Mendacity of clerks, 112. INDEX. Mind and feature, relation of, 155. Morals of trade, 107; signs of im- Mutual restraint of class interests, 417 over government, 75; continental Prominence of jaw, meaning of, 151. Protection, governmental, 91. Public prudence liable to fluctuation, 221-225; in what it should consist, R Railroad companies paralleled with Railway administration, essential vi- ciousness of, 256. Railway companies, dishonesties of, Railway engineers, morality of, 271. Reform-bill, horror of, 353. Representative system in corpora- Restrictions on the hours of labor, Right to coerce the criminal, basis of, 221-225. S Salesmen, their falsehood and dupli Social science, importance of diffus- State agency contrasted with private Valencia, prison of, 237. State enterprise, positive injuries of, W Wealth, indiscriminate respect paid Working classes in England, de. Working classes, education of, 371. THE END. THE SYNTHETIC PHILOSOPHY OF HERBERT SPENCER. FIRST PRINCIPLES. 1 vol. $2.00. CONTENTS. PART I.-THE UNKNOWABLE. 1 Religion and Science. 2. Ultimate Religious Ideas. 8. Ultimate Scientific Ideas. 4. The Relativity of all Knowl edge. 5. The Reconciliation. PART II.-THE KNOWABLE. CONTENTS OF VOL. II. PART IV.-MORPHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT. 1. The Problems of Morphology. 9. The Shapes of Leaves. 2. The Morphological Composition of Plants. 3. The Morphological Composition of Plants (continued). 4. The Morphological Composition of Animals. 5. The Morphological Composition of Animals (continued). 6. Morphological Differentiation in Plants. 7. The General Shapes of Plants. 8. The Shapes of Branches. 10. The Shapes of Flowers. 13. Morphological Differentiation in 14. The General Shapes of Animals. 16. The Shapes of Animal Cells. PART V.-PHYSIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT. 1. The Problems of Physiology. 4. Differentiations among the In- 5. Physiological Integration in Plants. 6. Differentiations between the Outer and Inner Tissues of Animals. 8. 7. Differentiations among the Out- 10. Summary of Physiological Development. SPENCER'S SYNTHETIC PHILOSOPHY. 1. The Factors. PART VI.-LAWS OF MULTIPLICATION. 2. A priori Principle. 3. Obverse a priori Principle. 4. Difficulties of Inductive Verification. 5. Antagonism between Growth and Asexual Genesis. 6. Antagonism between Growth and Sexual Genesis. 7. Antagonism between Develop 3 8. Antagonism between Expenditure and Genesis. 9. Coincidence between High Nutrition and Genesis. 10. Specialties of these Relations. 11. Interpretation and Qualification. 12. Multiplication of the Human Race. ment and Genesis, Asexual 13. Human Evolution in the Fuand Sexual. APPENDIX. ture. A Criticism on Professor Owen's The- On Circulation and the Formation ory of the Vertebrate Skeleton. of Wood in Plants. PART II. THE INDUCTIONS OF PSYCHOLOGY. 1. The Substance of Mind. 5. The Revivability of Feelings. 6. The Revivability of Relations 7. The Associability of Feelings. 9. Pleasures and Pains. PART III.-GENERAL SYNTHESIS, 1. Life and Mind as Correspondence. 2. The Correspondence as Direct and Homogeneous. 8. The Correspondence as Direct but Heterogeneous. 4. The Correspondence as extending in Space. 5. The Correspondence as extending in Time. 6. The Correspondence as increas ing in Specialty. 7. The Correspondence as increasing in Generality. 8. The Correspondence as increasing in Complexity. 9. The Coördination of Correspondences. 10. The Integration of Correspondences. 11. The Correspondences in their Totality. |