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 METHODOLOGY OF THE SOCIAL PROBLEM 1 37

{b) Causal subjective perception.

(c) General significance of the experimental method for psy- chology.

(d) The methods of psychical mass-measurement.

(e) Elementary psychical analysis. (/) Causal analysis of representation.

i^g) Analysis of feelings, affection, and volitions. (A) Physiology as an auxiliary to psychology and psycho- physics.

3. Folk-psychology.

4. The principles of psychology,

(a) The idea of the soul.

(b) The principle of psycho-physical parallelism.

(c) The principle of physical actuality. (</) The principle of creative synthesis.

(e) The principle of strengthening by contrast. (/) The principle of analysis of correlations. {g) The fundamental law of psychical causality. (K) The idea of psychical community.

5. The applications of psychology. Chap. III. The Logic of the Historical Sciences.

1. Philology.

(a) Philology and history.

(i) Philological interpretation.

{c) Philological criticism.

2. History.

(a) Tasks and types of historical research.

(l)) Historical criticism.

{c) Historical interpretation.

3. The philological-historical sciences. (a) Comparative language.

(*) Mythology. {c) Ethnology.

4. The principles of historical science.

(a) The science and the philosophy of history.

(b) The general limitations of historical development.

(c) Historical laws.

(d) The idea of purpose in history. Chap. IV. The Logic of the Social Sciences.

I. The general social sciences. (a) Sociology. (ti) Ethnology. {c) Demography. {d) Political science. ■ •