The rewards and punishments of conscience, 59, 60.
The self-complacency of virtuous men, 64, 65, and note.
The motive to virtue, according to Shaftesbury and Henry More, 76.
Analogies of beauty and virtue, 77.
Their difference, 78.
Diversities existing in our judgments of virtue and beauty, 79, 80.
Virtues to which we can and cannot apply the term beautiful, 82.
The standard, though not the essence, of virtue, determined by the condition of society, 109.
Summary of the relations of virtue to public and private interest, 117.
Emphasis with which the utility of virtue was dwelt upon by Aristotle, 124.