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Continuation of the Subject,
4. Habit,
Refutation of Dr. Hartley's Theory of Association,
LECTURE XLIV.
Influence of Particular Suggestions on the Intellectual Cha-
racter,
On the Moral Character,
LECTURE XLV.
On the Phenomena of Relative Suggestion,
Arrangement of our Relative Feelings as Coexisting or Succes-
sive,
On the Relations of Coexistence,
LECTURE XLVII.
Absurdity of Nominalism,
Use of General Terms,
Incongruity on the Terms used by the Conceptualists,
Smith's Theory of the Invention of General Terms,
LECTURE XLVI.
Continuation of the Subject.-Theory of General Notions,
Errors of the Realists and Nominalists Regarding Generaliza-
tion,
LECTURE XLVIII.
Analysis of the Process of Reasoning,
. 117
. 120
126
•
131
. 138
PAGE
87
89
101
104
145
146
148
159
164
174
. 178
. 183
. 185
. 187
190
LECTURE XLIX.
The Order of Propositions in Reasoning is not owing to any
Sagacity,
is Inde-
pendent of our Will,
depends
en the Laws of Suggestion,
The Variety in their Trains of thought, causes Mankind to
differ in Opinion,
211
What Locke terms Sagacity, may be, in part, produced indi-
rectly,
. 214
Analysis of the Scholastic Logic,
215
II. Reason,
III. Abstraction,
LECTURE L.
On the Relations of Succession,
LECTURE LI.
LECTURE LII.
Retrospect of the Intellectual Phenomena of the Mind,
Of Emotions,
Classification of Emotions,
1. Immediate Emotions, involving no Moral Affection,
1. Cheerfulness and Melancholy,
LECTURE LIII.
2. Wonder, at what is New and Strange,
3. Languor, at what is long continued,
4. Beauty, and its Opposite,
LECTURE LIV.
Continuation of the same Subject,
. 208
·
. 235
Reduction of certain Supposed Faculties to Relative Sugges-
tion, I. Judgment,
205
209
. 220
. 231
239
241
. 244
251
. 253
. 255
257
. 268
. 273
976
252
Continuation of the same Subject,-Why certain Objects ex-
cite this Emotion,
LECTURE LV.
LECTURE LVI.
Continuation of the same subject,-The Emotion of Beauty an
original Feeling of the Mind,
Remarks on Mr. Alison's Theory,
LECTURE LVII.
Conclusion of the Emotion of Beauty and its Opposite, .
5. Sublimity,
LECTURE LVIII.
Retrospect of the Emotions of Beauty and Sublimity,
6. The Ludicrous,
LECTURE LIX
1. Feelings distinctive of Vice and Virtue,
2. Love and Hate,
LECTURE LX.
Remarks on the Utility of these Emotions,
LECTURE LXI.
Conclusion of the Emotions of Love and Hate,
3. Sympathy,
Immediate Emotions, involving necessarily some Moral Feel-
ing,
LECTURE LXII.
Conclusion of the Emotion of Sympathy,
4. Pride and Humility,
297
. 332
. 339
314
321
. 350
. 352
366
. 373
ib.
. 377
LECTURE LXIII.
II. Retrospective Emotions, having relation to others,
1. Anger,
2. Gratitude,
LECTURE. LXV.
LECTURE LXIV.
Retrospective Emotions, having Reference to ourselves,—
1. Simple Regret and Gladness,
2. Remorse and its opposite,
Modes of our different Desires,
1. Desire of our own continued Existence,
III. Prospective Emotions, comprehending our Desires and
Fears,
Classification of them,
438
. 444
452
459
. 559
464