CONTENTS OF VOL. II. | |
---|---|
PAGE | |
THE GENESIS OF SCIENCE | 1 |
THE CLASSIFICATION OF THE SCIENCES | 74 |
REASONS FOR DISSENTING FROM THE PHILOSOPHY OF M. COMTE | 118 |
ON LAWS IN GENERAL, AND THE ORDER OF THEIR DISCOVERY | 145 |
THE VALUATION OF EVIDENCE | 161 |
WHAT IS ELECTRICITY? | 168 |
MILL versus HAMILTON—THE TEST OF TRUTH | 188 |
REPLIES TO CRITICISMS | 218 |
PROF. GREEN’S EXPLANATIONS | 321 |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF STYLE | 333 |
USE AND BEAUTY | 370 |
THE SOURCES OF ARCHITECTURAL TYPES | 375 |
GRACEFULNESS | 381 |
PERSONAL BEAUTY | 387 |
THE ORIGIN AND FUNCTION OF MUSIC | 400 |
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF LAUGHTER | 452 |
[First published in The British Quarterly Review for July1854.]
There still prevails among men a vague notion thatscientific knowledge differs in nature from ordinary