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Senior, Mr., on division of labour as the origin of society, i. 14; on a special
training for the higher departments of government, ii. 400.

Seriman, Zaccaria, his political romance, ii. 274, n.

Servius, accounts of his legislation, i. 268; laws falsely attributed to him,
i. 289.

Sevarambians, History of, ii. 271.

Short-hand writing, i. 234.

Sidney, Algernon, his political speculations, i. 62.

Signs, their logical nature, i. 370; two classes, ib.

Skill, practical, in politics, ii. 399; general and special, ii. 400.

Slavery, ii. 101.

Smith, Adam, his work on political economy, i. 72 ; ii. 153; his four maxims of
taxation, ii. 160.

Smith, Rev. Sydney, on habits, i. 346; ii. 183.

Social science, or sociology, i. 51.

Society, three sorts of, i. 9 n.; savage and barbarous distinguished, i. 12, n. ;
civil society originates in war, and not in the division of labour, i. 13 ;
man is a social animal, i. 15; does not extend to the entire species, i. 38;
political society essentially national, i. 40; ii. 452; societies, political,
their limited extent, ii. 90.

Socrates, character of his political speculations, i. 62; on the separation of
nature from utility, ii. 138; his views respecting a perfect state, ii. 245 ;
communist opinions attributed to him by Plato, ii. 250.

Solis, his historical speeches, i. 239.

Solitary animals cannot be domesticated, i. 38, n.

Solitude is combined with sociability in man, i. 34.

Solon, accounts of his legislation, i. 261, 274; laws falsely attributed to him,
i. 289.

Sovereign, use of the word, i. 90; sovereign power attributed to the king of
England, i. 90, n.

Species, meaning of the term, ii. 431; varieties of a species, ii. 431.
Speculative politics, i. 53; its province, i. 58; it inquires into the operation
and goodness of governments and laws, ib.; its predictions, ii. 350.
Speeches, in history, i. 232; reporting of speeches in antiquity, i. 233; ficti-
tious speeches were composed by the ancient historians, i. 235; ought
to be a true report of words actually used by the speaker, i, 242.
State of nature, i. 9; ii. 36; an ideal picture, ii. 281.

Spinoza, his political writings, i. 68; how he treats the three forms of govern-
ment, ii. 85; on the best form of government, ii. 308; his views on a cycle
of governments, ii. 444.

Statistical facts, i. 126; mode of statistical observation, i. 142; its recent use,
i. 134; difference between observation in statistics and positive politics,
i. 138.

Statistics, i. 54; originated in Germany, i. 72.

Stewart, Dugald, his remark on Grotius, i. 68; commends Montesquieu for
not quoting Grotius, i. 74; on the vicissitudes of civilization, ii. 445.
Stoics, their definition of economy, i. 45, n.; they did not occupy themselves
much with politics, i. 64; their doctrine of universal philanthropy, i. 64, n.
Storch, his definition of political economy, i. 45; his division of political
science, ii. 132.

Strabo, on the causes of Egyptian animal worship, i. 405.

Suarez, on the cessation of the cause of a law, ii. 18.

Success, political, i. 463; ii. 409.

Suffrage, direct and indirect, distinguished, ii. 83; universal, ii. 84.
Swift, his Lilliput and Brobdignag, ii. 271.

Syllogism, practical, ii. 165.

Tacitus, his historical character, i. 65; his remark on the phoenix, i. 290; on
the love of infamy, i. 348; on hating those whom you have injured,
ii. 44; his Germania, ii. 230.

Tame, its etymology, i. 37, n.

Tarquins, their expulsion, how attested, i. 266, 269, 271, 278.

Tasso, historical character of his Jerusalem Delivered, i. 248, 249.
Technical terms, i. 77; ought to be used constantly in the same sense,
i. 90, 93; difference between the popular and scientific uses of a term,
i. 92; their translation from one language to another, i. 94; influences
which untechnicalize them, i. 96; used for legal, parliamentary, and
administrative purposes, i. 98-101; ii. 387.

Temple, Sir William, his political speculations, i. 69; on a cycle of govern-
ments, ii. 444.

Temporary legislation, its experimental character, i. 174.

Tendencies of causes, i. 384, 386, 442; ii. 10.

Terminology in physics and politics, i. 97.

Terrasson, ideal descriptions of society in his Sethos, ii. 272.

Territory, national, how far involved in the idea of a nation, i. 40; connected
with sovereignty, ii. 453.

Theophrastus, his political speculations, i. 63.

Theopompus, his collections for his history, i. 183; he attests the capture of
Rome by the Gauls, i. 269; his description of two imaginary nations, ii. 265.
Theories, universal, in politics, ii. 25; partial, ii. 87; limitations in partial
theories ought to be expressed, ii. 88; application of partial theories,
ii. 112; they differ from empirical laws of nature, ii. 114; false theories
in politics, ii. 201, 203.

Theorists, political, their practical defects, ii. 193.

Theory, its nature, ii. 149; its conversion into maxims, ii. 163; its application
in practice, ii. 164; meaning of the maxim, 'True in theory, and false in
practice,' ii. 172; relation to precedent, ii. 232.

Theseus, his consolidation of Attica, i. 262.

Thomson, Mr., on the proof of the authorship of Junius, i. 366.
Thou, de, his history, i. 69.

Thucydides, character of his history, i. 61, 142; how he collected his mate-
rials, i. 183; his distinction as to hearsay evidence, i. 186; faithful
preservation of his work, i. 207; his speeches, i. 232; mode of their
composition, i. 234, 241; on the influence of time in rendering events
obscure, i. 258; describes the history of Pisistratida as preserved by
oral tradition, i. 260, 271; his account of the consolidation of Attica by
Theseus, i. 262; his dates of events in early Greek history, i. 276, 286;
his account of the Trojan war, i. 289; his exclusion of irrelevant matter,
i. 299; on the cause of the Trojan war, i. 333; on the cause of the Pelo-
ponnesian war, i. 334; on the government of the weak by the strong, ii. 41;
his debate on Mytilene, ii. 314.

Tidology, ii. 337, 339.

Titles of office, i. 85, 89; they do not designate any constant aggregate of
powers, i. 101; they are often not translated, i. 102; difficulties as to
rendering them from one language into another, i. 104; they resemble

proper names, i. 106; in politics the most abstract technical terms are
the most ambiguous, i. 107.

Tocqueville, M. de, on the characteristics of democracy, ii. 59, 67.
Tooke, Mr., his history of prices, i. 452.

Torture, its analogy with experiment, i. 169; its inefficiency, ib.; was an
institution juris gentium, ii. 32; frequent in the East, ii. 102.

Tradition, oral, i. 186; its infidelity, i. 188, 216, 317; analogy with the
tradition of customs, i. 190; rejected by the protestants, i. 215; is
assisted by metre, i. 217; by hieroglyphic symbols, i. 219; by periodical
observances and by other mnemonic facts, i. 219; how long it lasts,
i. 272; means by which its duration may be extended, ib., i. 275; time
alone does not render events uncertain or obscure, i. 199, 257.

Trogus Pompeius, his criticism on Livy and Sallust, for the length of the
speeches in their histories, i. 237.

Troy, siege of, its historical character, i. 254; its cause, i. 333.

True history of Lucian, ii. 265.

Type in art, ii. 238.

Túpavvos, tyrannus, meaning of the term, i. 88, 95; resemblance of his
power to that of a slave-master, ii. 62, n.

Tyranny, i. 96.

Twelve tables of Rome, i. 274.

Ulpian, on natural law, i. 16.

Uniformity of human nature, ii. 38, 139.

Universal jurisprudence, i. 54, 57; its principles, ii. 27, 37, 139; universal
history, how formed, i. 302; its difference from a history of man and a
history of civilization, i. 303; universal principles of international law,
ii. 35; universal principles of human nature, ii. 38; universal propositions
respecting political power, ii. 46; respecting political forms, ii. 49; uni-
versal propositions in politics, ii. 25; in positive politics, ib.; universal
language, ii. 37; universal weights and measures, ib.; universal church,
ii. 288.

Unwritten laws, ii. 27.

Utopia (by Sir T. More), its character, i. 68; ii. 265; its description of per-
petual peace, ii. 285.

Valerius Maximus, ii. 212.

Vatel, on the construction of instruments, ii. 7.

Vegetius, his maxims of war, ii. 160, 174.

Virgil, on physical causes, i. 399.

Visible and invisible church, ii. 288.

Vivisection of animals, i. 161; of men, i. 162.

Volition, its nature, i. 149; ii. 322.

Volney, on the connexion between liberty and high ground, ii. 112.
Voltaire on prediction, ii. 362.

Ward, Mr., on the universality of international law, ii. 35; on the agreement
in recognising the same rules of international law, ii. 116.

Whately, Archbishop, on examples, ii. 210; on political economists, ii. 232.
Whewell, Dr., his remarks on the Baconian method, cited, i. 7; his canons

respecting technical language, i. 77; his instances of common terms made
technical, i. 78; his aphorism on the appropriation of common terms, i. 80;

his aphorism on the formation of terms so as to enunciate true proposi-
tions, i. 84; on the precision of scientific terms, i. 92; his distinction
between terminology and nomenclature, i. 97; on palætiological sciences,
i. 117.

Will, its nature, i. 149; ii. 322; difficulty of predicting its operations, ii. 356.
Women, seclusion and freedom of, ii. 99.

Words, written and spoken, difference between, i. 214, n.

Wotton, Sir Henry, his definition of an ambassador, ii. 49.

Writing, perpetuates historical evidence, i. 200; modes of its preservation in
the original, i. 201; by copies, i. 204; inferiority of copies to originals,
i. 205; securities for the fidelity of copies, i. 205; permanence of writing,
i. 212, 221.

Xenophon, character of his Cyropædia, as a political work, i. 62, 231; mode of
its composition, i. 417; narrative of the execution of Orontes, i. 118;
his Anabasis, i. 182; on the legislation of Lycurgus, i. 284; on the effect
of a sacrifice to Boreas, i. 349; reports a conversation in which laws are
called contracts, i. 424; is stated to have first used short-hand writing,
i. 233, n.; his ideal state represented in the Cyropædia, ii. 245; his
Cyropædia represents Greek customs, ii. 262.

Zaleucus, his legislation, i. 274.

Zeno, his political doctrine, i. 63; his ideal model of political perfection,
ii. 258; on art and nature, ii. 282, n.

THE END.

ERRATA.

Page 85, notes, last line, for manent read maneat.

-

88, line 26, for is applicable read as applicable.

95, line 13, the two headings under No. 3 ought to be reversed.

144, notes, line 30, for quoque read aliquo.

186, notes, line 9, for putabant read putabunt.

251, note 39, for Tños read rúños.

259, notes, line 21, for quæritur read quæreretur.

263, note 72, read Gulliverianas.

271, note 98, read Notes and Queries,' vol. iii. p. 4, 374.

280, notes, line 8, for admoverit read admoverat.

290, line 2, for docks read clocks.

297, notes, line 13, for du read de: and line 14, for qui

read que.

299, line 24, after 'birds,' add (151).

411, note 6, for Savary read Javary.

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