Page:The varieties of religious experience, a study in human nature.djvu/548

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INDEX

Medical materialism, 10 ff.
Melancholy, 145, 279; Lectures V and VI, passim; cases of, 148, 149, 157, 159, 198.
Melting moods, 267.
Method of judging value of religion, 18, 327.
Methodism, 227, 237.
Meysenbug, 395.
Militarism, 365-367.
Military type of character, 371.
Mill, 204.
Mind-cure, its sources and history, 94-97; its opinion of fear, 98; cases of, 102-105, 120, 123; its message, 108; its methods, 112-123; it uses verification, 120-124; its philosophy of evil, 131.
Miraculous character of conversion, 227.
Mohammed, 341, 481.
Molinos, 130.
Moltke, Von, 264, 367.
Monasteries, 296.
Monism, 416.
Morbidness compared with healthy-mindedness, 488. See, also, Melancholy.
Mormon revelations, 482.
Mortification, see Asceticism.
Muir, 482.
Mulford, 497.
Müeller, 468.
Murisier, 349.
Myers, 233, 234, 466, 511, 524.
Mystic states, their effects, 21, 414.
Mystical experiences, 66.
Mysticism, Lectures XVI and XVII, passim; its marks, 380; its theoretic results, 416, 422, 428; it cannot warrant truth, 422; its results, 425; its relation to the sense of union, 509.
Mystical region of experience, 515.

Natural theology, 492.
Naturalism, 141, 167.
Nature, scientific view of, 491.
Negative accounts of deity, 417.
Nelson, 208, 423.
Nettleton, 215.
Newman, F. W., 80.
Newman, J. H., on dogmatic theology, 434, 442; his type of imagination, 459.
Nietzsche, 371, 372.
Nitrous oxide, its mystical effects, 387.
No-function, 261-263, 299, 387, 416.
Non-resistance, 281, 358, 376.

Obedience, 310.
Obermann, 476.
O'Connell, 257.
Omit, 296.
'Once-born' type, 80, 166, 363, 488.
Oneness with God, see Union.
Optimism, systematic, 88; and evolutionism, 91; it may be shallow, 364.
Orderliness of world, 438.
Organism determines all mental states whatsoever, 14.
Origin of mental states no criterion of their value, 14 ff.
Orison, 406.
Over-beliefs, 513; the author's, 515.
Over-soul, 516.
Oxford, graduate of, 220, 268.

Pagan feeling, 86.
Pantheism, 131, 416.
Parker, 83.
Pascal, 286.
Paton, 359.
Paul, Saint, 171, 357.
Peek, 253.
Peirce, 444.
Penny, 323.
Perreyve, 505.
Persecutions, 338, 342.
Personality, explained away by science, 119, 491; heterogeneous, 169; alterations of, 193, 210 ff.; is reality, 499. See Character.
Peter, Saint, of Alcantara, 360.
Philo, 481.
Philosophy, Lecture XVIII, passim; must coerce assent, 433; scholastic, 439; idealistic, 448; unable to give a theoretic warrant to faith, 455; its true office in religion, 455.
Photisms, 251.
Piety, 339 ff.
Pluralism, 131.
Polytheism, 131, 526.
Poverty, 315, 367.
'Pragmatism,' 444, 519, 522-524.
Prayer, 463; its definition, 464; its essence, 465; petitional, 467; its effects, 474-477, 523.
'Presence,' sense of, 58-63.
Presence of God, 66-72, 272, 275 ff., 396, 418.
Presence of God, the practice of, 116.
Primitive human thought, 495.
Pringle-Pattison, 454.
Prophets, the Hebrew, 479.
Protestant theology, 244.
Protestantism and Catholicism, 114, 227, 330, 461.
Providential leading, 472.
Psychopathy and religion, 22 ff.