Page:Will to Believe and Other Essays (1897).djvu/353

331 :Importance of individuals, the, 255-262; of things, its ground, 257.
 * Indeterminism, 150.
 * Individual differences, 259.
 * Individuals, the importance of, 255-262.
 * Infinite, 284.
 * Intuitionism, in Ethics, 186, 189.


 * , 249.
 * Judgments of regret, 159.


 * , 12.
 * Knowledge, 85.


 * on precipice, 59, 96.
 * Leibnitz, 43.
 * Life, is it worth living, 32-62.


 * , 176-7.
 * Mahdi, the, 2, 6.
 * Mallock, 32, 183.
 * Marcus Aurelius, 41.
 * Materialism, 126.
 * 'Maybes,' 59.
 * Measure of good, 205.
 * Mediumship, physical, 313, 314.
 * Melancholy, 34, 39, 42.
 * Mental evolution, 246; structure, 114, 117.
 * Mill, 234.
 * Mind, its triadic structure, 114, 117; its evolution, 246; its three departments, 114, 122, 127-8.
 * Monism, 279.
 * Moods, the strenuous and the easy, 211, 213.
 * Moralists, objective and subjective, 103-108.
 * Moral judgments, their origin, 186-8; obligation, 192-7; order, 193; philosophy, 184-5.
 * Moral philosopher and the moral life, the, 184-215.
 * Murder, 178.
 * Murderer, 160, 177.
 * Myers, 308, 315, 320.
 * Mystical phenomena, 300.
 * Mysticism, 74.


 * , the, 281.
 * Natural theology, 40-4.
 * Nature, 20, 41-4, 56.
 * Negation, as used by Hegel, 273.
 * Newman, 10.
 * Nitrous oxide, 294.
 * Nonentity, 72.


 * evidence, 13, 15, 16.
 * Obligation, 192-7.
 * Occult phenomena, 300; examples of, 323.
 * Omar Khayam, 160.
 * Optimism, 60, 102, 163.
 * Options offered to belief, 3, 11, 27.
 * Origin of moral judgments, 186-8.
 * 'Other,' in Hegel, 283.


 * , law of, 132.
 * Partaking, 268, 270, 275, 291.
 * Pascal's wager, 5, 11.
 * Personality, 324, 327.
 * Pessimism, 39, 40, 47, 60, 100, 101, 161, 167.
 * Philosophy, 65; depends on personal demands, 93; makes world unreal, 39; seeks unification, 67-70; the ultimate, 110; its contradictions, 16.
 * Physiology, its prestige, 112.
 * Piper, Mrs., 314, 319.
 * Plato, 268.
 * Pluralism, vi, 151, 178, 192, 264, 267.
 * Positivism, 54, 108.
 * Postulates, 91-2.
 * Possibilities, 151, 181-2, 292, 294.
 * Powers, our powers as congruous with the world, 86.
 * Providence, 180.
 * Psychical research, what it has accomplished, 299-327; Society for, 303, 305, 325.
 * Pugnacity, 49, 51.


 * , three, in Ethics, 185.


 * , 12, 30.
 * Rationality, the sentiment of, 63-110; limits of theoretic, 65-74; mystical, 74; practical, 82-4; postulates of, 152.