INDEX
- Absolutism, in method, 194–202
- Amusements, rivals to political interest, 139
- Anarchism, 26
- Aristotle, 4, 8, 138
- Art, of communication, 182–84
- Association, a universal fact, 22–23, 34, 151, 181;
- distinctive traits of human, 24;
- revolt against, 88, 98–100;
- economic, 105–07;
- and democracy, 143;
- rigid and flexible, 148;
- distinguished from community, 151–53;
- domination of isolated, 194;
- territorial and functional, 212–13.
- See Community, Groups, Society
- Attachment, a political need, 140, 214
- Ayers, C. E., 59 n.
- Bentham, J., 54 n.
- Biological, and social, 11–12, 152, 195
- Business, rival to political interest, 138;
- political control by, 182.
- See Economic Forces
- Carlyle, T., 102, 110
- Causal forces, and state, 9, 17–21, 25, 36, 37, 47, 53, 65, 66;
- versus the causal order, 201–02
- Child Labor Amendment, 121
- Common Interest, nature of, 17, 34–35.
- See Consequences, Public
- Communication, a public function, 60, 208;
- social necessity of, 152, 217–19;
- necessary to knowledge, 176–79;
- an art, 182–84.
- See Symbols
- Community, 38;
- and society, 98, 157;
- conditioning wants, 105–06;
- and communication, 152–54;
- importance of local, 211–19.
- See Great Society
- Comparative Method, 47
- Conjoint Behavior, see Association
- Conscience, private, origin of, 49–50
- Consequences, importance of for politics, 12–13, 15, 17, 24–25, 27, 32, 39, 43, 47, 65, 126, 156, 197;
- effect of expansion, 47–57;
- and rules of law, 56;
- effect of enduring, 57–62;
- effect of irreparable, 62–64;
- relation to state and government, 66–69;
- to antithesis of individual and social, 193
- Control, political, 12, 16;
- of human nature, 197–99
- Cooley, C. H., 97 n.
- Corporations, illustration of relation of individual and social, 190
- Democracy, political, 77;
- significance of, 83;
- historic genesis, 83–87;
- alleged unity, 83;
- pure, 94;
- and “individualism”, 86–96;
- inchoate, 109;
- pessimism about, 110;
- American, 111–15;
- as a moral idea, 143–44;
- machinery of
- political, 143–46;
- nature of ideal, 147–51;
- and experts, 203–08;
- and local community, 212
- Descartes, R., 88
- De Tocqueville, 20
- Direct Action, 31
- Dissemination, and social knowledge, 176–77;
- physical means of, 179;
- and art, 182–84.
- See Communication
- Dynastic States, 89
- Economic Determinism, 118–89, 155–56
- Economic Forces and Politics, 89–93, 98, 100, 103–07, 114, 118–20, 129–31, 141–42, 144, 155, 175, 182
- Education, and social control, 197–99;
- and absolutistic method, 200;
- and political democracy, 206–08
- Electoral College, 111
- Emerson, R. W., 217
- Equality, nature of, 149–50
- Experimental Method, in politics, 194–202;
- defined, 203
- Experts, importance of, 123–25, 136–37;
- and democracy, 203–04
- Factions, 119
- Facts, and meanings, 3;
- physical and social, 6–7, 11–12;
- and theories, 17
- Farmers, condition of, 129–30
- Gerontocracy, 78
- Government, and the public, 27–28, 32, 33, 37, 65–69;
- as representative, 76;
- dynastic, 81–82;
- fear of, 86, 90, 92;
- economic control of, 107;
- and opinion, 192–93
- Great Society, The, 96, 98, 126, 128, 142, 147, 155, 157, 184
- Groups, and the state, 4, 26, 71–73;
- local, 41–42.
- See Community
- Habit, political effects, 61, 169;
- and “individualism,” 158–61
- Hayes, C., 170 n.
- Hegel, G. W. F., 28, 71
- History, continuity of, 161;
- contemporaneous, 179
- Hocking, W. E., quoted, 57
- Hudson, W. H., quoted, 40–41
- Hume, D., 56
- Individual, antithesis to social, 13–15, 23, 63, 88, 147, 151, 186–191;
- and acts, 18, 21;
- and officials, 18, 75, 82;
- and invention, 58;
- economic, 91;
- as fiction, 102, 157–58;
- defined, 186–88
- Individualism, origin of, 22, 87–94;
- and private property, 61;
- explanation of, 98–102;
- influence, 116;
- economic, 134;
- and collectivism, 186–193;
- and method, 195.
- See Psychology
- Instincts, and social theory, 9–12
- Intelligence, necessary for social facts, 12, 24, 151–62, 188;
- and democracy, 208–10;
- embodied, 200–01.
- See Consequences, Knowledge
- Interdependence, 155
- James, W., quoted, 159–60
- Justice, and property, 92
- Kings’s Peace, 48
- Knowledge, political, 162–67;
- divided, 175;
- and communication, 176–79, 218–19
- Labor Legislation, 62
- Laissez-faire, 91, 134
- Law, not command, 53–54;
- nature of, 54–57;
- “natural,” 90, 95, 102, 155;
- social and physical, 196–97
- Legal Institutions, 16, 47
- Liberalism, 134
- Liberty, made an end in itself, 86;
- and “individualism,” 98–100, 192–94;
- nature of, 150;
- of thought, 168–70;
- and uniformity, 215–16
- Lippmann, W., 116 n, 158
- Locke, J., on natural rights, 87
- Macaulay, 102
- Majorities and Minorities, 207–08
- Materialism, 173–74
- Method, problem of, 192–203
- Mill, J., theory of democratic government, 93–95
- Mill, J. S., 195
- Mobility, social effect, 140
- Nationalism, 170
- News, 179–81
- Officers, agents of public, 16, 17, 33, 35, 67–68, 75;
- dual capacity, 77, 82;
- selection of, 78–82
- Opinion, 177, 179
- Parties, 119–21
- Paternalism, 62
- Perception, see Intelligence, Consequences
- Pioneer Conditions, effect on American democracy, 111
- Pluralism, political, 73–74
- Populus, defined, 16
- Private, defined, 15.
- See Public.
- Prohibition, 132–33
- Propaganda, 181–82
- Property, and government, 91–93.
- See Economic Forces.
- Psychology, of habit, 61, 159–60;
- of individualism, 88;
- of private consciousness, 100, 158;
- social effects of science of, 197–99
- Public, and private, 12–17, 47–52;
- and political agencies, 31, 35, 38, 67;
- marks of, 39–64;
- ownership, 61;
- democratic, 77;
- education, 112–13;
- eclipse of, 115, 122, 131, 137, 185;
- problem of, 125, 185, 208, 216;
- complexity of, 126;
- as intellectual problem, 152;
- and publicity, 167–171, 219;
- and opinion, 177
- Railways, and government, 133–34
- Reason, and the state, 20;
- and law, 55–57
- Religion, and social institutions, 41, 49, 169–70
- Rights, natural, 87, 95, 102
- Rousseau, J. J., 155
- Rulers, see Officers, Government
- Santayana, G., quoted, 211
- Science, distinction from knowledge, 163–65, 172;
- social and physical, 171, 179, 199;
- and the press, 181–82;
- applied, 172–76;
- method, 201
- Smith, Adam, 13, 89
- Smith, T. V., 147 n
- “Socialization,” 70
- Society, human, 24–25;
- and states, 26–29, 69–74, 147–49.
- See Association, Community, Consequences, Great Society, Groups, Individual, Public.
- Spencer, H., 63, 79
- Symbols, social import of, 141–42, 152–54, 218
- Tariff, 131–32
- Theocracy, 41, 49, 80
- Tilden, S. J., 208
- Theories, political, 4, 5, 8, 85.
- See Causal Forces, Economic Forces, Individualism, Mill, J., Utilitarianism
- Toleration, 49–51
- Tradition, revolt against, 86
- Utilitarianism, 91
- Wallas, G., 96
- Wants, individualistic theory of, 102;
- socially conditioned, 103–04
- War, and selection of rulers, 79;
- the World, 127–28
- Whitman, Walt, 184
- Will, as cause of state, 20, 38;
- and the command theory of law, 53;
- and government, 68;
- general, 153
- Wilson, Woodrow, quoted, 96–97
- Workers, political neglect and emancipation, 99–100.
- See Economic Forces