124.
Examinations, results obtained from, 125-127.
F
Factors, cooperative, 10. Faculty, complexity of, 103; illustrations
of, 128, 161; absence of, 168. Fallacies, popular, 374-377. Fertility, balance by mortality, 302. Fetichism, 429. Feudal system, 132, 139. Figures of speech, 123. Fijians, 178, 227, 256. Force, correlation and equivalence of, 262.
Froude’s opinions regarding social science, 372-379.
French, undue self-estimation by, 7; soldiers, 37; poets, 37; administration, 50; Academy, 137-141; language, 165, 166; Revolution, 178-180, 209; lesson from the, 210.
Functions, preparation for, 42; adjustment of special powers to, 46.
G
Gambling, grounds of reprobation, 425. Generosity in women, 185. Genesis of character, 307. —— of facts, 309. —— of the great man, 10-12. —— of the belief in universal history,
17-18. Geology, progress in, 49; idea of continuity from, 53. Germany, self-sufficiency of, 15; national
costume of, 17. Gin, quantity, distilled in England, 380. Gladstone’s theory, 552. Government, its duty, 7, 8; officers of, 36;
regulative agency of, 54. Great artificer, 7. Great-man theory of history, 42, 43, 46;
error concerning, 546. Greeks, 316, 522, 553.
H
Hamlet, quotation from,379. Hate, effect on judgment, 209-215.
Heat, as a mode of motion, 10.
Heredity, 472, 521, 530.
Historical evidence, untrustworthy-ness of, 16, 36.
Historical sequence denied by Canon Kingsley, 39.
History of England, 36; science of, 13; limits of exact science as applied to, 37; scientific method as applied to,
77. Hopes, visionary, 6, 8. Human nature, indefinitely modifiable, 15;
slow changes in, 16, 20. Hyde Park, 342; riots in, 343. Hypothesis of atoms and molecules, 429.
I
Iconoclasm, example of, 421. Ideas, relative faith in, 428, 446. Ignorance not the cause of crime, 508. Illusions, optical, 110, 121. Impatience, effect of this emotion, 206,
209. Improvidence of the English, 507-510. Infanticide, 298. Institutions, self-preservation of, 13. Insurance companies, 113. Intellectual culture, moralizing effects of,
124; appliances to, 129. Intelligence, average, 172, 173; cultivated,
175. Intuition, guidance by, 325; power of, 503. Invariants, theory of, 303. Ipecacuanha, 218.
J
Japanese, 522.
Jews, 17.
Judgments, 24; affected by coexisting
emotion, 89, 112, 206, 209; effect of
love and hate on, 225-231. Juggernaut, 522. Justice, abstract, 523
K
Kingsley’s views regarding social science, 51-54. Knowledge, second-hand, 53; effects on moral culture, 77, 88.
L
Laissez-faire policy, 391, 483. Land tenure, system regulating, 527. Language, use of old forms of, 44. Law, 49-51; reverence for, 71. Legislation, rational, 87. Licensing, act, 379. Locomotion, appliances for, 84.Logic, 102; discipline given by, 108. Loyalty, 226, 227.
M
Married life, healthfulness of, 116; cir-cumstances which determine, 122-124.
Master-builder, 132.
Mathematics, 173; discipline given by,
302. Matthew Arnold’s method, 297-300;
statements of, 199-210. Mechanics, 74. Mental science, truth taught by,77. Mercantile marine, inspection of, 85. Metamorphoses, 226, 467. Meteorology, 48. Mind, laws of, 52, 74; true theory of, 82. Modifiability of species, 464; of man, 300,
306-308; of all organic begins, 308. Monogamy, 176, 177. Moral code, operativeness of, 188,
212. —— nature, effects of war on, 227. —— teaching, effects of, 251-254. Mordaunt cases, 387. Mortality, 111; of children, 122; statistics
of, 122; rate of, 205, 213; decrease in the causes of, 217. Murders, committed in England, 198; by foreigners, 266, 293.
“Must-do-something” impulse, 21, 22; result of deficient knowledge, 24. Mutual dependence, of parts, 73, 181; of
sociology and biology, 208.
N
Napoleon, his despotism, 213, 214.
Nature of the aggregate determined by the nature of the units, 221-226; objection to this theory, 227.
Naval and Military Bible Society, 116.
Nonconformists, judgment warped by theological bias, 315. Non-restraint system, 15.
O
Observations, systematic, 14.Old beliefs, reaction from, 5, 7. Old-English periods, 175. Optical illusions, 121.Organization, regulative, 8; mutual
dependence of parts necessary to, 13,
18.
P
Parable of the sower, application of, 463. Parenthood, mental influence of, 516. Parliament, acts of, 5; member of, 7. Patriotism, 230, 286; effects on beliefs,
287, 288; leads to a low estimate of other peoples, 188, 289, 290; effects on sociological judgments, 296, 359.
Personal equation, 12. —— interests, 787. Phenomena,102; interpretation of, 103. Philanthropy, a means of evil, 113. Policy, 131, 133; conducive to
improvement, 185.
Political bias, 6; perverting effects of, 7; subtle form of,8; opposed to sociological conceptions, 9, 13.
—— economy, 16, 17; flaws in, 18; laws
of, 19. —— instrumentalities, 36-39. Polyandry, 176.
Poor-laws, examples of, 529, 94. Positive philosophy, faith pervading, 50.Positivism, 195. Power, manifestation of, 6; reverence for,
8,; its influence on political beliefs,
20. Preglacial period, 126. Press, 7. Prevision, 21; scientific, 38; of social
phenomena, 39; impossible, 47;
possible 48, 49, 74. Prodromus Flor? Nov?-Hollandi?,307. Progress in chemistry, 43, 44; in