[267] Fragments de Philosophie Cartésienne, p. 429: Des Rapports du Cartésienisme et du Spinozisme.
[268] Part 1st, lectures [1] and [2].
[271] On Condillac, 1st Series, vol. i., passim, and particularly vol. iii., lectures 2 and 3.
[272] We have never spoken of Locke except with sincere respect, even while combating him. See 1st Series, vol. i., course of 1817, Discours d'Ouverture, vol. ii., lecture 1, and especially 2d Series, vol. iii., passim.
[273] See 1st Series, vol. iv., lectures on Reid.
[274] Ibid., vol. v.
[275] For more than twenty years we have thought of translating and publishing the three Critiques, joining to them a selection from the smaller productions of Kant. Time has been wanting to us for the completion of our design; but a young and skilful professor of philosophy, a graduate of the Normal School, has been willing to supply our place, and to undertake to give to the French public a faithful and intelligent version of the greatest thinker of the eighteenth century. M. Barni has worthily commenced the useful and difficult enterprise which we have remitted to his zeal, and pursues it with courage and talent.
[276] Part 1st, [Lecture 3].