Mackintosh, Sir J., Life of. Moxon, 1835 PAGE 23 33, 34, 63 Malthus, Essay on the Principle of Population; or, a View of Martineau, Miss Harriet, Condensed Translation of Comte's 4 24, 28, 29, 35, 38, 40 Maurice, Rev. F. D. 22, 24 Mayhew, H., London Labour and London Poor, 1851 Examination of Sir W. Hamilton's Philosophy. Inaugural Address to the University of St. Milton's Paradise Lost. Milton's Works, by Rev. H. J. Todd, Montucla, J. F., Histoire des Mathématiques. Paris, 1799- Morell, J. D., Historical and Critical View of Speculative 16 7, 56 Newman, Rev. J. H., An Essay on the Miracles recorded in xiv INDEX OF AUTHORITIES AND REFERENCES. Newton, Sir Isaac, Philosophic Naturalis Principia Mathe- Oersted, Hans Christian, The Soul in Nature. Translated by Page, David, F.R.S.E., F.G.S., Philosophy of Geology. Black- PAGE 10 xvi 66 68 7, 52, 69 Parker, Theodore, Discourse of Matters pertaining to Religion. 7, 11, 49, 58 Playfair, Professor, Fourth Dissertation to Encyclopædia Britannica, 8th ed. Black, Edinburgh.. Pope, Alexander, Essay on Man. Works, Trade ed., 1806, vol. iii. 29 13 Powell, Baden, Rev., Unity of Worlds, 2nd ed. Longmans, Order of Nature. Longmans, 1859 Public Schools Commission, Report of, vol. iv. 1864 Sedgwick, Professor, Discourse on the Studies of the University of Cambridge 22, 55 75, 76 30 Shaftesbury, Lord, An Inquiry concerning Virtue. istics, vol. ii. 1757 Character 62 Smith, Adam, Wealth of Nations, by M'Culloch. Longmans, 1846. Smith, Rev. Pye, Geology and Scripture, 5th ed. Bohn, 1854. 68 Smith, Dr. Southwood, Philosophy of Health, 11th ed. Longmans, 1865 34, 69 34 Somerset, Duke of, Christian Theology and Modern Scepticism. Somerville, Mary, Connexion of the Physical Sciences, 9th ed. Spencer, Herbert, First Principles. Williams & Norgate, 1863. Classification of the Sciences, 2nd ed. 1869. 37 Principles of Biology. Williams & Norgate, 1864 11, 43 82 Stewart, Dugald, Elements of the Philosophy of the Human On the Scientific Use of the Imagination. Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, with Proofs, Voysey, Rev. C., Defence of. Trübner & Co., 1869. PAGE 4 41 76 36 Whately, Dr. (Archbishop of Dublin), Lecture on the Works Whewell, Dr., Bridgewater Treatise. London, 1852. 17, 44, 45, 49 History of the Inductive Sciences, 2nd ed. Parker, On the Fundamental Antithesis of Philosophy. 18 56 The great truths, that Natural and Divine operations are one, and that the laws of Nature are Divine thoughts' If the laws of our reason did not exist in Nature, we should vainly attempt to force them upon her; if the laws of Nature did not exist in our reason, we should not be able to comprehend them.' OERSTED'S Soul in Nature (The Spiritual in the Material). THE INDUCTIVE PHILOSOPHY. AN ILLUSTRIOUS ASTRONOMER, who flourished about the time of the invention of the telescope 1-a period when inquisitive and reflecting minds were beginning to perceive the difficulty of reconciling the discoveries of Physical Science with the Theology of the Christian Fathers has left on record these memorable ex pressions: In Theology we balance authorities; in However un Science we weigh reasons. A holy man was Lactantius, Low we who denied that the earth could be round. A holy Combine autho man was Augustine, who, granting the earth's rotundity, denied the antipodes. A holy thing to me is the Inquisition, which, allowing the smallness of the earth, denies its motion. But more holy to me is Truth; and hence I prove, by Science, that the earth is round, is inhabited on every side, is of small size, and in motion among the stars.'2 1 Note A, p. 44. 2 'In Theologia quidem authoritatum, in Philosophia vero rationum, esse momenta ponderanda. Sanctus igitur Lactantius, qui terram negavit esse rotundam: Sanctus Augustinus, qui, rotunditaté concessa, negavit tamen antipodas; Sanctum Officium hodiernorum, qui, exilitate terræ concessa, negant tamen ejus motum; at magis B |