Bust of T.H H.
at Hodeslea House
Appleton ed., Vol. I frontispiece
Preface I
Method and Results
[v] The fourth of the "Collected Essays" in the volume now published gives an account of the indispensable conditions of scientific assent, as they are defined by the author of the famous "Discours de la Methode."
The other eight set forth the results which, in my judgment, are attained by the application of the "Method" of Descartes to the investigation of problems of widely various kinds; in the right solution of which we are all deeply interested, Hence I have given the volume the title of "Method and Results."
Written, for the most part, in the scant leisure of pressing occupations, or in the intervals of ill-health, these essays are free neither from superfluities in the way of repetition, nor from deficiencies which, I doubt not, will be even more conspicuous to other eyes than they are to my own. But so far as their substance goes, I find nothing to alter in them,though the oldest bears the date of 1866. Whether that is evidence of the soundness of my opinions, or of my having made no progress in wisdom for the last quarter of a century, must be left to the courteous reader to decide.
Hodeslea, Eastbourne.
January 16th, 1893.
Page | ||
Autobiography | 1 | |
I | On the Advisableness of Improving Natural Knowledge [1866] | 18 |
II | The Progress of Science [1887] | 42 |
III | On the Physical Basis of Life [1868] | 130 |
IV | On Descartes' "Discourse Touching the Method of Using One's Reason Rightly and of Seeking Scientific Truth" [1870] | 166 |
V | On the Hypothesis that Animals are Automata, and Its History [1874] | 199 |
VI | Administrative Nihilism [1871] | 251 |
VII | On the Natural Inequality of Men [1890] | 290 |
VIII | Natural Rights and Political Rights [1890] | 336 |
IX | Government: Anarchy or Regimentation [1890] | 383 |
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THE
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