A

Abstract science, discipline given by, 302-305, 445, 454; investigation of physical action, the province of, 302.

Action, relation to feeling. 342; not produced by cognition, 445-452.

Acts, building, 7; contagious disease, 115; parliamentary, 268 licensing, 379; public, 380, 381.

Adaptation of organisms to environ-ment, 387, 480, 481, 482; to social conditions, 482, 483; need for, 348.

Admiralty mismanagement, 216-217, 218.

Allotropic form, of oxygen, 304: of carbon,

304. Alton Locke, extract from, 52. Altruism, 251-255, 260, 268; individual,

479, 549.

Amity, religion of, 248-254; truths ig-nored by adherents to the religion of, 259-263.

Analogy, between individual and social organisms, 466-470.

Analysis, chief function of, 323.

Anomalies, manifested by human na-ture, 15-18.

Antagonistic creeds, 181; social states,

342, 358. Anti-patriotism, 314; bias of, 317; ex-ample of, 112; effect on sociological speculation, 311.

Anti-theological bias, distortions of judgment caused by, 421; errors from, 422,421.

Antithesis, series of, 47, 48.

Anti-Tobacco Society, report from, 111.

Appliances for discipline, 112; undue belief in, 165.

Art-museums, 484.

Aryan races, 472.

Astronomy, progress in, 105; sidereal, 208; idea of continuity from, 305; theories in, 545; charge against, 551.

Athanasian Creed, 418.

Athenian democracy, 265.

Atomicity, conception of, 304.

Atomic theory, 304.

Automorphic interpretation, 159,160; illustrations of, 161, 162; necessity for guarding against, 186.

Average intelligence, inadequate for guidance, 205, 206.

B

Barbarities, committed by Europeans, 212.

Bias educational, 13-36; patriotic, 86-119; class, 117-136; political, 230-254; theological, 250-269; of enmity, 267 ; of the wealthy, 270.

Biological truth, a check to rash political action, 44; underlying legislation, 77; laws, 80; use of, 102.

Biology, preparation in, 22; position assigned by M. Comte, 53; cardinal truth of, 78; contributions to, 130.

Buddhism, 293. Building acts, 6.Bureaucratic system, 166.

C

Calico, demand for, 19; consumption of,

19.

Causation, physical, 7; crude notions regarding, 39; fructifying, 51, 54; continuous, 428.

Changes, destructive and constructive, 17. Character, genesis of,39.Charles I., 229. Chemistry, progress in, 450,453. Circulating libraries, effect of,86. Civilization, course of, 88. Class-bias, 230, 341; illustrations of,

346-348; truth obscured by, 350, 352,

358. 395; in China, 549. Cognition, 445, 506. Commemorative structures, 182, 183. Commerce of literature, 86 221. Commons, enclosure of, 49; House of, 120,

215, 286, 376. Commune, reign of, 209. Comparative psychology of the sexes,

39-45. Compromise, between old and new beliefs, 248-250. Conceptions, complex, 6; sociological, 9,

21.

Conceptive faculty, want of, 175; plasticity

of, 175, 187. Conclusions, general, 204, 208. Concrete sciences, discipline given by, 228,

303, 305. Conformists, warped judgment of, 315. Confucius, maxims of, 511. Conservatism, 558. Consolidation, the result of war, 74, 136;

of Germany, 263.

Constitutions, belief in, 166; useful only when products of national character 305-310.

Continuity, conceptions of, 451, 2452. Co?perative industry, 227-229, 231. Corollary, from the doctrine of evolution,

219. Cotton, its price, 19,20. Courage, 41, 221; over-estimate of, 253,

256. Credulity, its coexistence with untruthfulness, 108.

Creeds, 114, 129; Athanasian, 250; reactions against the, 252; antagonistic, 267.

Crime not the result of ignorance, 290,

294. Cromwell,229.

D

Davy, experiments of, 304, 304. Democracy, a despotism, 373. Despotism, lesson of, from France, 166.

Difficulties of the social science, 11-13; objective, 40-74, 85; subjective, 104, 115-139, 186.

Discipline, mental, 9; effect on habits of thought, 288; acquired by study of abstract science, 14; acquired by study of physical science, 16, 45; sole study of physical science inadequate as a, 103, 165, 169.

Dissenting organizations, 315.

Divine government, outgrowths from theory of, 36.

—— strategist, 37.

Doctrine of averages, 43.

Domestic relations, 164, 176.

Drainage, 25, 85.

Dutch, not imaginative, 257.

E

Easter-eggs, 167.

Education, national, 13.

Educational institutions, 86, 87, 110.

Egoism, 521-254, 260, 266, 268; reflex, 269; general, 287.

Embodied power, emotion excited by, 119-120.

Emotion, effect on judgment, 71; illustrations, 72-74; excited by embodied power, 76-79.

Employed, conceptions of the, 136-143.

Employers, bias of, 345; mental attitude of,

350.

English, early history of the, 16-20; self-depreciation by, 37; ideas of the, 56; enterprises of the, 119; inventions

of the, 126; imagination of, 135; science, 137 improvidence, 140. Enmity, emotions enlisted by, 248, 248-253; religion of, 259.

Equilibrium, between fertility and mortality, 286; between conflicting sympathies and antipathies, 431.

Ether, units of, 429. Ethics, 308; utilitarian system of, 417. Evidence, untrustworthiness of historical,

11, 12; distorted, 13, 15, 82; perverted through confounding observation with inference, 84-90.

Evils, suppression of, 19; redistribution of,

22.

Evolution, process of, 46; individual, 73, 77; products of human, 79; arrest of, 81; study of, 82 charge against, 358; societies products of,88; effect of,