[251:17] Quoted by Lange: Op. cit., II, p. 113.
[252:18] The phrase "psycho-physical parallelism," current in psychology, may mean automatism of the kind expounded above, and may also mean dualism. It is used commonly as a methodological principle to signify that no causal relationship between mind and body, but one of correspondence, is to be looked for in empirical psychology. Cf. § [99].
[255:19] Quoted by Ward: Op. cit., I, p. 18.
[256:20] There are times when Huxley, e. g., would seem to be on the verge of the Berkeleyan idealism. Cf. [Chap. IX].
[256:21] For the case of Karl Pearson, read his Grammar of Science, Chap. II.
[261:22] Pater: The Renaissance, pp. 249-250.
[262:23] Hobbes: Leviathan, Chap. XV.
[265:24] Quoted from Balfour: Foundations of Belief, pp. 29-31.
[265:25] Ferguson: Religion of Democracy, p. 10.
[266:26] Haeckel: Op. cit., p. 344.