LECTURE IV

Note 1, page 143.—The Spirit of Modern Philosophy, p. 227.

Note 2, page 165.—Fechner: Über die Seelenfrage, 1861, p. 170.

Note 3, page 168.—Fechner's latest summarizing of his views, Die
Tagesansicht gegenüber der Nachtansicht
, Leipzig, 1879, is now, I
understand, in process of translation. His Little Book of Life after
Death
exists already in two American versions, one published by
Little, Brown & Co., Boston, the other by the Open Court Co., Chicago.

Note 4, page 176.—Mr. Bradley ought to be to some degree exempted from my attack in these last pages. Compare especially what he says of non-human consciousness in his Appearance and Reality, pp. 269-272.

LECTURE V

Note 1, page 182.—Royce: The Spirit of Modern Philosophy, p. 379.

Note 2, page 184.—The World and the Individual, vol. ii, pp. 58-62.

Note 3, page 190.—I hold to it still as the best description of an enormous number of our higher fields of consciousness. They demonstrably do not contain the lower states that know the same objects. Of other fields, however this is not so true; so, in the Psychological Review for 1895, vol. ii, p. 105 (see especially pp. 119-120), I frankly withdrew, in principle, my former objection to talking of fields of consciousness being made of simpler 'parts,' leaving the facts to decide the question in each special case.

Note 4, page 194.—I abstract from the consciousness attached to the whole itself, if such consciousness be there.