INDEX. Addison (Joseph) quoted, 112. "ADELPHOS," M.D., Author of Essay, The Popular Doctrine of Altruism, 39. BATHGATE (HERBERT J.), Author of Essay, Walt Whitman, 155. Browning (Robert) quoted, 153. Burial and Cremation, 67. Carlyle (Thomas) compared with Emerson, 119; his definition of Certainty, the intuition of the impossibility of a Contradictory, 104. Compensation, here and hereafter, 133, 139. Comte (Auguste): Law of the Three Stages, 20, 21; Classification Cremation, 67; in Rome and Greece, 70; bearing of English Democracy, 51; not identical with any one form of government Disinterestedness, the highest form of Individualism, 39. Emerson (Ralph Waldo) compared with Carlyle, 120; the Evolu- 66 Compensation" and "Spiritual Laws," 137; quoted, 126, 127, 131, 137. Faith, to be practical, must be real, 3. FROTHINGHAM (O. B.), Author of Essay, The Real God, 1. God, becomes unreal when life ceases to be simple, 4; Pagan and Happiness is Virtue, 135; the Happiness of Martyrs, 141. Hell, the popular doctrine, 107; not compatible with the idea of Humanity Positivism in relation to Humanity, 40, 43; progress Hume (David) quoted, 181. Idealism, 123. Idolatry, an effort to realize God, 5. Incarnation, Christian doctrine of, 7. Individualism best attained by Disinterestedness, 39. Jesus, and upholder of the Rights and Liberties of the Soul, 55. KAINES (Dr. J.), Author of Essays, Positivism, its Intellectual Lewes (George Henry) and Berkeley, 182. Lewins, M.D. (Robert) quoted, 185. LEWIN (WALTER), Author of Essays, Emerson and the Transcen- Materialism and Spiritualism, 184. Mill (John Stuart) on the Positivist Calendar of Comte, 42. O'BYRNE (M. C.), Author of Essay, The Eschatological Mania, 179. Parker (Theodore): Anecdote about him and Emerson, 120. Polytheism, 22. Pope (Alexander) quoted, 188. Positivism Comte's Law of the Three Stages, 21; his Classifica- Prayer difficulties about Prayer, 145; the Scientists and Prayer, Punishment of Sin, 139. Religion of Humanity, 37, 46. Salgues (Dr.) on Old Age, 107. Scientists not always friends of freedom and progress, 189. Shakespeare quoted, 12. Sin and Punishment, 139. Soul grows by Virtue, 141. Success in Life, 131. Tennyson (Alfred) quoted, 108, 110, 115, 182. Transcendentalism in New England, 121; what Transcendentalism Truth, criterion of, 95. Virtue, identical with Happiness, 135; Virtue, the growth of the WALTERS (FRANK W.), Author of Essay, The True Democracy, 49. Whitman (Walt), the great Poet of Democracy, 158; his spiritual- |