Tissot translates Kant into French, [61].

Torricelli, experiments of, [8].

Transcendentalism, chiefly communicated through German literature, [51];
influence on German literature, [51];
its apostles in the New World, [103];
in New England, [105];
borders on Platonism, [107];
an enlarged orthodoxy, [108];
imported in foreign packages, [115];
Quakerism compared with, [119];
advocated by James Walker, [122];
attacked by Andrews Norton, [123];
legitimate fruits of, [143];
defined by Emerson, [127];
literary achievements of, [132];
essentially poetic, [134];
a distinct system of philosophy, [136];
misconceptions of, [138];
practical usefulness of the disciples of, [140];
objections to, [149];
inaugurated the practice of dietetics, [150];
favorable to all reform movements, [155];
ideas of women, [181];
relation to questions of religion, [184];
reaction against sensationalism, [189];
the faith of, [190-192];
asserts immortality of the soul, [193-196];
accepts the miracles, [201];
its view of Christianity, [204];
superseded by idealism, [215];
as a gospel, [302];
end of one phase of, [332];
defined by Bartol, [342];
minor followers of, [355-356];
literature of, [357-372].

Trinitarianism of Platonic origin, [107];
avowed by idealists, [109];
its debt to Unitarianism, [113].

Tuckerman, H. T., writes for Southern Literary Messenger, [92].

Tübingen, follower of the Hegelian idea, [186].

Tyndall, John, address of, quoted, [210];
objections to, by Taine, [212].

U.

Unitarians, the, belong to the school of Locke, [109];
of New England, [110];
friends to free thought, [114].

Unitarianism represented in England by Priestley, [115].