Page:History of Modern Philosophy (Falckenberg).djvu/663

 INDEX. 641 Flint, R., 17, 548 note, 563 note * Fludd, R., 29 FlUgel, 532, 536 Forberg, 421, 423 Forge, L. de la, 111 note, 113 Fortlage, Karl, 389 note f, 399, 442, 597, 615 ; works by, 16, 538 note ; system of, 513-515 Fouillfee, A., 563 Fowler, Thos., 69 note, 155 note, 199 note Fox Bourne, 154 note, 156 note Franchi, A., 551 Franck, A., 39 note *, 552 note * Franck, Sebastian, 52 Francke, 296 Frantz, K., 466 note Fraser, A. C, 155 note, 214 Frauensiadl, J., 446 note f, 538, 546 Frederichs, F., 330 Frederick the Great, 251, 296 Freedom of the Will, Hobbes's denial of, 75; Descartes's unlimited af- firmation of, 106-107; denied by Spinoza, 131, 133; Locke on, 176- 177; affirmed by Berkeley, 219; denied by Hume, 232; in Rous- seau, 263; Leibnitz on, 285-286; Herder on, 313-314; Kant on, 375. 377, 391-392; Fichte on, 420, 427, 436-437; Schelling on, 461 seq., Herbart on, 525, 530; Scho- penhauer on, 539, 544, 545; J. S. Mill on, 568. See also Character, the Intelligible; Determinism Frege, G., 621 note f Freudenthal, J., 10 note, 63, 118 Fries, A. de, 155 note Fries, J. F., and Kant, 340; an op- ponent of constructive idealism, to^; his system, 506-509; and Herbart, 525 Froschammer, 601 Fullerton, G. S., 117 note f Gabler, 588 Gale, 156 note Galileo (Galileo Galilei), 32, 57, 72, 80, 175, 182; his work as a founda- tion for modern physics, 56; his system, 58-60 Galluppi, P., 550 Gallon, Francis, 580 Garve, C, 303, 331 Gassendi, P., 29, 57, 60-61, 7a, 87 Gauss, 621 Gay, 183 Geijer, E. G., 583 Geil, 156 note Genovesi, A., 549 Gentilis, Albericus, 42, 43 George, L., 486 George of Trebizond, 27 Georgius Scholarius (Gennadius), 27 note Gerdil, S., 548 Gerhardl, 269 Gerson, 39 Gersonides, 118 Geulincx, Arnold, 110, 111-116, 143, 218 Gichtel, 53 Gierke, O., 25 note f, 39 note *, 623 Gilbert, William, 64 Gioberti, V., 550, 551 Gioja, M., 550 Gizycki, G. von, 199 note, 231 note, 5S2 Glanvil, 224 note Glisson, Francis, 270 note Glogau, G., 88 note, 623 God, doctrine of, in Nicolas of Cusa, 20-24 ; in Taurellus, 31-32 ; in Bruno, 35, 36; Campanella's argu- ment for the existence of, 37; Wei- gel's doctrine of, 52-53 ; Bohme's doctrine of, 53, 54, 55; Descartes's arguments for the existence of, 92- 94 ; Spinoza's doctrine of, 123 seq. ; Malebranche's view of, 146 seq. Locke's doctrine of, 156, 163, 168-169 ; Berkeley ascribes ideas of sense- world to, 217 j^f.; Hume's doctrine of, 229-231 ; Voltaire's doctrine of, 245 ; Holbach's dis-