[69] “A World of Pure Experience,” above, pp. [39-91].
[70] [For an explanation of this expression, see above, p. [32].]
[71] I call them ‘passing thoughts’ in the book—the passage in point goes from pages 330 to 342 of vol. i.
[72] Shadworth Hodgson has laid great stress on the fact that the minimum of consciousness demands two subfeelings, of which the second retrospects the first. (Cf. the section ‘Analysis of Minima’ in his Philosophy of Reflection, vol. i, p. 248; also the chapter entitled ‘The Moment of Experience’ in his Metaphysic of Experience, vol. i, p. 34.) ‘We live forward, but we understand backward’ is a phrase of Kierkegaard’s which Höffding quotes. [H. Höffding: “A Philosophical Confession,” Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, vol. ii, 1905, p. 86.]
[73] [Cf. below, pp. [197], [202].]
[74] [Cf. A Pluralistic Universe, Lect. iv, ‘Concerning Fechner,’ and Lect. v, ‘The Compounding of Consciousness.’]