[599] Ibid. p. 164.

[600] Ibid. pp. 320-22.

[601] Fragment, p. 102.

[602] Ibid. p. 162.

[603] Analysis, p. 73.

[604] Fragment, p. 209.

[605] Fragment, p. 316.

[606] At one point, as J. S. Mill notes, he speaks of an 'unsatisfied desire' as a motive, which seems to indicate a present feeling; but this is not his usual view.—Analysis, ii. 361, 377 n.

[607] Analysis, ii. 233 n. Mill adds that though his father explains the 'intellectual,' he does not explain the 'animal' element in the affections. This, however, is irrelevant for my purpose.

[608] Fragment, pp. 51-52.