[12] The religious character of nationalism has been forcibly brought out by Carleton Hayes, in his “Essays on Nationalism,” especially Chap. IV.
[13] J. S. Mill, Logic, Book VI, ch. 7, sec. I. Italics mine.
INDEX
- Absolutism, in method, [194–202]
- Amusements, rivals to political interest, [139]
- Anarchism, [26]
- Aristotle, [4], [8], [138]
- Art, of communication, [182–84]
- Association, a universal fact, [22–23], [34], [151], [181];
- distinctive traits of human, [24];
- revolt against, [88], [98–100];
- economic, [105–07];
- and democracy, [143];
- rigid and flexible, [148];
- distinguished from community, [151–53];
- domination of isolated, [194];
- territorial and functional, [212–13].
- See [Community], [Groups], [Society]
- Attachment, a political need, [140], [214]
- Ayers, C. E., [59] n.
- Bentham, J., [54] n.
- Biological, and social, [11–12], [152], [195]
- Business, rival to political interest, [138];
- political control by, [182].
- See [Economic Forces]
- Carlyle, T., [102], [110]
- Causal forces, and state, [9], [17–21], [25], [36], [37], [47], [53], [65], [66];
- versus the causal order, [201–02]
- Child Labor Amendment, [121]
- Common Interest, nature of, [17], [34–35].
- See [Consequences], [Public]
- Communication, a public function, [60], [208];
- social necessity of, [152], [217–19];
- necessary to knowledge, [176–79];
- an art, [182–84].
- See [Symbols]
- Community, [38];
- and society, [98], [157];
- conditioning wants, [105–06];
- and communication, [152–54];
- importance of local, [211–19].
- See [Great Society]
- Comparative Method, [47]
- Conjoint Behavior, see [Association]
- Conscience, private, origin of, [49–50]
- Consequences, importance of for politics, [12–13], [15], [17], [24–25], [27], [32], [39], [43], [47], [65], [126], [156], [197];
- effect of expansion, [47–57];
- and rules of law, [56];
- effect of enduring, [57–62];
- effect of irreparable, [62–64];
- relation to state and government, [66–69];
- to antithesis of individual and social, [193]
- Control, political, [12], [16];
- of human nature, [197–99]
- Cooley, C. H., [97] n.
- Corporations, illustration of relation of individual and social, [190]
- Democracy, political, [77];
- significance of, [83];
- historic genesis, [83–87];
- alleged unity, [83];
- pure, [94];
- and “individualism”, [86–96];
- inchoate, [109];
- pessimism about, [110];
- American, [111–15];
- as a moral idea, [143–44];
- machinery of
- political, [143–46];
- nature of ideal, [147–51];
- and experts, [203–08];
- and local community, [212]
- Descartes, R., [88]
- De Tocqueville, [20]
- Direct Action, [31]
- Dissemination, and social knowledge, [176–77];
- physical means of, [179];
- and art, [182–84].
- See [Communication]
- Dynastic States, [89]
- Economic Determinism, [118–89], [155–56]
- Economic Forces and Politics, [89–93], [98], [100], [103–07], [114], [118–20], [129–31], [141–42], [144], [155], [175], [182]
- Education, and social control, [197–99];
- and absolutistic method, [200];
- and political democracy, [206–08]
- Electoral College, [111]
- Emerson, R. W., [217]
- Equality, nature of, [149–50]
- Experimental Method, in politics, [194–202];
- defined, [203]
- Experts, importance of, [123–25], [136–37];
- and democracy, [203–04]
- Factions, [119]
- Facts, and meanings, [3];
- physical and social, [6–7], [11–12];
- and theories, [17]
- Farmers, condition of, [129–30]
- Gerontocracy, [78]
- Government, and the public, [27–28], [32], [33], [37], [65–69];
- as representative, [76];
- dynastic, [81–82];
- fear of, [86], [90], [92];
- economic control of, [107];
- and opinion, [192–93]
- Great Society, The, [96], [98], [126], [128], [142], [147], [155], [157], [184]
- Groups, and the state, [4], [26], [71–73];
- local, [41–42].
- See [Community]
- Habit, political effects, [61], [169];
- and “individualism,” [158–61]
- Hayes, C., [170] n.
- Hegel, G. W. F., [28], [71]
- History, continuity of, [161];
- contemporaneous, [179]
- Hocking, W. E., quoted, [57]
- Hudson, W. H., quoted, [40–41]
- Hume, D., [56]
- Individual, antithesis to social, [13–15], [23], [63], [88], [147], [151], [186–191];
- and acts, [18], [21];
- and officials, [18], [75], [82];
- and invention, [58];
- economic, [91];
- as fiction, [102], [157–58];
- defined, [186–88]
- Individualism, origin of, [22], [87–94];
- and private property, [61];
- explanation of, [98–102];
- influence, [116];
- economic, [134];
- and collectivism, [186–193];
- and method, [195].
- See [Psychology]
- Instincts, and social theory, [9–12]
- Intelligence, necessary for social facts, [12], [24], [151–62], [188];
- and democracy, [208–10];
- embodied, [200–01].
- See [Consequences], [Knowledge]
- Interdependence, [155]
- James, W., quoted, [159–60]
- Justice, and property, [92]
- Kings’s Peace, [48]
- Knowledge, political, [162–67];
- divided, [175];
- and communication, [176–79], [218–19]
- Labor Legislation, [62]
- Laissez-faire, [91], [134]
- Law, not command, [53–54];
- nature of, [54–57];
- “natural,” [90], [95], [102], [155];
- social and physical, [196–97]
- Legal Institutions, [16], [47]
- Liberalism, [134]
- Liberty, made an end in itself, [86];
- and “individualism,” [98–100], [192–94];
- nature of, [150];
- of thought, [168–70];
- and uniformity, [215–16]
- Lippmann, W., [116] n, [158]
- Locke, J., on natural rights, [87]
- Macaulay, [102]
- Majorities and Minorities, [207–08]
- Materialism, [173–74]
- Method, problem of, [192–203]
- Mill, J., theory of democratic government, [93–95]
- Mill, J. S., [195]
- Mobility, social effect, [140]
- Nationalism, [170]
- News, [179–81]
- Officers, agents of public, [16], [17], [33], [35], [67–68], [75];
- dual capacity, [77], [82];
- selection of, [78–82]
- Opinion, [177], [179]
- Parties, [119–21]
- Paternalism, [62]
- Perception, see [Intelligence], [Consequences]
- Pioneer Conditions, effect on American democracy, [111]
- Pluralism, political, [73–74]
- Populus, defined, [16]
- Private, defined, [15].
- See [Public].
- Prohibition, [132–33]
- Propaganda, [181–82]
- Property, and government, [91–93].
- See [Economic Forces].
- Psychology, of habit, [61], [159–60];
- of individualism, [88];
- of private consciousness, [100], [158];
- social effects of science of, [197–99]
- Public, and private, [12–17], [47–52];
- and political agencies, [31], [35], [38], [67];
- marks of, [39–64];
- ownership, [61];
- democratic, [77];
- education, [112–13];
- eclipse of, [115], [122], [131], [137], [185];
- problem of, [125], [185], [208], [216];
- complexity of, [126];
- as intellectual problem, [152];
- and publicity, [167–171], [219];
- and opinion, [177]
- Railways, and government, [133–34]
- Reason, and the state, [20];
- and law, [55–57]
- Religion, and social institutions, [41], [49], [169–70]
- Rights, natural, [87], [95], [102]
- Rousseau, J. J., [155]
- Rulers, see [Officers], [Government]
- Santayana, G., quoted, [211]
- Science, distinction from knowledge, [163–65], [172];
- social and physical, [171], [179], [199];
- and the press, [181–82];
- applied, [172–76];
- method, [201]
- Smith, Adam, [13], [89]
- Smith, T. V., [147] n
- “Socialization,” [70]
- Society, human, [24–25];
- and states, [26–29], [69–74], [147–49].
- See [Association], [Community], [Consequences], [Great Society], [Groups], [Individual], [Public].
- Spencer, H., [63], [79]
- Symbols, social import of, [141–42], [152–54], [218]
- Tariff, [131–32]
- Theocracy, [41], [49], [80]
- Tilden, S. J., [208]
- Theories, political, [4], [5], [8], [85].
- See [Causal Forces], [Economic Forces], [Individualism], [Mill, J.], [Utilitarianism]
- Toleration, [49–51]
- Tradition, revolt against, [86]
- Utilitarianism, [91]
- Wallas, G., [96]
- Wants, individualistic theory of, [102];
- socially conditioned, [103–04]
- War, and selection of rulers, [79];
- the World, [127–28]
- Whitman, Walt, [184]
- Will, as cause of state, [20], [38];
- and the command theory of law, [53];
- and government, [68];
- general, [153]
- Wilson, Woodrow, quoted, [96–97]
- Workers, political neglect and emancipation, [99–100].
- See [Economic Forces]
Transcriber’s Notes
Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.
Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.
The index was not checked for proper alphabetization or correct page references.
Footnotes, originally at the bottoms of the pages on which they were referenced, have been collected, renumbered, and placed just before the Index.
Some page numbers in the Table of Contents are out of sequence, as they were in the original book.