INDEX Annihilation of soul incapable of proof, 288 Anthropomorphism, xvii, 13, 276 Antinomies, 108-9 Appearance and Reality, 3, 101, 226; antithesis of, 183-203 Aristotle, 19-40, 67, 203. 205-27 passim, 268, 273 Arnold, Matthew, 2 Attention, why volatile, 217 Authority, argument from, 250, and old age, 241 Absolute, an abstraction, xviii; no starting point, xix; the death of morals, 2: its transcendence of distinctions, 3; triviality of its con- templation, 4; its monotony, 14, and irredeemable perfection, 14; as un- knowable and a useless theory. 41. and hence to be called false, 59; as explaining objectivity, 60, 286-7; Lotze's theory of, 62-84; suppresses difficulties ex officio, 108; an inter- pretation of reality, 119-20; a mis- conception, 126; unites God and the Automata, 133-4 devil, 167, 287; Bradley's, 187-91; as asylum ignorantiæ, 188; trans- mutes appearances, 189, 199; un- knowable, 191; inaccessible, 192; neither divine nor conscious, 287 Absolute Idea, 96, 102-3 Absolutism, xxiv Abstraction, the kingdom of, xviii; from time and individuality, 98-9; its value, 100-2 its teleological subordination, 104 as instrument, 120; mathe- matical, why judged real, 120; as method of simplification, 145-8; produces timelessness, 212 Accidents not distinct from essence, 222 an Activity, purposive, condition of know- ledge, 12 speculative, 25-6; of intelligence, 130; of Mephisto, 180, and substance, 204-27; transcend- ing change, 205 of divine life, 212; motion as, 214; is substance, 225 Actuality, 67, 208, 224, 226 Adaptation, argument from, to adapter, 131; its imperfection, 131; shown by Darwin to be conceivable without adapter, 132, origin of, 142; growth of, 142; novelty of, 143; not due to natural selection. 154; instantaneous in perfect life, 215-6 Alice, 284 Baldwin, J. M., 8 Balfour, Arthur, viii, 6 Barbarism, and Humanism, xxii Bateson, W., 135 Beatific Vision, 203, 212 Beauty, ideal of, 259-60 Becoming, 107, 118, 207, 208, 210, 216-7 Being, and nothing, xviii; Aristotle's ideal of, 205, 226; unchanging, 207, 216-7 as perfect barmony, 225 Berkeley, 126, 223 Bradley, F. H., 3, 38, 96, 101, 108, 183-201 passim Buddha, 158, 168 Burnet, J., 212 Calculus of probabilities, 126, 150 Calinon, 86, 89 Carroll, Lewis, 53, 216 Causation, 64; immanent-not more intelligible than transient, 68-9 Cave-dwellers, 21, 23, 41, 43 Chance as originating world, 72; as excluding intelligence, 150 Change, and identity, 69; problem of, 73, 101 endangers adaptation, 143; as fact, 188; as defect, 211 Coexistence and interaction, 65 Cognition as moral act, 15 Analysis of 'complex' and 'simple,' 56 Coherence a psychological fact, 52-3; Anaximander, 156 feelings of, 52; not always logical, 291
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