In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

INDEX Alexander, Samuel: his Moral Order and Progress as the best statement of ethical theory, 305 Analogy: value lies in its suggestiveness, 355 Aristotle, 224, 263; on friendship, 383 Artistic activities: aesthetic consciousness in German philosophy, 428; aesthetic rightness related to moral rightness, 247; organize aspects of everybody 's experience, 425, 428; quality of is quality of experience as such, 428; represent completely mediated experience, 420; social function of, 431-34; as union of sensational and ideal, 431 Attention: theory of as phase of Social Psychology, 275; and vocations, 28082 . See also Habit -direct: found in unified activity, 12325 , 127-28; self does not appear in, 134-35 -voluntary: always involves conflict of old and new activity, 125-26; cannot be explained in terms of other fixed psychological categories, 130-31; as process of forming a new coordination , 125-26 Bain, Alexander, 4, 6, 111,222; cannot explain sense of obligation, 3 Baldwin, James Mark, 110-11, 116, 261, 288; on imitation, 117-19, 330, 348, 364-65 Bentham, Jeremy, 84, 252, 293; idea that duty is nonsensical, 216-17 Bluntschli, Johann Kasper: account of society as an organism, 356-57 Bosanquet, Bernard: his Philosophical Theory ofthe State, 305 Caird, Edward: on imitation, 330, 364; praise for his Social Philosophy of Comte,305 Carlyle, Thomas: assertion that printing invented democracy, 384; on modern industrial system as pigs crowding in a trough, 413; on priestly function of literature, 432 Choice: as outcome of process of self-discovery , 258; refers to active phase of self, 142 Common sense: business of philosophy is fighting it, 425; two senses of, 425-26; view of external world, 426 Comte, Auguste, 306 Conflict: arises because society takes mutual interests into account, 322; and evolution of rights, 346-48; importance of in dynamic organism, 34243 ; not the result of an improper theory ,333 Continuity: complete dissolution of is impossible , 290; in deliberative process, 226; essential to idea of evolution or growth, 261; importance of for Dewey, 139n.6 Copernicus, 51, 235 Criminal, 335-37, 345-46. See also Reformer Custom: consciousness is coordinated with disintegration of, 389-90; and development of psychological individual , 100-106; difficulty of overcoming in economic matters, 400-401 Darwin, Charles, 235; on emotion, 14849 , 156 Deliberation: brings out relations and values, 219-20; does not involve weighing pros and cons, 245; ideals develop within, 226-31; moral value 449 450 of, 115; as third phase of moral self, 141 Desire: arises out of divided or partial activity, 170-71, 175-76; considered as motive, 254-55; correlative with effort, 212-13; criticism of hedonist account of, 174, 177-79; distinction between its excitant and object, 17374 ; does not conflict with good as presented by reason, 194; good as satisfaction of, 181-82, 184-85, 189; higher and lower, 206-7; impossible to trace origin of, 169; not a piece of psychical machinery, 106; not formed from the start, 255; not merely selfish but assertion of process of life, 19798 , 199-202; as one side of effort, 170; as projective, 168-70; why we think it is bad, 202-5 Dewey, John, 19,20,23,34,36, 174,214, 256; account of moral categories, xxxxvii ; account of virtue in The Study ofEthics: A Syllabus, 152; article on effort, 213; article on reflex arc, xl; on fact/value distinction, xiii-xviii; later social philosophy, lvi; Stratton's review of the The Study ofEthics: A Syllabus, xxviii-xxxv, 107. See also "Logical Conditions of a Scientific Treatment of Morality" Division of labor: in the social structure, 342; related to the necessities of the case, 352 Dualism, political: allows sphere for both individual and society, 294-95; contrasted with organic theory, 301-2; and universals, 331-32 Duty. See Obligation; Rights Economic activities: categories of capital, labor, the market, 388-92; competition in, 411-19; evolution of wants in, 395-96; importance of technology for, 397-404; practical intelligence in, 399-400; role of money in, 394-95; technological activities as mediations of organism and environment, 38788 ; time and space in, 391, 394; wants, needs, and efforts in, 388 Economic aspect of society: control of not merely a moral matter, 350-51; evaluation of labor in, 393-94; and excessive accumulation of wealth, 350-52, Index 434; and questions of distribution, 274-75 Effort: aspects of, 212-14; not directed against an external obstacle to will, 213; not external to will, 236; moral aspect of involves structure of self as self, 213-14; not a piece...

Share