; as
mathematical
physics, Des
cartes, 393 ; Bacon's def.
cartes, 393 ; Bacon's def.
Windelband - History of Philosophy
; sovereignty of, 660 ; problems of, see Epistemology.
397-399 distinction between eternal and contingent truths, 398 prin ciple of sufficient reason, 309 atti tude toward mechanism and tele ology, 420-426, 694 (627) dynamical standpoint, 421, 666 monadology, 422 ff. pre-established harmony, 424, 483 anticipation of principle of evolution, 421-424, 656 on innate ideas, 462-464 on knowledge of ex ternal world, 483; theodicy, 491 f. , 672 optimism, 492, 673 ethical principle of perfection, 605 influence on Kant, 465, 635, 538, 566 on Fries, 576 Reinhold, 676 Maimon, 578 contrasted with Fichte, 593 influ ence on Hegelians, 632, 640 cf. also 379, 483 486 f. , 490, 494, 601, 511, 619, 627, 683.
Leroux, 628.
Lessing, 439, 446, 497, 498
Leucippus, 29 42 62 ff. , 60, 108,
111, 128
Lewes, 11, 630.
Lewis, 629.
Liberatore, 631.
Liebmann, 633, 642.
Life, as principle of explanation with
Knutzen, 444.
Koppen, 660.
Krause, 660, 571, 610. Krug, 573, 681. KrUger, 445.
Laas, 633.
Labanca, 631.
Labriola, 631.
Labruyere, 515.
Lactantius, 217.
Ladd, 630.
Lamarck, 480, 653, 666. Lambert, 446, 461, 480. Lamennais, 628, 649. Lamettrie, 442, 465 ff. , 470 Lancelin, 622.
Ionics, 32
Leibniz, 422
theory, 666
Schelling's philos. of Nature, 698.
by Sophists, 87 96; by Abelard, 306 by Ramus, 381 Locke on, 451 Condillac, 478 Humboldt, 602 de Bonald, 648.
on knowledge of external world, 467 on existence of God, 469 attitude toward rationalism, 694 (452 note) on toleration, 487 ethics, 502 f. , 513 on the state. 519 influ ence in France, 456 ff. developed by Berkeley, 469 and Hume, 472 criticised by Leibniz, 462-464 cf. also 114, 391, 404, 537.
516, 641.
Lips, 355.
Littre", 628.
Locke, leader of English
Lanfranc, 276.
Lange, 633, 642.
Language, bearing on philos. studies 692 (440) psychology, 450 f. , 453;
Languet, 433.
Laplace, 470
Larochefoucauld, 515.
Laromiguiere, 627, 634
Latitudinarians, 486.
Law, first grasped clearly by Heraclitus, Logic, defined, 20 Sophists, 88 ff.
37, 50 suggested by mathematics and astronomy, Pythagoreans, 56 relation to Nature, 73 emphasised by Democritus, 111 by Stoics, 181 contrasted with fact, 398, 566 as general fact, Comte, 651 of Nature, as moral authority, Stoics, 171 Cicero, 177 Abelard, 308 Thomas, 326 Renaissance, 435 Enlighten ment, 503; in history, 652-664; see Nature and Right; cf. 299 note 2.
Lazarus, 631, 642.
Leech in an, 629.
Lefevre, 864.
Leibniz, writings, 382, 444 life, 443
Socrates, 97 Plato's, or dialectic, 119 ff. Aristotle's, 132-138, 686
character, 693 (444) his method, metaphysical, of Hegel, 611 ff. , 645;
(142) 198
Peripatetics, 197 Stoics, hypostatisation of logical pro
with Aristotle, 141 with as limit to mechanical as central conception of
Enlighten ment, 439 life and writings, 440.
by Porphyry and Proclus,
cesses
250
270
metaphysical, 290, 686 (142) formal logic the only possible for empiricism, 360 of Ramus, 361 terrainistic of Occam, 342 Hobbes, 404 Con dillac, 478 developed by Hamilton and others to an algebraic calculus, 629, 639 transcendental, of Kant, 543 this attacked by Herbart, 583
main topic of Middle Ages, logical relations identified with
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Index. 713
recent tendencies, 060 ; the logical 450-468, 479 ff. ; culminates in the
inadequate to explain reality, 143, 341, 399, 425, 476, 485, 6«tJ, 041, 647 (. ,676 ; see also Dialectic, Realism.
Logos, doctrine of, with Heraclitus, 36 Stoics, 180 186; influence of Stoic doctrine on Christian, 223 Philo's doctrine of, 241 f. j Origen, 254.
Longiuus, 218, 233. Lossius, 445, 461.
Loue, 624, 632, 643 Lowndes, 629.
Lucretius, 162, 686 (162). Lullus, 315, 321, 397. Luther, 356, 364
Lyceum, see Peripatetic School. Lycopbron, 74
Mably, 443, 523.
Maccbiavelli, 382, 426
Mach, 651.
Mackenzie. 630.
Mackintobb, 629.
Macrocosm and microcosm, 187, 366 ff.
422
Magiienus, 356.
Maieulic, 97.
Maignanus, 356.
Maimon. 670, 678, 696 (670). Maimonides, 318 (. , 321.
Mainlander, 633.
Maistre, Jos. de, 627, 648. Malebranclie, 379, 381, 406, 407, 410,
416 f. , 436, 471, 486, 636, 661 note. Mamiani, 631.
Man, identified with animal world,
62 f. , 453 466 f. ; as measure, 92 as centre of creation and end of history, 261 as microcosm, 347, 369 ff. reverence for, Kant's ma terial principle, 553 as object of religious veneration, Comte, 652 capacity for perfection, 626, 672.
Mandeville, 441, 516 f. , 624
Hani and Manicbtelsm, 239 L, 286. Manael, 629, 638.
Marcianus Capella, 273, 298.
Marcion, 221, 258.
Marcus Aurelius, 213, 216, 230. Mariana, 382.
Marsh, 630.
Marailius of Inghen, 316.
Marsilius of Padua, 345, 426, 432. Martin, 627.
MarUneau, II. , 629.
Martineau, Jas. , 630.
Marx, 632. 666.
Materialism, of Leucippua, 43 of
Democritus, 108, 109 ft; of Epicu reans, 183-186; of Stoics, 186; of Hobbes, 413 of Spinoxa'a adherents, 464 of Hartley, etc. , 466 f. ; ranch,
Hyiteme de la Nature, 481 in psy chology of nineteenth century, 634 of Feuerbacb, 641, 666 moral, 671 recent, 642 as philos. of history, 656.
Mathematics, with Pythagoreans, 46- 47, 66 f. ; in Plato's system, 129 in fluence on modern philos. , 372 379, 387-389, 396-391); on Spinoza, 396, 418; on Comte, 651, 653; distin guished from philos. by Kant, 486 the sole demonstrative science with Hume, 473 how possible, 639 ff. see also Geometrical Method.
Matter, cosmic, of Ionics, 32 Auaxi- mander, 33; opposed to form by Aristotle, 139 ff. accessory cause, 144 Non-being or space with Plo- tinus, 246 f. j evil, 247 regarded as self-moved, etc. , by Averroes, 338; identified with space by Descartes and Spinoza, 406, 410 Kant's dy namic theory of, 646 contradiction in conception of, Herbart, 684.
Maupertuis, 442, 478, 489. Maximus Couf. , 274. Maximus of Tyre, 216. Mayer. 633, 655.
McCosh, 629.
Mechanics, created by Galileo, 388 in
fluence on philos. . 400 f. ; lit. of, 692
(380) recent theories, 651. Mechanism and mechanical view of world, Leucippua, 53 with Strato,
179; Epicurus, 183; Galileo, Des cartes, Spinoza, 401 opposed by Cudworth, etc. , 401 reconciled with teleology by Leibniz, 420 ff. ; opposed by Schelling and Goethe, 598 influential in this century, 624 in associational psychology, 635 see also Materialism, Natural ism.
Medici, Cosmo d\ 364.
Medicine, independent origin, etio
logical, 66 magical, with Paracelsus,
373.
Megarians, 70 (. , 82, 89.
Meier, F. , 446.
Meiners, 446.
Melancthon. 356, 359, 364, 486. Melissus, 28, 30, 44.
Melito, 217.
Mendelssohn, 446, 478, 483, 607, 612,
52
Menedemus, 72.
Metaphysics, origin of name, 19
grounded anew by Democritus and Plato, 104 Plato's teleologies! , 128 connected with logic, 133 of Aris totle, 139 ff. of Theophrastus, 178 of Stoics, 180; religious, 214 ff. ; of
;
f.
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714 Index.
logical genera and species, 271 if. ; Montaigne, 35o, 362, 376, 403.
of inner experience, 278 ff. ; logical, Montesquieu, 443, 610.
of Realism, 290 ff. ; of Nominalism, Moral law, with Kant, 552 ; see Ethics.
296 ; of psychology, 323 f. ; Boehme's,
374 f.
; as mathematical physics, Des
cartes, 393 ; Bacon's def. of, 401 ;
Spinoza's, 408 ff. ; Leibniz, 420 ff. ;
Wolff, 482 ; Berkeley, 470 ; as basis for
morals, 503 f. ; Kant's attitude toward, More, Thomas, 382, 427 ff. 466, 478, 480, 537 ; of intellectual per Morell, 029.
ception, 592 ; of the irrational, 610 ff. ; Morelly, 443, 623. Lotze's, 044 ; recent idealistic, 042; Morgan, 441. historical with Comte, 652. Morgan, Lloyd, 630.
Method, maieutic of Socrates, 97 ; Moritz, 445.
modified by Plato, 118 f. ; Aristotle's Motekallemin, 317.
deductive, 137 ff. ; scholastic, 312, 344 ; Motion, as basis of mediating attempts,
inductive, 97, 118, 137, 344, 384 ;
problem raised in Renaissance, 378,
383 ; of Bacon, 383 ; of Galileo and
Kepler, 388; of Descartes, 389 ff. ; basis of feelings with Cyrenaics, 86
of Hobbes, 389 ; Descartes' method
misunderstood by his disciples, 395 ;
geometrical, supreme with Spinoza.
396 f. ; continued by Wolff, 482;
criticized by Rudiger and Crusius, conservation of, Descartes, 411.
484 f. , exploded by Kant, 485; in Motives, Greek theories, 72, 75, 79 f. ;
Metrodorus, 76, 684 (30). Metrodorus the Epicurean, 162. Michael Psellos, 342. Microcosm, see Macrocosm. Milesians, 28 f. , 32 ff. , 48 ff. Mill, James, 629, 665.
Mill, J. Stuart, 629, psychology and method, 635, 654, 660 ; ethics, 666-667.
Milton, 433.
pfcnpit, 47, 120.
Mind (see Spirit, Soul, Psychology),
mode of consciousness, 406.
Minucius Felix, 214, 217, 224.
Mode, all bodies and minds modes
of spatiality and consciousness, Des cartes, 406"; infinite and finite of Spinoza, 409 f. ; everything a mode of both attributes, 420.
Moderatus, 215.
Moleschott, 632.
Monad, Bruno's conception of, 371,
Leibniz, 423.
Monism, original presupposition, 32 ff. ;
metaphysical, of the Eleatics, 37 ff. ; of the spirit, in Neo-Platonism, 240 ff. ; in the Renaissance, 367 ff. ; modern so-called, 632, 643.
Monotheism, pantheistic with Xeno- phaiies, 34 ; of Cynics, 86 ; theistic with Aristotle, 146 f. ; as final form of religion, 497 f.
Morals, I'lato's, 125 ff. ; ascetic, 230 ; in eighteenth century, 502 ff. ; of master
" and slaves, 679 ; see Ethics. Moral sense," 509, 517.
More, Henry, 382, 402, 404, 435, 460, 60S.
39 ; the essence of change, 43 ; early theories of its cause, 52 ff. ; contra dictions in conception of, Zeno, 55
of perceptions with Protagoras, 92 with Deinocritus, 113 f. , 115 f. ; with Aristotle, 147 f. ; made cause of all cosmic processes by Galileo, 388, 410 ;
adequacy of psychological, recog nised by Kant, 633 ; critical of Kant, 633 ; dialectical of Fichte and Hegel, 591 f. ; historical compared with that of natural science, 048, 651, 653 f. , 667, 660.
eighteenth century, 501, 614-517 ;
Mill, 060 ; see Freedom, and Will. Music, theory of Pythagoreans, 46. Musonius, 210.
Mutazilin, 318.
Mysteries, 124, 685 (123).
Mystics and Mysticism, source in Neo-
Platonism, 227 ; a factor of Med. philos. , 260 ff. , 275, 304 ff. , 333, 409, 487, 583 ; of Biran, 636.
Myths, with the Sophists, 76 ; Plato, 102, 123, 687 (123) ; Stoics, 189 f. ; Gnostics, 243 f. ; Schelling, 619.
Naive and sentimental, 004 f. Nativism, 539 note 1.
Naturalism of Strato, 179 ; of Arabians.
338 ; of Renaissance, 401 ff. ; of En lightenment, 479 ff. , 627; see also Materialism, Mechanism.
Natural law, see Law, and Right. Natural religion, 486 ff. ; see Deism, and
Religion.
Natural selection, 63, 656 f. , 672. Natural science, among the Greeks,
27 ff. ; daughter of Humanism, 351 ; favoured by Nominalism, 343 f. , 376 ; its decisive influence on modern philos. , 378 ; how possible, Kant, 641 ff. ; influence in nineteenth cen tury, 624 f. , 648 ff. ; its method compared with that of history, 648, 661,663 f. , 667, 660.
NaluraNaturans andNatura Xaturata, probably first used by Averroism, 330, 338 ; with Eckhart, 335 f. ; with Bruno, 368 f. ; with Spinoza, 400.
(488).
171 f. ; regarded as equivalent to law, Neo-Pythagoreans, 117 uote
123, 233, 237,
stitution, 436 Kant's philos. of,
540 purposivenessof, 659 ff. , 665 ff.
specification of, 500 as objectifica-
lion of will, Schopenhauer, 689 Nigidius Figulus, 215. Schelling's philos. of, 597 . Goethe's
Index. 715
Nature, first object of philosophy, 26, Malebranche, 417 on Schelling, 010 27 f. ; contrasted with statute, 73 fl. ; see also Plotinus, Proclus.
with Democritus, 110; Plato's pin Neo-Platoniste, English, of Cambridge, ion, of, 129 f. ; Aristotle's, 146 ft*. ; 382, 435, 449 f. , 490 note, 502 f. , 094 Stoic doctrine of life according to,
171; Strato's view of, 179; Epicu 213, 216, 220 f. , 230
reans' view of, 183 ff. ; Stoics', 180 f. ; 089 (238).
spiritualisation of, by Plotinus, 249 ; XfcWIDJlIl tJ*J0
by Valentinus, 254 ; return to, by Newton, 378, 380, 691 (380), 402, 421, school of Chartres, 302 f. ; relation 479, 490.
to deity with Kckhart, 335 ; return Nicolai, 445, 483, 607, 621. to, in Renaissance, 360 306 re Nicolas d'Oresme, 34. ">.
garded as God made creatural, 308 spiritualisation of, in Renaissance,
373 despiritualised again, 401 rec
ognised as one, 402 identified with
God, Spinoza, 409 opposed to in Nicole, 381.
Nicolaus d'Autricuria, 344.
Nicolaus Cusanus, 312, 316, 336 f. , 337,
343, 346 f. , 308 f. , 371, 402, 405, 409, 419, 422, 648, 692.
Nicomachus, 213, 210. Nietzsche, 033, 070-080. Nifo, 355, 369.
view, 597, 699 as realm of the con tingent. 143, 341, 344, 425, 500, 041 as esthetic standard, 493 as ethical standard. 73 86, 110, 435 f. , 024 008 f. , 072; state of, with Cynics, 83 llobbes. view of, 434 Rous
Nineteenth century, philosophy of, 623 ff.
Nizolius, 365, 300, 376.
Nominalism, 272 its origin, 290 of
Roscellinus, 296 revived, 312, 342 favours study of natural science, 843 370 influence on Descartes, Locke, and llobbes, 403 on Locke, 461 '. , 408 on Berkeley, 452, 409 of Feuerbach, 041 see also Termin- ism.
seau, 625 Kant, 658 Fichte, 008.
Schiller, 004
Nausiphanes, 106.
Necessity, mechanical, with Leucippus,
Norms, 03, 09, 181, 279, 080. Aristotle. 134 natural, with Stoics, Norris, 471.
63 with 1'lato, 130 logical, with
181 denied by Epicurus, 183 two
kinds, Leibniz, 390; Spinoza's, 419;
subjective, Tetens, 400 of evil, Leib
niz, 492 logical, identified with real
ity, 637 of a priori Forms, 639 ff.
feeling of, attaching to experience,
Fichte, 679 teleological, of ideal Novalis, Fr. v. Hardcnberg, 671, 599. ism, 690 see also Materialism, Mech Numbers, with Pythagoreans, 46, 47
anism.
Negative theology, with Philo, Apolo
with Plato, 122, 129, 131 in Alcx- andrianism, 242 ff. in the Renais sance, 372, 387.
gists, and Neo-Platonists, 237 f. , 689
(238); with Scotus Erigena, 290; of Numenius, 213, 210, 220, 223, 232.
Eikhart, 336 of Bruno, 308
of Spi
Object, of knowledge, Kant, 637 ff. ,
674, 676 indifference of subject and object, 608.
noza, 408 cf. Agnosticism.
Nekkam, Alex. , 344.
Neo-Kantianism, 6:13, 042
Neo-Platunisiii, dependent on earlier Objectification, 68'. l.
Greek conceptions, 123, 167 per Objective, with Dew arte*, = subjective sonality and writings. 216, 218 phil in modern sense. 303; objective spirit, osophical interpretation of myths, with Hegel. 613; cf. En*.
222 on spirit and matter, 233 ff. Occam, see William of Occam-
doctrine of Ideas, 117 note 0; 233 Occasionalisni, 410 ff. , 474 note note on nature of God, 237 ff. , 089 Odo (Odardus) of Cambray, 29. }. (238); on history, 2. V» In Middle Oinomaoa, 216, 686 (163).
Ages, 208 ff. influence on Augustine, Ok«n, 671, 698, 008, 056.
279 280 on John Scotus, 289 ff. Oldendorf, 382.
on Bernard of Chartres, 294 on One (fr), of Xenophauea, 34 with William of Champeaux, 296; on Parmenides, 38; with Neo-Pythago
Nouniena, Kant's theory of, 647
*»0i, of Anaxagoras, 42. 084 (42) 64,
03; as part of soul with Plato, 124 with Aristotle, 150; with Theo- phrastus, 178 Plotinus, 246; Au gustine, 270, note see Reason.
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716 Index.
reans, 237 with riato, 122 with
Proclus, 261.
Ontological argument of Anselm, 292
restated by Descartes, 393. Ontologism, 631, 661 n.
Ontology, of the Stoics, 199 possibility
of denied, 546 ff. cf. Metaphysics. Ophites, 268.
397-399 distinction between eternal and contingent truths, 398 prin ciple of sufficient reason, 309 atti tude toward mechanism and tele ology, 420-426, 694 (627) dynamical standpoint, 421, 666 monadology, 422 ff. pre-established harmony, 424, 483 anticipation of principle of evolution, 421-424, 656 on innate ideas, 462-464 on knowledge of ex ternal world, 483; theodicy, 491 f. , 672 optimism, 492, 673 ethical principle of perfection, 605 influence on Kant, 465, 635, 538, 566 on Fries, 576 Reinhold, 676 Maimon, 578 contrasted with Fichte, 593 influ ence on Hegelians, 632, 640 cf. also 379, 483 486 f. , 490, 494, 601, 511, 619, 627, 683.
Leroux, 628.
Lessing, 439, 446, 497, 498
Leucippus, 29 42 62 ff. , 60, 108,
111, 128
Lewes, 11, 630.
Lewis, 629.
Liberatore, 631.
Liebmann, 633, 642.
Life, as principle of explanation with
Knutzen, 444.
Koppen, 660.
Krause, 660, 571, 610. Krug, 573, 681. KrUger, 445.
Laas, 633.
Labanca, 631.
Labriola, 631.
Labruyere, 515.
Lactantius, 217.
Ladd, 630.
Lamarck, 480, 653, 666. Lambert, 446, 461, 480. Lamennais, 628, 649. Lamettrie, 442, 465 ff. , 470 Lancelin, 622.
Ionics, 32
Leibniz, 422
theory, 666
Schelling's philos. of Nature, 698.
by Sophists, 87 96; by Abelard, 306 by Ramus, 381 Locke on, 451 Condillac, 478 Humboldt, 602 de Bonald, 648.
on knowledge of external world, 467 on existence of God, 469 attitude toward rationalism, 694 (452 note) on toleration, 487 ethics, 502 f. , 513 on the state. 519 influ ence in France, 456 ff. developed by Berkeley, 469 and Hume, 472 criticised by Leibniz, 462-464 cf. also 114, 391, 404, 537.
516, 641.
Lips, 355.
Littre", 628.
Locke, leader of English
Lanfranc, 276.
Lange, 633, 642.
Language, bearing on philos. studies 692 (440) psychology, 450 f. , 453;
Languet, 433.
Laplace, 470
Larochefoucauld, 515.
Laromiguiere, 627, 634
Latitudinarians, 486.
Law, first grasped clearly by Heraclitus, Logic, defined, 20 Sophists, 88 ff.
37, 50 suggested by mathematics and astronomy, Pythagoreans, 56 relation to Nature, 73 emphasised by Democritus, 111 by Stoics, 181 contrasted with fact, 398, 566 as general fact, Comte, 651 of Nature, as moral authority, Stoics, 171 Cicero, 177 Abelard, 308 Thomas, 326 Renaissance, 435 Enlighten ment, 503; in history, 652-664; see Nature and Right; cf. 299 note 2.
Lazarus, 631, 642.
Leech in an, 629.
Lefevre, 864.
Leibniz, writings, 382, 444 life, 443
Socrates, 97 Plato's, or dialectic, 119 ff. Aristotle's, 132-138, 686
character, 693 (444) his method, metaphysical, of Hegel, 611 ff. , 645;
(142) 198
Peripatetics, 197 Stoics, hypostatisation of logical pro
with Aristotle, 141 with as limit to mechanical as central conception of
Enlighten ment, 439 life and writings, 440.
by Porphyry and Proclus,
cesses
250
270
metaphysical, 290, 686 (142) formal logic the only possible for empiricism, 360 of Ramus, 361 terrainistic of Occam, 342 Hobbes, 404 Con dillac, 478 developed by Hamilton and others to an algebraic calculus, 629, 639 transcendental, of Kant, 543 this attacked by Herbart, 583
main topic of Middle Ages, logical relations identified with
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Index. 713
recent tendencies, 060 ; the logical 450-468, 479 ff. ; culminates in the
inadequate to explain reality, 143, 341, 399, 425, 476, 485, 6«tJ, 041, 647 (. ,676 ; see also Dialectic, Realism.
Logos, doctrine of, with Heraclitus, 36 Stoics, 180 186; influence of Stoic doctrine on Christian, 223 Philo's doctrine of, 241 f. j Origen, 254.
Longiuus, 218, 233. Lossius, 445, 461.
Loue, 624, 632, 643 Lowndes, 629.
Lucretius, 162, 686 (162). Lullus, 315, 321, 397. Luther, 356, 364
Lyceum, see Peripatetic School. Lycopbron, 74
Mably, 443, 523.
Maccbiavelli, 382, 426
Mach, 651.
Mackenzie. 630.
Mackintobb, 629.
Macrocosm and microcosm, 187, 366 ff.
422
Magiienus, 356.
Maieulic, 97.
Maignanus, 356.
Maimon. 670, 678, 696 (670). Maimonides, 318 (. , 321.
Mainlander, 633.
Maistre, Jos. de, 627, 648. Malebranclie, 379, 381, 406, 407, 410,
416 f. , 436, 471, 486, 636, 661 note. Mamiani, 631.
Man, identified with animal world,
62 f. , 453 466 f. ; as measure, 92 as centre of creation and end of history, 261 as microcosm, 347, 369 ff. reverence for, Kant's ma terial principle, 553 as object of religious veneration, Comte, 652 capacity for perfection, 626, 672.
Mandeville, 441, 516 f. , 624
Hani and Manicbtelsm, 239 L, 286. Manael, 629, 638.
Marcianus Capella, 273, 298.
Marcion, 221, 258.
Marcus Aurelius, 213, 216, 230. Mariana, 382.
Marsh, 630.
Marailius of Inghen, 316.
Marsilius of Padua, 345, 426, 432. Martin, 627.
MarUneau, II. , 629.
Martineau, Jas. , 630.
Marx, 632. 666.
Materialism, of Leucippua, 43 of
Democritus, 108, 109 ft; of Epicu reans, 183-186; of Stoics, 186; of Hobbes, 413 of Spinoxa'a adherents, 464 of Hartley, etc. , 466 f. ; ranch,
Hyiteme de la Nature, 481 in psy chology of nineteenth century, 634 of Feuerbacb, 641, 666 moral, 671 recent, 642 as philos. of history, 656.
Mathematics, with Pythagoreans, 46- 47, 66 f. ; in Plato's system, 129 in fluence on modern philos. , 372 379, 387-389, 396-391); on Spinoza, 396, 418; on Comte, 651, 653; distin guished from philos. by Kant, 486 the sole demonstrative science with Hume, 473 how possible, 639 ff. see also Geometrical Method.
Matter, cosmic, of Ionics, 32 Auaxi- mander, 33; opposed to form by Aristotle, 139 ff. accessory cause, 144 Non-being or space with Plo- tinus, 246 f. j evil, 247 regarded as self-moved, etc. , by Averroes, 338; identified with space by Descartes and Spinoza, 406, 410 Kant's dy namic theory of, 646 contradiction in conception of, Herbart, 684.
Maupertuis, 442, 478, 489. Maximus Couf. , 274. Maximus of Tyre, 216. Mayer. 633, 655.
McCosh, 629.
Mechanics, created by Galileo, 388 in
fluence on philos. . 400 f. ; lit. of, 692
(380) recent theories, 651. Mechanism and mechanical view of world, Leucippua, 53 with Strato,
179; Epicurus, 183; Galileo, Des cartes, Spinoza, 401 opposed by Cudworth, etc. , 401 reconciled with teleology by Leibniz, 420 ff. ; opposed by Schelling and Goethe, 598 influential in this century, 624 in associational psychology, 635 see also Materialism, Natural ism.
Medici, Cosmo d\ 364.
Medicine, independent origin, etio
logical, 66 magical, with Paracelsus,
373.
Megarians, 70 (. , 82, 89.
Meier, F. , 446.
Meiners, 446.
Melancthon. 356, 359, 364, 486. Melissus, 28, 30, 44.
Melito, 217.
Mendelssohn, 446, 478, 483, 607, 612,
52
Menedemus, 72.
Metaphysics, origin of name, 19
grounded anew by Democritus and Plato, 104 Plato's teleologies! , 128 connected with logic, 133 of Aris totle, 139 ff. of Theophrastus, 178 of Stoics, 180; religious, 214 ff. ; of
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714 Index.
logical genera and species, 271 if. ; Montaigne, 35o, 362, 376, 403.
of inner experience, 278 ff. ; logical, Montesquieu, 443, 610.
of Realism, 290 ff. ; of Nominalism, Moral law, with Kant, 552 ; see Ethics.
296 ; of psychology, 323 f. ; Boehme's,
374 f.
; as mathematical physics, Des
cartes, 393 ; Bacon's def. of, 401 ;
Spinoza's, 408 ff. ; Leibniz, 420 ff. ;
Wolff, 482 ; Berkeley, 470 ; as basis for
morals, 503 f. ; Kant's attitude toward, More, Thomas, 382, 427 ff. 466, 478, 480, 537 ; of intellectual per Morell, 029.
ception, 592 ; of the irrational, 610 ff. ; Morelly, 443, 623. Lotze's, 044 ; recent idealistic, 042; Morgan, 441. historical with Comte, 652. Morgan, Lloyd, 630.
Method, maieutic of Socrates, 97 ; Moritz, 445.
modified by Plato, 118 f. ; Aristotle's Motekallemin, 317.
deductive, 137 ff. ; scholastic, 312, 344 ; Motion, as basis of mediating attempts,
inductive, 97, 118, 137, 344, 384 ;
problem raised in Renaissance, 378,
383 ; of Bacon, 383 ; of Galileo and
Kepler, 388; of Descartes, 389 ff. ; basis of feelings with Cyrenaics, 86
of Hobbes, 389 ; Descartes' method
misunderstood by his disciples, 395 ;
geometrical, supreme with Spinoza.
396 f. ; continued by Wolff, 482;
criticized by Rudiger and Crusius, conservation of, Descartes, 411.
484 f. , exploded by Kant, 485; in Motives, Greek theories, 72, 75, 79 f. ;
Metrodorus, 76, 684 (30). Metrodorus the Epicurean, 162. Michael Psellos, 342. Microcosm, see Macrocosm. Milesians, 28 f. , 32 ff. , 48 ff. Mill, James, 629, 665.
Mill, J. Stuart, 629, psychology and method, 635, 654, 660 ; ethics, 666-667.
Milton, 433.
pfcnpit, 47, 120.
Mind (see Spirit, Soul, Psychology),
mode of consciousness, 406.
Minucius Felix, 214, 217, 224.
Mode, all bodies and minds modes
of spatiality and consciousness, Des cartes, 406"; infinite and finite of Spinoza, 409 f. ; everything a mode of both attributes, 420.
Moderatus, 215.
Moleschott, 632.
Monad, Bruno's conception of, 371,
Leibniz, 423.
Monism, original presupposition, 32 ff. ;
metaphysical, of the Eleatics, 37 ff. ; of the spirit, in Neo-Platonism, 240 ff. ; in the Renaissance, 367 ff. ; modern so-called, 632, 643.
Monotheism, pantheistic with Xeno- phaiies, 34 ; of Cynics, 86 ; theistic with Aristotle, 146 f. ; as final form of religion, 497 f.
Morals, I'lato's, 125 ff. ; ascetic, 230 ; in eighteenth century, 502 ff. ; of master
" and slaves, 679 ; see Ethics. Moral sense," 509, 517.
More, Henry, 382, 402, 404, 435, 460, 60S.
39 ; the essence of change, 43 ; early theories of its cause, 52 ff. ; contra dictions in conception of, Zeno, 55
of perceptions with Protagoras, 92 with Deinocritus, 113 f. , 115 f. ; with Aristotle, 147 f. ; made cause of all cosmic processes by Galileo, 388, 410 ;
adequacy of psychological, recog nised by Kant, 633 ; critical of Kant, 633 ; dialectical of Fichte and Hegel, 591 f. ; historical compared with that of natural science, 048, 651, 653 f. , 667, 660.
eighteenth century, 501, 614-517 ;
Mill, 060 ; see Freedom, and Will. Music, theory of Pythagoreans, 46. Musonius, 210.
Mutazilin, 318.
Mysteries, 124, 685 (123).
Mystics and Mysticism, source in Neo-
Platonism, 227 ; a factor of Med. philos. , 260 ff. , 275, 304 ff. , 333, 409, 487, 583 ; of Biran, 636.
Myths, with the Sophists, 76 ; Plato, 102, 123, 687 (123) ; Stoics, 189 f. ; Gnostics, 243 f. ; Schelling, 619.
Naive and sentimental, 004 f. Nativism, 539 note 1.
Naturalism of Strato, 179 ; of Arabians.
338 ; of Renaissance, 401 ff. ; of En lightenment, 479 ff. , 627; see also Materialism, Mechanism.
Natural law, see Law, and Right. Natural religion, 486 ff. ; see Deism, and
Religion.
Natural selection, 63, 656 f. , 672. Natural science, among the Greeks,
27 ff. ; daughter of Humanism, 351 ; favoured by Nominalism, 343 f. , 376 ; its decisive influence on modern philos. , 378 ; how possible, Kant, 641 ff. ; influence in nineteenth cen tury, 624 f. , 648 ff. ; its method compared with that of history, 648, 661,663 f. , 667, 660.
NaluraNaturans andNatura Xaturata, probably first used by Averroism, 330, 338 ; with Eckhart, 335 f. ; with Bruno, 368 f. ; with Spinoza, 400.
(488).
171 f. ; regarded as equivalent to law, Neo-Pythagoreans, 117 uote
123, 233, 237,
stitution, 436 Kant's philos. of,
540 purposivenessof, 659 ff. , 665 ff.
specification of, 500 as objectifica-
lion of will, Schopenhauer, 689 Nigidius Figulus, 215. Schelling's philos. of, 597 . Goethe's
Index. 715
Nature, first object of philosophy, 26, Malebranche, 417 on Schelling, 010 27 f. ; contrasted with statute, 73 fl. ; see also Plotinus, Proclus.
with Democritus, 110; Plato's pin Neo-Platoniste, English, of Cambridge, ion, of, 129 f. ; Aristotle's, 146 ft*. ; 382, 435, 449 f. , 490 note, 502 f. , 094 Stoic doctrine of life according to,
171; Strato's view of, 179; Epicu 213, 216, 220 f. , 230
reans' view of, 183 ff. ; Stoics', 180 f. ; 089 (238).
spiritualisation of, by Plotinus, 249 ; XfcWIDJlIl tJ*J0
by Valentinus, 254 ; return to, by Newton, 378, 380, 691 (380), 402, 421, school of Chartres, 302 f. ; relation 479, 490.
to deity with Kckhart, 335 ; return Nicolai, 445, 483, 607, 621. to, in Renaissance, 360 306 re Nicolas d'Oresme, 34. ">.
garded as God made creatural, 308 spiritualisation of, in Renaissance,
373 despiritualised again, 401 rec
ognised as one, 402 identified with
God, Spinoza, 409 opposed to in Nicole, 381.
Nicolaus d'Autricuria, 344.
Nicolaus Cusanus, 312, 316, 336 f. , 337,
343, 346 f. , 308 f. , 371, 402, 405, 409, 419, 422, 648, 692.
Nicomachus, 213, 210. Nietzsche, 033, 070-080. Nifo, 355, 369.
view, 597, 699 as realm of the con tingent. 143, 341, 344, 425, 500, 041 as esthetic standard, 493 as ethical standard. 73 86, 110, 435 f. , 024 008 f. , 072; state of, with Cynics, 83 llobbes. view of, 434 Rous
Nineteenth century, philosophy of, 623 ff.
Nizolius, 365, 300, 376.
Nominalism, 272 its origin, 290 of
Roscellinus, 296 revived, 312, 342 favours study of natural science, 843 370 influence on Descartes, Locke, and llobbes, 403 on Locke, 461 '. , 408 on Berkeley, 452, 409 of Feuerbach, 041 see also Termin- ism.
seau, 625 Kant, 658 Fichte, 008.
Schiller, 004
Nausiphanes, 106.
Necessity, mechanical, with Leucippus,
Norms, 03, 09, 181, 279, 080. Aristotle. 134 natural, with Stoics, Norris, 471.
63 with 1'lato, 130 logical, with
181 denied by Epicurus, 183 two
kinds, Leibniz, 390; Spinoza's, 419;
subjective, Tetens, 400 of evil, Leib
niz, 492 logical, identified with real
ity, 637 of a priori Forms, 639 ff.
feeling of, attaching to experience,
Fichte, 679 teleological, of ideal Novalis, Fr. v. Hardcnberg, 671, 599. ism, 690 see also Materialism, Mech Numbers, with Pythagoreans, 46, 47
anism.
Negative theology, with Philo, Apolo
with Plato, 122, 129, 131 in Alcx- andrianism, 242 ff. in the Renais sance, 372, 387.
gists, and Neo-Platonists, 237 f. , 689
(238); with Scotus Erigena, 290; of Numenius, 213, 210, 220, 223, 232.
Eikhart, 336 of Bruno, 308
of Spi
Object, of knowledge, Kant, 637 ff. ,
674, 676 indifference of subject and object, 608.
noza, 408 cf. Agnosticism.
Nekkam, Alex. , 344.
Neo-Kantianism, 6:13, 042
Neo-Platunisiii, dependent on earlier Objectification, 68'. l.
Greek conceptions, 123, 167 per Objective, with Dew arte*, = subjective sonality and writings. 216, 218 phil in modern sense. 303; objective spirit, osophical interpretation of myths, with Hegel. 613; cf. En*.
222 on spirit and matter, 233 ff. Occam, see William of Occam-
doctrine of Ideas, 117 note 0; 233 Occasionalisni, 410 ff. , 474 note note on nature of God, 237 ff. , 089 Odo (Odardus) of Cambray, 29. }. (238); on history, 2. V» In Middle Oinomaoa, 216, 686 (163).
Ages, 208 ff. influence on Augustine, Ok«n, 671, 698, 008, 056.
279 280 on John Scotus, 289 ff. Oldendorf, 382.
on Bernard of Chartres, 294 on One (fr), of Xenophauea, 34 with William of Champeaux, 296; on Parmenides, 38; with Neo-Pythago
Nouniena, Kant's theory of, 647
*»0i, of Anaxagoras, 42. 084 (42) 64,
03; as part of soul with Plato, 124 with Aristotle, 150; with Theo- phrastus, 178 Plotinus, 246; Au gustine, 270, note see Reason.
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716 Index.
reans, 237 with riato, 122 with
Proclus, 261.
Ontological argument of Anselm, 292
restated by Descartes, 393. Ontologism, 631, 661 n.
Ontology, of the Stoics, 199 possibility
of denied, 546 ff. cf. Metaphysics. Ophites, 268.
