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Paper circulation, excess of, when
salutary, 324.

Parental constitutions, traits of in
offspring, 158.

Peel, Sir Robert, on the efficacy of
legislation, 104.
Philanthropy, short-sightedness of,
100.

Poetic speech, in what it consists,
37.

Political education, necessity of, 374.
Popular character determines the
penal code, 216.

Predicate and subject, arrangement
of, 18.

Printers Union, working of, 359.
Prison discipline in relation to idle-
ness, 240; to self-control, 240.
Prison ethics, approved system of,

244.

Private enterprise, what it has ac-
complished, 54 superiority of,


over government, 75; continental
dependence on, 102.
Prominence of jaw, meaning of, 151.
Protecting the individual against
himself, 55.

Protection, governmental, 91.
Protuberant cheek bones, signifi
cance of, 153.

417

Public prudence liable to fluctuation,
321.

Punishment, grounds of its justice,
221-225; in what it should consist,
225; just limits of, 226; how to fix
its duration, 242; scheme of, die
tated by justice, 244; evil effect
of excessive, 239.

R

Railroad companies paralleled with
Railroad officials, character of, 260.
the state, 252.
Railroads, order of their appearance
in England, 88.
Railway administration, essential vi-

ciousness of, 256.
Railway companies, dishonesties of,
253-255.

Railway engineers, morality of, 271.
Railway directors, how elected, 269.
Railway politics, morality of, 213.
Railway system, fundamental vice
of, 290.

Reform-bill, horror of, 353.
Reform-bill of Lord John Russell,
377.

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Self-dependent races, progressive-
ness of, 102.
Self-criticism, 49.
Self-help, national, 101.
Sensibilities, economy of, 40.
Sentences, arrangement of parts of,
20; suspensions of, 23.
Shareholders, railway, small influ-
ence of, 279; characters of, 283.
Sheep, mixture of French and Eng-
lish races of, 158.
Silk-business, frauds in, 119.
Simile, use of, 28.

Social changes, unlikely origin of,

82.

State enterprise, positive injuries of,
60.

State, failure of to perform its du-
ties, 52.

Stimulus to social action, 65.
Stocking weavers, distress and re-
lief of, 83.

T

Tailors, how they are cheated, 111.
Taxation should be direct as the fran
chise is extended, 37.

Town councils, character of, 169;
extravagance of, 171.
Trade immoralities, are they growing
Trade essentially corrupt, 134.

Social science, importance of diffus-
ing a knowledge of, 375.
Solitary system increases the ten-
dency to crime, 220.

V

State agency contrasted with private Valencia, prison of, 237.
enterprise, 77; dependent upon
private action, 79.

W

Wealth, indiscriminate respect puid
to, 140; protest against the adora
tion of, 147; the possessor of hon-
estly acquired, respectable, 145.
Whately, Dr., 26, 30.
Working classes in England, de.
mands of, 357.

Working classes, education of, 371.
Words, economic use of, 12; use of
long, 14; strength of Saxon, 15;
sequence of, 16.

Style, why it should be varied, 44;
direct and indirect, 24; varies with
the mind addressed, 25; employ-
ment of figures in, 27.
Synechdoche, use of, 27.

Trades-unions, tyranny of, 378.
worse? 136; remedy for, 146.

U

University education, estimate of,
373.

Utopianisms of the working classes,
365.

THE END.

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Recommencement.

12. Evolution and Dissolution.

4. The Relativity of all Knowl edge.

5. The Reconciliation.

13. Simple and Compound Evolution.

4. The Indestructibility of Matter.
5. The Continuity of Motion.
6. The Persistence of Force.
7. The Persistence of Relations
among Forces.

8. The Transformation and Equiv-
alence of Forces.

9. The Direction of Motion.

10. The Rhythm of Motion.

11. Recapitulation, Criticism, and 21. Segregation. 22. Equilibration.

23. Dissolution.

1. Organic Matter.

2. The Actions of Forces on Organic Matter.

8. The Reactions of Organic Matter on Forces.

14. The Law of Evolution.

15. The Law of Evolution (con. tinued).

16. The Law of Evolution (continued).

17. The Law of Evolution (concluded).

18. The Interpretation of Evolution. 19. The Instability of the Homoge

neous.

20. The Multiplication of Effects.

24. Summary and Conclusion.

THE PRINCIPLES OF BIOLOGY.

2 vols. $4.00.

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.

PART I. THE DATA OF BIOLOGY.

4. Proximate Definition of Life.
5. The Correspondence between

Life and its Circumstances.
6. The Degree of Life varies as the
Degree of Correspondence.

7. The Scope of Biology.

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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.

10. Genesis, Heredity, and Varia tion.

CONTENTS OF VOL. II.

PART IV.-MORPHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT.

2. The Morphological Composition of Plants.

1. The Problems of Morphology. 9. The Shapes of Leaves. 10. The Shapes of Flowers. 11. The Shapes of Vegetal Cells. 12. Changes of Shape otherwise caused.

7. The General Shapes of Plants. 8. The Shapes of Branches.

11. Classification.

1. The Problems of Physiology.
2. Differentiations among the Out-
er and Inner Tissues of Plants.
3. Differentiations among the Out-
er Tissues of Plants.

4. Differentiations among the In-
ner Tissues of Plants.

5. Physiological Integration in Plants.

7. The Arguments from Distribution.

8. How is Organic Evolution caused?

9. External Factors. 10. Internal Factors. 11. Direct Equilibration. 12. Indirect Equilibration. 13. The Coöperation of the Factors. 14. The Convergence of the Evi dences.

13. Morphological Differentiation in Animals.

14. The General Shapes of Animals. 15. The Shapes of Vertebrate Skeletons.

The Shapes of Animal Cells.
Summary of Morphological De-
velopment.
DEVELOPMENT.

6. Differentiations between the
Outer and Inner Tissues of
Animals.

PART V.-PHYSIOLOGICAL

16.
17.

8.

7. Differentiations among the Out-
er Tissues of Animals.
Differentiations among the In-
ner Tissues of Animals.
9. Physiological Integration in An-
imals.

10. Summary of Physiological Development.

SPENCER'S SYNTHETIC PHILOSOPHY.

PART VI.-LAWS OF MULTIPLICATION.

1. The Factors.

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.

8. Antagonism between Expendi-
ture and Genesis.
9. Coincidence between High Nu-
trition and Genesis.

10. Specialties

of these Rela

tions.

11. Interpretation and Qualification.

12. Multiplication of the Human Race.

7. Antagonism between Develop

ment and Genesis, Asexual 13. Human Evolution in the Fuand Sexual.

ture.

APPENDIX.

A Criticism on Professor Owen's The- On Circulation and the Formation ory of the Vertebrate Skeleton. of Wood in Plants.

THE PRINCIPLES OF PSYCHOLOGY.

2 vols. $4.00.

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.

PART I. THE DATA OF PSYCHOLOGY.

1. The Nervous System.
2. The Structure of the Nervous

System.

3. The Functions of the Nervous

System.

PART II.-THE INDUCTIONS

1. The Substance of Mind.
2. The Composition of Mind.
3. The Relativity of Feelings.
4. The Relativity of Relations be-
tween Feelings.

5. The Revivability of Feelings.

3

4. The Conditions essential to Ner-
Vous Action.

5. Nervous Stimulation and Ner-
vous Discharge.
6. Estho-Physiology.

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.

OF PSYCHOLOGY.

6. The Revivability of Relations
between Feelings.

7. The Associability of Feelings.
8. The Associability of Relations
between Feelings.

9. Pleasures and Pains.

PART III.-GENERAL SYNTHESIS,

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.

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