Bell, G. M.: his "Country Banks and the Currency, 339." Berkeley's system, 75.
Bible: Lectures on, by the Rev. T. Gilbart, quoted, 60; its evidences, 193; landmarks, 197; a belief in, strengthens the powers of reasoning,
Bickersteth, Rev. R.: his speech quoted,
141; his Bible Landmarks quoted, 197; his National Obligations to the Bible quoted, 244.
Bigland's Letters on History "quoted, 316, 317, 319, 322.
Blakey's Essay on Logic quoted, 144, 163, 359.
his History of Moral Science quoted, 351, 366. Bloomer dress, 304.
Blunt's Undesigned Coincidences, 105, 317.
Board of Health, their Report quoted, 48, 54, 86, 87.
Books: immoral, none sold at the stations of the North-Western Rail- Way, 254.
Boswell's Life of Johnson quoted, 258. Branches of knowledge should have
Brewer's Guide to Science quoted, 49. Briggs, Mr., a working millwright, his prize essay on the Industrial Exhibition quoted, 90.
Britannia newspaper quoted, 241. British Association for the Advance- ment of Science, 336, 338. British Banner quoted, 92. Brougham, Lord, quoted, 59. Bull, an example of, 142.
Bullion's Internal Management of a Country Bank, 107.
Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress quoted, 218.
Buxton, Sir Thomas Fowell, his attri- butes, 9; his argument from enu- meration quoted in his Life by his son, 61.
Cause and effect: arguments from, may be brought under genus and species, 69; the relation of, 71; physical, 71; moral, 80; conditional, 95; final, 109; fallacies connected with, 210; connected with history, 324; the relation of, connected with statistics, 341; of virtues and vices, 354.
Chain of reasoning: wherein it differs from a series of reasonings, 285. Chalmers, Dr., on Political Economy, quoted, 81, 86; his opinion of Church establishments, 81; of Ricardo's theory of rent, 86; adopted the Malthusian theory of population, 89, 332.
Chances, the doctrine of, 138.
Charles II. granted a Charter to the Royal Society, 77; anecdote of, 78. Chartists their principles, 51. Chess, lessons taught by, 313. Children, logic to, 308.
Christian Times quoted, 159, 345. Christianity, evidences of, 193. Church establishment: its advantages, 81. Circumstantial evidence, 99; the prin- ciples of. 100; employed by theolo- gians, 103; Paley's Horæ Paulinæ, ib.; Blunt's Undesigned Coinci- dences, 105; application to the ordi- nary affairs of life, 106; Scriptural instances of, 107; final cause an item in, 119; illustration of. 120. City of London Literary and Scientific Institution: its prize essay, 361. Civilization, origin of, 122. Clarendon, Lord: his attributes, 40. Clarke's. Dr. Adam, Commentary on the Bible quoted, 214.
Classification, examples of, 54; mental,
Consciousness, truths that we know by, 6.
Constantine the Great removed the seat of empire, 319.
Contrast: a principle of reasoning, 158; examples of, 160; used in theology, 161.
Controversy not inconsistent with re- ligion, 13; may sometimes be better declined, 249, 300.
Conversation, compared with reading, 153; rules of, 255; cause of man's superiority over animals, 257; with- out reasoning, 260.
Conversational reasoning, 249, 254; examples of, 258.
Convocation, the Archbishop of Canter- bury's Speech on, 94. Country bank notes, 339.
Court of Chancery, abuses in, 235. Courtesy in controversy, 300. Courts of Law, evidence in, 99. Crime: causes of its increase, 92. Criticisms on Logic for the Million, 33, 81, 160, 255.
Croly's, Dr., Sermons quoted, 112; on Marriage with the Sister of a deceased Wife quoted, 116; National Know- ledge, National Power, quoted, 349. Cromwel!, Oliver: his government, 318. Croxall's Esop's Fables quoted, 176. Cruelty to animals, Lord Erskine's speech upon, 124.
Crystal Palace: its size, 348. Cumming's, Dr., Sermon on God in Science quoted, 110; Lecture on Music quoted, 295.
Curran; his address to a jury, 241.
Daily avocations, our reasonings should be associated with, 360.
David what he did when hungry, 127, 134.
Debating societies, 363; advantages of, 364.
Debtors, the laws of Moses respecting, 320.
Debts, public: Mr. Burke's dilemma against, 280.
Deduction: what is it? 129.
Definition: what is it? 25; reasoning from, 62; errors in reasoning from, 209.
Degrees of assent, 198.
Degrees of rank in heaven, Dr. Watts on, 247.
Deity, proofs of his existence, 110, 224; proofs of his goodness, 112, 113. Descriptive reasoning, 224, 227; the principles of reasoning connected with, 230; how rendered more vivid, 231; in the form of personification, 232; descriptions of Geo. Robins's, 232; practical application of, 234: erroneous reasoning from, 236.
De Vericour's Historical Analysis of Christian Civilization quoted, 321. Dickens's Household Words quoted,341. Diet, the logic of, 308.
Dilemma: what is it? 276; examples of, 279; Bastiat's in favour of free- trade, 279; Burke's against public debts, 280; Torrens's against works conducted by the Government, 280; Say's against Sumptuary Laws, 280; Seymour's against Priestly Abso- lution, 280; Lord Beaumont's against Bishops appointed by Rome, 281; dilemma against Synods, 281; in favour of the Pursuit of Knowledge,
Discontent, reasons against, 244. Discoveries that may arise from the Industrial Exhibition, 291; in science, 321.
Disputation, scholastic, 266, 268. Disputes not incompatible with re- ligion, 13; are sometimes better avoided, 300.
D'Israeli's Curiosities
of Literature quoted, 40, 143, 178, 361, 140. Dissenters, Dr. Alexander on, 89. Distinctions between moral good and evil, 351.
Division, rules of, 45; the application of, 48.
Doctrines of the Catholic Church: transubstantiation, 38; confession and absolution, 280; celibacy of the clergy, 245; baptismal regeneration, 242; papal hierarchy, 246. Doctrines of the Society of Friends, on war and oaths, 355; on salutations and amusements, 356.
Domestic concerns, great men un- happy in, 322.
Domestic consultation, the logic of, 310. Doubting the art of, taught by meta- physical logic, preface vii. 75. Dress, the logic of, 304.
Drunkenness: its effects, 80, 354.
Duke of Wellington: how proved to be mortal according to Mr. Mill, 272.
Elijah: his residence at Zarephath,105; another reference to, 138. Employments: their effects on the mind, 125
Encyclopædia Britannica quoted, 144. England: superiority of, 244.
English Gentleman, The, quoted, 311. Enthymeme: what is it? 250; examples of, 252.
Enumeration: arguments from, 59; of the duties of public companies, 352. Epichirema: a compound syllogism, 275, 277.
Erroneous reasonings of political eco- nomists, 68, 121.
Errors in reasoning, 201; from not un- derstanding the question, 204; from the relation of subject and attribute, 205; from a whole and its parts, 207; from genus and species, 208; from cause and effect, 210; from examples, 211; from analogy, comparison and contrast, 213; from parables, fables, and proverbs, 214; from written do- cuments, 214; miscellaneous errors, 216.
Erskine, Lord: his speech quoted on cruelty to animals, 124.
Evidence of our sense: can we believe it? 75.
Examples, good, to be imitated, 133. Examples: mode of reasoning from, 127; exemplified from Scripture, 132; differ from fables, 172; fallacies con- nected with, 211.
Exeter, Bishop of: his trial with the Rev. Mr. Gorham, 189. Exhibition, the Great: Banking Prize
Essays in connexion with, 54; Lord Overstone's speech on,61; Prize Essay, by the Rev. Mr. Whish, 81, 154, 357; Prize Essay, by a working millwright, on, 90; speech of the Earl of Carlisle on, 290; article from the Times on, 292; statistics of, 348; Moral effects of, 35%.
Experience the test of truth, 300. Extensive empires, advantages of, 322. Eye: a description of, 224.
Final cause and effect: the relation of, 109; application of, to natural theo- logy 110; to the divine attributes, 112; to the human mind, 113; to the animal creation, 114; to moral ac- tions; 115; the design of legislators, 116; the interpretation of the law, 117; in judicial cases, 118; in cir- cumstantial evidence, 119; in politi- cal economy, 121; to the feelings of the mind, 122; effects of training on the mind, 124; the ordinary af- fairs of life, 125; fallacies connected with, 211.
Fletcher's Lectures on the Roman Catholic Religion quoted, 242, 246. Follett, Sir William : his clear reason- ings, 360.
Forced interpretation, 214. Forgery of the Old Testament: dis- proved by a trilemma, 283. Forms of reasoning, 221, 274. France: law of partnership in, 88. Francis, St.: his Equivocation, 220. Franklyn, Dr.: his mode of reasoning, 44; anecdote of, 215; his Poor Richard's Almanack quoted, 182. Free-Trade and its so-called Sophisms quoted, 84.
Garden supplies examples for classifi- cation, 66.
General principles: their application to particular cases, 57, 137; misap- plication of, 208; application of in political economy, 331; in moral philosophy, 355.
General theories should not be raised on a small number of particulars, 130, 211.
Gentleman: what forms one, 311. Genus and species: the relation of, 53; rules for dividing, 55; mode of reasoning from, 56, 130; errors in reasoning from, 63, 208; in statis- tics, 343; in morals, 353.
Giddings, J. R. of America: his speech on slavery quoted, 157.
Gilbart J. W.: his prize for a Banking Essay in connexion with the Great Exhibition, 54.
his Practical Treatise on Banking quoted, 57, 107, 145, 299, 339, 352.
his Lectures on Ancient Com- merce quoted, 72, 98, 125, 135, 243, 281, 327, 354, 355.
Gilbart J. W.: his Lecture on the Philo-
sophy of Language quoted, 150, 258. Gilbart, Rev. Thomas: his Lectures
on the Bible quoted, 60.
Gilfillan's Bards of the Bible quoted, 283.
Goodwill of other people: how to ob- tain, 126.
Gorham, Rev. Mr.: his trial with the Bishop of Exeter, 189. Grammar compared with Logic, 4; sub- stantives and adjectives compared with subject and attribute, 31. Guilt; indications of, 100. Guy Fawkes's Indictment quoted, 156.
Habit, the effect of, 135.
Habits, good: the source of happiness,
277; man has the power of forming them, 278; of reasoning, how formed, 357.
Hall's Book of the Feet quoted, 305. Hallam's Literature of Europe quoted, 270.
Hamilton, Dr.: his sermon on Early Closing quoted, 97, 231.
-Sir William: his new ana-
lytic, 271. Health necessary to reasoning well, 357; effects of certain studies upon, 358.
Health of mind; how promoted, 359. Henry, Rev. Matthew: quoted, 139. Hill, Rev. Rowland: Sherman's Anec- dotes of, 38, 82; Southey's description of, 226.
Hill's Logic quoted, 131, 252. Historians, philosophical, 139. Historical evidence, 229.
History: mode of writing, 216, 316; logic applied to, 313; political eco- nomy founded on,325; the philosophy of, 315. Holt, Judge: Lord Campbell's charac-
ter of, in his Lives of the Lord Chan- cellors, 154.
Homœopathy: must be proved by ex- periment, not by reasoning, 79. Honourable man; a merchant should be one, 354.
Horæ Paulinæ of Paley, quotations from, 103.
Human body is an animal, 79.
Husband logical, is useful, 15.
Huyshe, Rev. John: his Logic quoted, 250.
Ignorantia elenchi: what is it? 204. Illicit process: what is it? 207. Imagination is restrained by reasoning, 14, 359.
Independence of mind: what it implies, 19.
Induction: what is it? 129; explained by Mr. Hill, 131.
Industrial Exhihition: Lord Overstone on. 61; Rev. Mr. Whish on, 81, 154, 357; a working man's essay on, 90; the Earl of Carlisle on, 290,
Industry: the cause of distinction. 128; the cause of wealth, 328; of a gentle- man, 134.
Intellect: truths of, 6.
Internal evidences of the Divine in- spiration of the Scriptures, 194. Interpretation: rules of, in regard to legal instruments, 191; of the Holy Scriptures, 200.
Interrogative reasoning, 237. Ireland, Lord-Lieutenancy of: effects of its abolition, 93; population of, 335; circulation of. 340.
gations to the Bible, 244; on Music, 295; on Congregational Chanting, 297; on the Philosophy of History, 313; on Oliver Cromwell, 318; on systematic morality, 349. Legal argumentation: the principle of analogy applied to, 146. Lessing's Fables quoted, 173.
Literary Characteristics of the Bible quoted, 179, 199.
Literary Institutions: their effects, 245, 364.
Literary World of New York quoted, 118, 307.
Locke on the Human Understanding quoted, 268.
Logic: definition of, 3; compared with grammar, 4.
Loose definitions: reasoning from, 209. Love of truth necessary to sound reason- ing, 18.
Lysson's Esop's Fables quoted, 177.
his Statistical Account of the British Empire quoted, 188. Macculloch's, Dr., Literary Character- istics of the Holy Scriptures quoted, 179, 199.
Macnish's Anatomy of Drunkenness quoted, 354.
Malthus, his dispute with Macculloch, 66; his theory of population, 89, 332. Man's power over himself to prevent or control Insanity quoted, 14. Manner: influence of, 21. Manufactures a source of national wealth, 230.
Marcet, Mrs.: Conversations on Political Economy quoted, 50, 88, 135, 325; her Willy's Grammar quoted, 240. Marriage: the logic of, 306. Marriage with the sister of a deceased wife, 165.
Martin, Rev. S. Lecture on Money quoted, 42.
Master, logical: useful, 15.
Mathematical reasoning, 47, 285, 362. Mayo's Philosophy of Living quoted, 313.
Medicine, its character as a science, 78, 79.
Melvill, Rev. H.: his sermon quoted, 300.
Memory strengthened by the art of reasoning, 13.
Mental independence should be culti- vated, 19.
Mental reservation, 219.
Metaphors are not arguments, 164. Mill's Logic quoted, 31, 75, 180, 208, 212, 213, 272.
Mind: its powers, 5.
Modern civilization: the permanency of, 293.
Money, metallic: its attributes, 42; effects of its increase, 30; evils of its abolition, 89.
Moral cause and effect: the relation of, 78, 80; examples of, 81; modes of reasoning from this relation, 82; dif- ficulty in proving that a specific cause does produce a specific effect, 83; public measures are usually judged by their effects, 85; sometimes effects are put for causes, 85; the same cause does not always produce the same effect, 87; the reductio ad absurdam, or pointing out the absurd effects, 88; proving too much, 90; ad- vantages and disadvantages of pro- posed measures are referred to cause and effect, 90; effects of early mar- riages, 92; causes of the increase of crime, 92; effects of the Lord Lieu- tenancy of Ireland, 93; probable effects of a convocation, 94; fallacies connected with cause and effect, 210. Moral habits a source of wealth, 328. Moral philosophy: application of logic to, 349.
Moral principle connected with sound reasoning, 365.
Moral reasonings: the principle of ana- logy applied to, 145.
Moral truths proved to exist, 349. Morality of actions consists in their motives, 115.
Morning Chronicle quoted, 234, 345. Morning Herald quoted, 281. Mosaic code of law: its spirit, 116; writings, authenticity of, 317. Moses allowed interest for money, 39; the spirit of his laws, 116; respecting debt, 320.
Motives to actions," 109; form the morality of actions, 115; inferred from the actions, 119, 125; fallacy of assigning wrong motives, 211. Mottram's prize essay on Institutional Education quoted, 364.
Multiplication: application of, 48, 336. Munro's Manual of Logic quoted, 39. Music: advantages of, 295.
Names have no necessary connexion with things, 2.
Napoleon Buonaparte, 8, 13, 173, 216. Narratives, 227.
National debt Mr. Burke's dilemma on, 280.
National wealth: its nature, 327; its causes, 327; its effects, 330.
« EelmineJätka » |