Page:History of Modern Philosophy (Falckenberg).djvu/661

 INDEX. 639 Doubt, the Cartesian, 8S seq. ; in Bayle, 150-152; Rousseau's rever- ential, 265 Drobisch, M. W., 330, 532, 535-536 Droz, 144 note Druskowitz, Helene, 601 Du Bois-Reymond, E., 252 note, 622 note * Duhring, E., 16, 59, 601, 610 note Dumont, E., 565 note Duncan, G. M., 269 note • Durdik, 181 note Ebbinghaus, H., 626 Eberhard, J. A., 303, 414 Ekrhtermeyer, 589 Eckhart, 51, 53, 473 Eclecticism, of the German Illumi- nation, 294, 295, 300, 302, 307; of Schleiermachcr, 476 sej,', of Cou- sin and his School, 562 Edfeldt, H., 583 Education, Locke on, 180; Rous- seau on, 262 Edwards, Jonathan, 5S1 Ego, the, certain knowledge of, in Campanella, and Descartes, 37, 89-90 ; the individual, and the transcendental consciousness in Kant, 345, 350; Fichte's doctrine of, 429 seq., 441 seq. ; a complex of representations in Beneke, 512; Fortlage on, 514; Herbart's doc- trine of, 524 seq.; the neo-Kan- tians on the individual, and the transcendental consciousness, 617- 618. See also Soul Ellis, 65 Emerson, R. W., 582 Empiricism, founded by Bacon, 64 seq. in Hobbes, 72; and rational- ism, 80 seq., 315 seq. of Locke, 155 seq., 173-175; of J. S. Mill, 564, 566 seq. ; of Opzoomer, 585- 586; Liebmann on, 624-625. See also Experience, Sensationalism Encyclopedists, the, 242, 243 note *, 251 seq. Engel, J. J., 2l6 note, 302-303 Ennemoser, 469 Erasmus, Desiderius, 30 Erdmann, Benno, works by, i';6 note, 175 note, 300 note*, 329,330, 332 note, 587 note, 621, 626 Erdmann, J. E., 10, 94, 127, 468; works by, 15. 269, 538 note, 628; philosophy of, 589 Erhardt, F., 330 Eschenmayer, K. A., 447, 462 Ethelism, in Crusius, 301; of Fichte, 419, 428 seq., 434 seq. ; of Schopen- hauer, 540 seq. ; in Hartmann, 609, 61 1 seq. See also Panthelism. Ethics, Bacon on, 70-71; Hobbes's political theory of, 75-79; Des- cartes on, 106; Geulincx on, 115- 116; Spinoza on, I'^t seq. Pascal on, 143-144; Malebranche on, 147- 148; Locke on, 170-171, 176-179; English, of XVIH. century. 195- 214; Hume's empirical and me- chanical, 231 seq. of French sen- sationalists 248-251; of French materialists, 252-253, 257-259; of Rousseau, 263-264; of Leibnitz, 285-287; of Herder, 314; of Kant, 383 seq.; of Fichte, 434 seq.; of Schleiermachcr, 485-486; of Hegel, 498-499; of J. F. Fries, 509; of Beneke, 512-513; of Herbart, 518, 533-534. 535; of Schopenhauer, 543-545; of Comte, 561; of Ben- tham, 564, 565-566; of J. S. Mill, 564, 568-569; of Spencer, 57^579; of T. H. Green, 581 ; of Lotze, 609; of Hartmann, 612 seq. ; recent Ger- man interest in, 626 Eucken, R., works by, 9 note, 17, 19 note, 112 note *, 113 note f. 149 note, 471 note, 515 note, 552 note f, 600 notef, 601,628; philosophy of, 623, 624 Everett, C. C, 424 note, 582 Evil, Weigel on the origin of, 53; Bohme on the origin of, 53-55; Spinoza's doctrine of, 139 seq.;