Senior, Mr., on division of labour as the origin of society, i. 14; on a special Seriman, Zaccaria, his political romance, ii. 274, n. Servius, accounts of his legislation, i. 268; laws falsely attributed to him, 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 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. ; Socrates, character of his political speculations, i. 62; on the separation of 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, Sovereign, use of the word, i. 90; sovereign power attributed to the king of Species, meaning of the term, ii. 431; varieties of a species, ii. 431. Spinoza, his political writings, i. 68; how he treats the three forms of govern- Statistical facts, i. 126; mode of statistical observation, i. 142; its recent use, Statistics, i. 54; originated in Germany, i. 72. Stewart, Dugald, his remark on Grotius, i. 68; commends Montesquieu for 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. Syllogism, practical, ii. 165. Tacitus, his historical character, i. 65; his remark on the phoenix, i. 290; on 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. Temple, Sir William, his political speculations, i. 69; on a cycle of govern- 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 Theophrastus, his political speculations, i. 63. Theopompus, his collections for his history, i. 183; he attests the capture of Theorists, political, their practical defects, ii. 193. Theory, its nature, ii. 149; its conversion into maxims, ii. 163; its application Theseus, his consolidation of Attica, i. 262. Thomson, Mr., on the proof of the authorship of Junius, i. 366. Thucydides, character of his history, i. 61, 142; how he collected his mate- Tidology, ii. 337, 339. Titles of office, i. 85, 89; they do not designate any constant aggregate of proper names, i. 106; in politics the most abstract technical terms are Tocqueville, M. de, on the characteristics of democracy, ii. 59, 67. Torture, its analogy with experiment, i. 169; its inefficiency, ib.; was an Tradition, oral, i. 186; its infidelity, i. 188, 216, 317; analogy with the Trogus Pompeius, his criticism on Livy and Sallust, for the length of the 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 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 Unwritten laws, ii. 27. Utopia (by Sir T. More), its character, i. 68; ii. 265; its description of per- 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. Ward, Mr., on the universality of international law, ii. 35; on the agreement Whately, Archbishop, on examples, ii. 210; on political economists, ii. 232. respecting technical language, i. 77; his instances of common terms made his aphorism on the formation of terms so as to enunciate true proposi- Will, its nature, i. 149; ii. 322; difficulty of predicting its operations, ii. 356. 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 Xenophon, character of his Cyropædia, as a political work, i. 62, 231; mode of Zaleucus, his legislation, i. 274. Zeno, his political doctrine, i. 63; his ideal model of political perfection, 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. |