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Aragon, nobles and the kings, | Blatchford, 56

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national conflicts, 225
Archer, W., on fecundity v.
civilization," 261
Art and luxury, 159-168
Associations, founded on things,
43; their unity is a thing,
78, 79; their incompatibility
with liberty, 109–113, 192;
guilds, 195-203; their laws,
212-231; are not direct but
in things, 249-255; functions
and values, 269-277.

Austin, on the seat of the

supreme power, 213
Authority, failure of, 102-103

Bacon, on the organization of
thought, 131

Balance of Power, as a condi-
tion of culture, 232-242;
versus hegemony, 234

Bodin, 22, 23

Buckle, on the progress of
society, 128

Budgets, increase in the, 99
Burckhardt, 14

Bureaucracy and German colo-
nial policy, 99; its tendency
to increase, 96; and war,
90-101
Burke, 206

Carlyle, on history, 185
Categorical Imperative, 68
Chesterton, G. K., 113; on
Marxism, 87

Chiozza Money, on compul-
sion, 114

Christian Church as the model
of associations, 251
Classicism, 190

Coercion, 113

Cohen, Hermann, 68

Communist manifesto, 57

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Dean of Canterbury on the
consumption of alcohol, 153
Death and resurrection, 256-
268
Democracy and compulsion,
114-123; and power of in-
dividuals, 11O
Descartes, 17
Dicey, on sovereignty, 214
Dominium, 213, 217, 238
Doubt, Cartesian, 18
Duguit, Leon, on functions and
rights, 212; on human asso-
ciations, 249; on law, 215;
on the "legality of laws,"
220; on private property,
218; on rights, 189
Dühring, 58

Economic activity, 45; and
military powers, identity of,
54-62
Economists on luxury, 156

Fichte, Ego of, 33

Force, theory of, 58
Freedom, 52; Kantian, 68
French Revolution, its juridical
conception, 271

Function and power, 51; and
values, 195-278

Functional principle, 278–282 ;
its justice, 270; its expe-
diency, 271

Gautier, his animalism, 162
George, Henry, 86

George, Lloyd, and bureau-
cracy, 99

German heresy, 19; liberals,

70; monism, 71; State, 25
Germany and the division
of labour, 110; and expan-
sion towards Asia, 234; and
the hegemony of Europe,
233
Gierke, 214
Goethe, 17

Good, as the self-realization of
the ego, 133
Government by men, 52; by
things, 52
Green, 214

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Jethro Brown, 132

Hague conferences, cause of Jellinek, Professor, 71, 74, 214

their failure, 225
Haldane on organization, 124
Happiness, as central concep-
tions of the Stoic and Epi- |
curean doctrines; the ideal
of, 140-148; and Liberty,
105-191
Harrison, Jane, on the social
origins of Greek religion,
257
Hedonist objections, 169–182
Hegel, 206; on the State, 30,
35, 43; as trinitarian, 35; as
unitarian, 35; idealism of,
40

Joffre's proclamations, 50

Kaiser, Potsdam speech, 49
Kant, Immanuel, 17, 28, 32, 33,

34, 39, 40, 68, 69; on free-
dom, 189; on happiness, 182
Kidd, B., on the permanence of
civilization, 260

Laissez-faire, 135

Law, Hegel's philosophy of, 38
Leroy-Beaulieu, 100

Leviathan, 22, 24

Liberalism, 112, 278

History, economic interpreta- Liberty, the failure of, 191–192 ;

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Middle Ages, II; of the
Renaissance, II; of Shake-
speare, 17

Marshall, on luxury, 154
Marvin, 64

Marx, Karl, 73, 80, 91, 206
Marxism, 57

Meredith's "Egoist," 142
Middle Ages, 22, 23, 24; Central
Ideas, II

Might, a condition of all his-
torical realities, 63; and
Right, 63-79

Militarism, 71-79, III
Mommsen, on luxury, 154
Montague, 64

Moore, G. E., 64; on ethics,
189; on the objectivity of
goodness or badness, 136
Morality, objectivization of, 43

National Guilds, 100
Naumann, Friedrich, 86
Necessity, as criterion of jus-
tice, 116

New Age, the, 100

Nietzsche, 25; on the super-
man, 187

Novels, a definition, 147

Oligarchy, and power of in-
dividuals, 110

O'Neill, H. C., on the impos-
sibility of organizing a de-
mocracy, 107
Oppression, dynamics of, 61
Organization and Liberty, 107-

113

Ostwald, 71, 73

Pacifism, 63-70
Paganism, 258

Paine, Thomas, 206

Paul, St., 17; on expediency,

179
Perry, 64

Personality, 256; discovery of,
23

Philanthropists, 16
Pitkin, 64

Plato, on the rise of a city,
216

Power, a doctrine of, 44-53;
as the essence of man, 253;
and function, 51; political,
55

Powers, economic and military,
54-62

Progress, and order, 113; of
thought and the kings of
England, 129
Protagoras on man, 243
Puritans, 67

Quevedo, on jealousy, 198

Renaissance, 14, 15, 272
Renan, on the aim of the
world, 186
Resurrection, 256–268
Rickett, 64

Right and might, 63-79; as
property of some realities,
63
Rights, 250, 270; subjective
and objective, 212-220
Romanticism, the end of, 183-

190

Rousseau,, 20, 21,22,23, 188

Ruskin, 171; on wealth, 151
Russell, Bertrand, 64, 66, 70;
on the perpetuation of
societies, 261

Russia as an example of
the cost of authoritarism,
134

Schiller, 25

Seillière, on imperialism, 240
Seligman, Professor E. R.A.,
83

Shaw, B., on poverty, 199; on

the war, 91

Sidwick, on Austin, 213
Smith, Adam, 89

Social Contract, 21; energy,

51

an organism, 214; as coer-
cive power, 112; as the good,
19, 27-34; as a moral person,
75; as a nécessity, 19-27; as
positive moral valuation, 38;
as pure will, 29; as relation,
38; as "totality," 29; as
unity of power, 22; based
on the supreme autonomy
of rulers, 41; Germany, 25;
German theory of, 27;
norms which condition its
sovereignty, 228; organic
theory, 76; in the Middle
Ages, 24; and subjective
rights, 228

Statist on the true wealth of
England, 157

Socrates, on pleasure and pain, Stirner, on the ego, 187

144

Solidarity, of men in things, 223;

and war, 205-211
Sovereignty, 21; and law,

224

Spain as an example of the cost
of authoritarism, 134
Spann, Othmar, 28
Spaulding, 67
Spencer, Herbert, 61
State, according to Duguit, 38;
to Gierke, 76; to Green,
Bosanquet, and Bradley, 31;
to Hegel, 30, 35-43; to
Hermann Cohen, 27, 28, 29,
30; to Hobbes, 40; to
Ihering, 38; to Jellinek, 75;
to Kant, 32; to Loening, 38; |
to Rumelin, 38; to Savigny,
38; to Tredelenburg, 38; as

Stuart Mill, III; on the free

play of spiritual originality,
135; on liberty, 124; on
private property, 126, 229;
central error of, 127
Subjective rights against soli-
darity, 52; their creation by
gratitude, 52

Sydney Webb, Mrs., on the
guilds, 198

Syndicalism, 26, 248; progress
of, 279
Syndicalist theory, 22

Things, primacy of, 243-255;
as essence of associations,
43, 78, 79
Thought, as
Thought, as social function,
131; and liberty, 124-131;
organization of, 124

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