];
tool-maker, [71]
Marcus Aurelius, [106]
Materialism, [50], [70], [73], [171], [182]
Mathematics, [137], [149]
Matter, [72], [211]
Means and ends, [72]-[73]
Mechanics, [67], [69];
Greeks and, [67]
Mechanism, [211]
Mechanisation of nature, [71]-[72]
Mediaeval Christianity, [17], [19], [126]
Meliorism, [178]
Memory, [1], [6], [103];
emotional character, [2];
individual and group, [8];
primitive, [3]
Metaphysics, [17], [124], [126]
Methods, [149];
social philosophy, [193];
true, [32]
Middle Ages, [47], [64], [132]
Military art, [15]
Mill, J. S., [132]
Mind, pure, [111]
Miracles, [125]
Mistakes, [175]
Modern thought, [52];
Bacon as founder, [28];
early, [49], [50].
See also [Thought]
Mohammedans, [39]
Moral ends, [169]
Moral life, [165]
Moral science. See under [Science]
Morality, pragmatic rule, [163];
standard of judgment, [176]
Morals, [126], [169];
politics and, [197]
National state, [200];
end or instrument, [202]-[203];
rôle of the modern, [201]
Nationalistic movement, [201]
Natural Science. See under [Science]
Naturalism and humanism, [174]
Nature, contrast of ancient and modern conceptions, [53]-[54];
inquiry into, [32], [37], [48], [49];
loss of poetry when considered as mechanism, [69];
profound change in man's attitude to, [115];
value of mechanisation, [71]-[72];
web imposed on, [35]-[36]
Neglect, [97]
Neo-Platonism, [111]
New World, [39]
Non-being, [107]
Noumenal reality, [23]
Nous, [36]
Obliviscence of the disagreeable, [103]
Observation, [140]
Optimism, [178]
Opportunity, [211]
Organic society, [187]
Organisms, [86]
Organisation, [206]-[207]
Oriental nations, [127]
Origin of philosophies, [5], [18], [24], [25]
Pantheon, Greek, [105]
Past, [212]
Perfectibility of mankind, [49]
Perfection, [177]
Personality, [47], [189], [209]
Persuasion, [31]
Pessimism, [178]
Phariseeism, [176]
Phenomenal reality, [23]
Philosophy, emancipation, [123];
function, [111], [122];
future aim and scope, [26];
hard and fast alternatives of English and German schools, [99]-[100];
history, [25];
opportunities, [49];
origin, [5], [18], [24], [25];
practical nature, [121];
proper province, [21], [124];
work, [18]
Physician, [168]
Physics, [75]
Plato, [13], [14], [17], [19], [188], [205];
dramatic sense, [15];
experience, [79], [92];
ideas, ideal realm, [105];
on change, [107];
social arts, [94];
ultimate reality, [106]
Pleasure, [181]
Plotinus, [106]
Pluralism, [204]
Poetry, [7], [8], [103], [212]
Political changes, [43]
Political organisation, [44]
Politics, [125];
morals and, [197];
movements, [47]
Possession of knowledge, [31]
Potentiality, Aristotle's use of term, [57], [58]
Practical and esthetic, [66]
Pragmatism, [38]
Pretensions, [21]
Primitive man, [4]
Principles, [81], [163];
criteria of experience, [48]
Probability, [21]
Production, [181]
Progress, [42], [48], [116], [211];
Bacon and, [32], [34];
economic and moral, contrast, [125]
Proof, [20]
Property, [182], [189]
Protestantism, [46]
Proudhon, [189]
Prussian State, [190], [201]
Psychology, [83], [135];
change in, [84];
malicious, [82]
Pure reason, [78]
Questioning, [17]. See also [Inquiry]
Radicalism, [18], [19], [100]
Rank, [63]
Rationalism, [97];
rigidity, [98]
Rationalists [87], [88], [89]
Rationalisation, [97], [102]
Real, changed conceptions, [103];
ideal and, a human issue, [128];
problem of relation to the ideal, [130]
Reality, [23], [27];
classic conception, [105];
nomenal vs. phenomenal, [23];
ultimate, [106];
ultimate, one with ideality, [111]
Reason, [83], [174];
as a faculty separate from experience, [95];
as re-adjusting intelligence, [96];
changed conceptions, [77]
Reasoning, [32]
Reconstruction of philosophy, [52];
essential, [51];
historical factors, [28];
in moral conceptions, [161];
scientific factor, [53];
social philosophy and, [187];
specific present problem, [43];
value of a solution of the dilemma of reason and experience, [101]
Re-creation, [51], [180]
Reform, [179], [180];
starting-point, [196]
Relativity of sensations, [88]
Religion, [103], [211], [212];
movements, [47]
Religious freedom, [46]
Religious spirit, [210]
Renaissance, [29]
Research, [42];
co-operative, [37]
Responsibility, [163]
Revolution of thought, [60]
Rights and duties, [207]
Rome, [9]
Ruler and subject, [44];
in nature, [64]
Rules of conduct, [165]
Sailors, [11]
Salvation, [112]
Santayana, George, on Locke, [82]
Satisfaction, [157]
Savage, [85], [176]
Scholasticism, [30]
Science, [11], [23];
advance in, [53];
co-operative pursuit, [37];
estheticism and, reconciling, [127];
human value, [173];
industry and, [38], [41], [42];
natural, [42], [48];
open world of, [61];
origin, [12];
picture of universe, [64]-[65];
relation to experience, [95];
separation of natural and moral, [173];
so-called, [36];
traditional, [30]
Scientific revolution, [53]
Self-delusion, [140]
Self-interest, [194]-[195]
Sensations, [84];
as points of readjustment, [89];
relativity, [88]
Senses, [84], [87]
Sentimentalism, [73]
Shakespeare, [94]
Slavery, [191]
Social belief, [26]
Social development, [43]
Social evils, [182].
See also [Ills]
Social philosophy, reconstruction, [187];
reconstructive impact, [193]
Social unit, real, [204]
Social welfare, [180]
Sociality, [185]
Society, [200], [205];
defect of usual theories about, [188];
individuals and, three views, [187]-[188];
philosophy and, [124]
Socrates, [14], [17]
Soldiers, [139]
Sophists, [13], [14]
Space, [118]-[119], [120]
Spinoza, [106]
Standards, [175]
State, Aristotle's theory, [44];
contract theory, [45];
current conception, [200];
importance, [204];
individual and, [190], [191];
modern, [44];
origin, [44];
supremacy, [202], [203]
Subject and ruler, [44];
in nature, [64]
Success, [179]
Suggestions, [3], [6], [7]
Summum Bonum. See [Final good]
Supernaturalism, [47]
System, [98], [99]
Telegraph, [120]
Telephone, [120]
Terminology, [21]
Theories, [144], [145];
validity, [156]
Theory and practice, [140]
Things as they are, [115]
Thinking, habits, [74], [75].
See also [Thought]
Thomas, St. See [Aquinas]
[Thought], [117];
good and bad thinking, [136];
instrumental nature, [145]-[146];
its origin in difficulties, [138]-[139];
kinds, [135];
logic and, [134];
place, [96];
systems, [145]
Tolerance, [46]
Tradition, [14];
positive knowledge vs., [16]
Transitoriousness, [106]
Travel, [39], [40]
Trouble, [138], [140]
Truth, as utility, [157];
defining, [159]-[160];
logical conception, [156]-[157];
old and new, [33], [34];
pragmatic conception, [156], [159];
test of, nature of, [155], [166];
why the modern conception is offensive, [157], [158]
Unity, [108]
Universal, [64]
Universe, closed conception, [54]
Utilitarianism, defects, [181];
merit, [180];
need of reconstruction, [183]
Utility, [157]
Valves, [15]
Verification, [156]
Virtues, [164]
Vision, [21]
War, [204]
War, world, lesson, [129];
nationalistic phase, [201];
"real" and "ideal" in, [128]
Wealth, [40], [42], [125]
Wind, [11]
Work,
[181]
Workingmen, [139]
World, closed and open conceptions, [54], [60]-[61];
modern conception as material for change, [114];
nomenal and phenomenal, [23]
Transcriber's Notes:
Typos corrected:
(Chapter III) "Home Faber" to "Homo Faber"
(Index entry) "Summum Conum" to "Summum Bonum"
The text is in American-English but the Index seems to be done in British-English.
Below are some words in the Index which are different from the text:
| INDEX | TEXT |
|---|---|
| dramatisation | dramatization |
| labour | labor |
| mediaeval | medieval |
| Generalisations | Generalizations |
| mechanisation | mechanization (2 instances) |
| organisation | organization (2 instances) |
| Rationalisation | Rationalization |
| nomenal | noumenal (2 instances) |