Pragmatism,2,17,276,279,292,294,295, 300;translated by W. Jerusalem, 297."Pragmatism's Conception of Truth,"2,271andn."Proposed Shortening of the College Course,"2,45n.Psychology, Principles of,1, 194, 203, 223, 224, 249, 268, 269, 283, 293ff., 296, 297, 300, 301, 304 andn., 305, 307, 320,2,12,13."Quelques Considérations sur la Méthode Subjective,"1, 180.Radical Empiricism, Essays in,2,267n."Radical Empiricism, Is it Solipsistic?"2,218."Radical Empiricism as a Philosophy,"2,197n.Selected Essays and Reviews,2,271."Sentiment of Rationality, The,"1, 203 andn."Shaw Monument, Oration on Unveiling of,"2,59,60."Spatial Quale, The,"1, 205 andn."Spencer's Definition of Mind as Correspondence,"1, 180.Talks to Teachers and Students on Some of Life's Problems,2,4,5,40,79,286."Tigers in India, The,"2,20n.Varieties of Religious Experience.(Gifford Lectures),1, 145-147, 293,2,169,170,209,210,268."What Psychical Research has Accomplished,"1, 229 andn., 306."Will to Believe, The,"2,44,48,85,87,88,207,208,209,282.Will to Believe, The, and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy,1, 229n., 237n., 280n.,2,4,5,34, 58n., 64."Word More about Truth, A,"2,295.Seealso list of Dates at the beginning of Volume I, and the partial bibliography (Appendix II,infra).James, Mrs. William (Alice Gibbens),1, 192, 193, 195, 196, 217, 218, 232, 237, 247, 269, 276, 277, 278, 279, 281, 286, 288, 294, 297, 298, 316, 319, 321, 325, 328, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 346,2,5,7,8,9,20,24,34,35,36,37,38,52,59,60,63,92,93,96,97,110,111,112,113,129,134,145,147,158,159,161,165,175,176,182,187,188,193,215,223,233,247,250,256,258,259,275,312,313,333,334,338,350.See Contents.James, William (J.'s son), birth of,1, 234;mentioned, 237, 260, 275, 276, 277, 282, 329, 330, 336, 346,2,92,98,129,159,174,175,185,186,187,250,258,259,274,275,276.See Contents.Jameson Raid,2,27.Janet, Pierre,2,216,217,226,254.Janet, Mme. Pierre,2,216.Jap, a dog,1, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279.Jefferies, Richard,The Life of the Fields,2,258,259.Jeffries, B. Joy,1, 163.Jerome, W. T.,2,264.Jerusalem, W.See Contents.Jevons, F. B.,2,306."Jimmy," students' name for theBriefer Course,1, 301.Johns Hopkins University,J.declines invitation to teach at,1, 203.Johnson, Alice,2,311.Journal of Speculative Philosophy,1, 266,2,339.Jung-Stilling, Johann K.,Autobiography,1, 155.Kallen, Horace M.,2,271.Kant, Immanuel,Kritik der reinen Vernunft,1, 138,2,179;J.lectures on, 45, 47, 51, 54;mentioned,1, 117, 141, 191, 202, 205,2,3.Kaulbach, W. von,1, 90.Keane, Bishop,1, 294.Keene Valley, Adirondacks,J.'s summer holidays in,1, 194, 195, 196;an eventful 24 hours, and its effect,2,75-79, 95;his further misadventure, 90, 91;mentioned,1, 232,2,51,259,261,296,297.Kipling, Rudyard,The Light that Failed,1, 307;mentioned,2,21,22,231.Kitchin, George W.,2,306.Knox, H. V.,2,313,314.Kruger, Paul,2,27.Kolliker, R. A. von,1, 123.Kosmos, the startling discoveries concerning,1, 101.Kühnemann, Eugen,2,263.La Farge, Bancel,2,275.La Farge, John,1, 24, 91,2,173.Lamar, Lucuis Q. C.,1, 251.Lamb, Charles,2,239.Lamb House, Rye, Henry James's English home,2,107,111.Lawrence Scientific School, Chemical laboratory in,1, 31;C. W. Eliot quoted onJ.'s course in, 31, 32 andn.Leibnitz, Baron G. W. von,2,13.Lemaître, Jules,2,63.Leonardo,2,227,228,245.Leopardi, Giacomo, "To Sylvia,"1, 246 andn.Lesley, Susan I.,Recollections of my Mother,2,135andn.Lessing, Gotthold E.,Emilia Galotti,1, 91;Fischer's Essay onNathan der Weise, 94.Leuba, James H.,2,210,211,218.See Contents.Lincoln, Abraham, effect of his death,1, 66, 67;characterized byJ., 67.Linville, N. C.,1, 316, 317.Lister, Sir Joseph,1, 72.Lloyd, Henry D.,2,166.Locke, John,1, 191,2,165,257.Lodge, Henry Cabot,2,30.Lodge, Sir Oliver,1, 229n.Loeser, Charles A.,1, 337, 339.Lombroso, Cesar,2,15.London,1, 175,2,307.London,Times,2,43,65,118.Long, George,1, 78.Loring, Katharine P.,1, 259, 262, 311, 316.Lotze, Rudolf H.,1, 206, 208.Loubet, Émile, President of France,2,89,98.Lowell, A. Lawrence,2,326.Lowell, James Russell, death of,1, 314, 315n.;J.'s memory of, 315;mentioned, 195.Lucerne,2,133.Ludwig, Karl F. W.,1, 72, 160, 215.Lutoslawski, W.,2,103,171.See Contents.McDougall, William,2,313,314,315.McKinley, William, and the Spanish War,2,74;Philippine Policy of his administration disapproved byJ., 93, 94, 289;and Roosevelt,J.'s description of, 94;mentioned, 50, 101, 102, 109.MacMonnies, F. W., Bacchante,2,62andn., 63.Macaulay, Thomas B., Lord,1, 225.Mach, Ernst,1, 211, 212.Maine, U. S. S., explosion of,2,73.Manchester College.SeeHibbert Foundation.Marcus Aurelius,1, 78, 79.Marshall, Henry Rutgers,Instinct and Reason,1, 87.See Contents.Martin, L. J.,2,246,249.Martineau, James,1, 283.Mascagni, Pietro,I Rantzau,1, 334, 335.Massachusetts General Hospital,1, 71, 72.Materialism,1, 82, 83.Maudsley, Henry,1, 143.Maupassant, Guy de,1, 282.Medical License bill (proposed), in Mass.,2,66ff.Mediums,1, 228,2,287,311.AndseePaladino, Eusapia, and Piper, Mrs.Mental Hygiene, Connecticut Society for,2,273;National Committee for, 273.Merriman, Daniel.See Contents.Merriman, Mrs. Daniel,2,118.Merriman, R. B.,2,63,66,132.Mescal,J.'s experiment with,2,35,37.Metaphysical problems,J.'s mind haunted by,2,2.Metaphysics, outline of course offered byJ.in,2,3,4;J.'s proposed system of, 179, 180.Meysenbug, Malwida von,Memoiren einer Idealistin,2,135andn.Mezes, Sidney E.,2,14.Mill, John Stuart,1, 164,2,267.Miller, Dickinson S., quoted, onJ.as a teacher and lecturer,2,11-17;"Truth and Error," 18;quoted, onJ.'s talks with Columbia Faculty Club, 265n.;his "study" ofJ., 331, 332;mentioned, 87, 88, 137, 163, 232n., 282.See Contents.Mind,1, 254, 255.Mind-curers.SeeFaith-curers.Miracles,2,57,58.Mitchell, S. Weir,2,37.Monism,1, 238, 244, 245.Montgomery, Edmund,1, 254, 255.Morgan, C. Lloyd,2,216.Moritz, C. P.,1, 141.Morley, John,Voltaire,1, 144n.Morse, Frances R.,1, 197,2,106,113,232.See Contents.Morse, Mary.SeeElliot, Mrs. John W.Morse, John T.,2,10.Motterone, Monte,1, 324.Müller, G. E.,1, 312, 313.Munich Congress,2,46,50.Munk, H.,1, 213, 114.Münsterberg, Hugo, recommended byJ.as head of Harvard Psychological Laboratory,1, 301, 302;"the Rudyard Kipling of philosophy," 318;"an immense success," 332;criticizesJ.,2,267,268;mentioned,1, 312,2,2,18,121,229,270,293,320.See Contents.Murray, Gilbert,2,271.Musset, Alfred de,2,63.Myers, F. W. H.,Human Personality,1, 229n.,2,151,185andn.;death of, 141;J.'s tribute to, 141, 151, 157;mentioned,1, 287, 290,2,57,114,118,156,157,161.See Contents.Myers, Mrs. F. W. H.,1, 290, 345,2,151,157.Naples,2,222.Nation, The, review ofLiterary Remains of Henry Jamesin,1, 240, 241;J.'s comments on, 284;and Cleveland's Venezuela Message,2,28;mentioned,1, 70, 92, 104 andn., 117, 118, 161, 186, 188, 189,2,42,182,332.Nauheim (Bad),2,92,93,95,104,107,134,135,157,158,160,333,338.Neilson, Adelaide,1, 168.Nevins, John C.,Demon Possession and Allied Themes,2,56andn.New Forest, The,2,160,161.New Jerusalem Messenger, H. James, Senior's, letter to editor of,1, 14-16.New World, The,1, 334,2,44.New York City,2,264,265.Newcomb, Simon,1, 250.Newport, R. I.,2,202,203.Newton, Sir Isaac,2,1n.Nichols, Herbert,1, 335,2,14.Nietzsche, Friedrich W.,2,233.Nivedita, Sister,2,144.Nonentity, Idea of,2,293.Nordau, Max S.,Entartung,2,19;mentioned, 17.Norton, Charles Eliot, Ruskin's letters to,2,206;mentioned,1, 181, 291, 331, 338, 347,2,191,199.See Contents.Norton, Grace,1, 284,2,191.See Contents.Norton, Mrs. Charles E. (Susan Sedgwick),1, 181.Norton Woods, the,2,201.Olney, Richard, and the Venezuela Message,2,27,29.Optimism,1, 83, 238.Oregon, forest fires in,2,80.Ostensacken, Baron,1, 337, 339.Ostwald, W.,2,229.Oxford,2,307.Padua, Galileo anniversary at,1, 333 andn.;University of, confers degree onJ., 333.Pædagogy,2,47.Paladino, Eusapia,2,186andn., 311, 320, 327.Paley, William,1, 283.Pallanza, Italy,1, 329.Palmer, George H., a Hegelian,1, 205, 208;investigates psychic phenomena withJ., 227;mentioned, 202, 292, 335,2,2,18.See Contents.Palmer, Mrs. Alice Freeman,2,124.Papini, Giovanni,Crepuscolo dei Filosofi,2,245,246;mentioned, 172, 227, 228, 229, 257, 267.Paris,1, 174, 175, 217.Paris Commune (1871),1, 161.Parkman, Francis,2,10.Parkman, Mrs. Henry,2,205.Parthenon, the,2,224,225.Party spirit, the only permanent force of corruption in the U. S.,2,100.Pasteur, Louis,1, 72, 225.Paty du Clam, Colonel du,2,98.Paulsen, Friederich,Einleitung,1, 346,2,244.Peabody, Elizabeth,1, 112.Peabody, Frances G.,2,229.Peace Congress,2,277.Peillaube, M.,2,228,229.Peirce, Benjamin,1, 32.Peirce, Charles S.,1, 33, 34, 80, 149, 169,2,191,233,294,328.Peirce, James M.,2,258.Perry, Ralph Barton, hisList of Published WritingsofJ.,1, 144, 223, 224;mentioned,2,121,163,234,295.Perry, Thomas S., withJ.in Berlin,1, 107, 109, 111, 113, 114, 117, 124;mentioned, 40n., 60, 91, 94, 102, 106, 134, 151, 157, 169,2,10.See Contents.Pertz, Mrs. Emma (Wilkinson),1, 135 andn.Pessimism,1, 238.Peterson, Ellis,1, 166.Pflüger, Dr.,1, 156.Phelps, Edward J.,2,27n.Philippine question, the,2,167,168.Philippines, policy of McKinley administration concerning,2,93,94;duty of U. S. with regard to, 289.Philosophical Club, University of California,J.'s lectures to,2,79.Philosophical Review,2,228.Philosophical Society,J.refuses to join,2,164.Philosophy,J.begins to feel the pull of,1, 53, 54;difficulties attending teaching of, in American colleges, 188, 189, 190.Physiological Psychology,1, 165, 166, 179.Physiological Psychology, International Congress of,1, 288, 289, 290.Physiology,J.attends lectures on, in Berlin,1, 118, 120, 121;J.'s first teaching subject, 165.Picquart, M. G. (Dreyfus case),2,67,98.Piddington, J. G.,2,311.Pierce, George W.,2,14.Pillon, François,1, 208, 229, 233, 343,2,45,79.See Contents.Pillon, Mme. François,2,73,204,338,343.Pinkham, Lydia E., "the Venus of Medicine,"1, 261 andn.Piper, Mrs. William,J.quoted on,1, 227, 228;mentioned,2,242,311,319,320.AndseeHodgson, R.Plato,1, 283.Pluralism,1, 186,2,155.Pluralistic idealism,2,22.Pollock, Sir Frederick,1, 222,2,199.Pomfret, Conn.,1, 153, 154.Popular Science Monthly,1, 190.Porter, Noah,1, 231, 232.Porter, Samuel,1, 214.Porto Rico,2,74.Potter, Horatio,1, 59.Powderly, Terence V.,1, 284.Pragmatism, and radical empiricism, distinction between,2,267;disadvantages of the word as a title, 271, 295, 298.Prague,1, 211, 212, 213.Pratt, James B.,J.'s replies to his questionnaire on religious belief,2,212-215.Pratt, M.,2,204.Prince, William H.,1, 37, 39, 42, 44.Prince, Mrs. William H. (Katharine James),1, 42.See Contents.Princeton Theological Seminary, H. James, Senior, at,1, 8.Pringle-Pattison, A. S.,2,325,326.AndseeSeth, Andrew.Profession, choice of,1, 75, 79, 123.Prussia, political conditions in (1867),1, 95;and France, 95.Prussians,1, 122.Psychic phenomena, investigated byJ.and Palmer,1, 225ff.;mentioned, 248, 250, 305, 306,2,56,287,320.Psychical Research, American Society for,J.active in organizing,1, 227;amalgamated with English Society, 227;J.on its function, 249, 250,2,242,286,306.Psychical Research, English Society for, founded,1, 227;J.a corresponding member, vice-president, and president of, 227, 229n., 248.Psychologists, American Association of,2,20.Psychology,J.begins to read on,1, 118, 119;J.gives course in, 179;J.helps to make it a modern science, 224, 225;"a nasty little subject,"2,2.Psychology, Experimental, in U. S., History of,1, 179n.Psychology, Physiological.SeePhysiological Psychology.Putnam, Charles P.,1, 71, 195, 196, 327,2,296.Putnam, Frederick W.,1, 31.Putnam, George,2,224,225.Putnam, James J., letter toJ.on Medical License bill,2,72n.;mentioned,1, 71, 168, 195, 196,2,112,128,147,249.See Contents.Putnam, Marian (Mrs. James J.),2,249.Quincy, Henry P.,1, 77, 122.Radcliffe College,2,4,24,180n., 181.Radcliffe College,J.'s class at.See Contents.Radical Empiricism and pragmatism, distinction between,2,267;mentioned, 203, 204.Rafael Sanzio, the Sistine Madonna,1, 90.Raffaello, Florentine cook,1, 339, 341.Rankin, Henry W.,2,55.See Contents.Reed, Thomas B.,2,50.Reid, Carveth,1, 205, 222.Religion,J.'s views on,2,64,65,127,149,150,211ff., 269.Renan, Ernest, death of,1, 326;mentioned, 110,2,123,338.Renouvier, Charles, theAnnée 1867 Philosophique,1, 138, 186;influence onJ.of his writings on free will, 147, 169;J.'s first acquaintance with his work, 186;J.'s correspondence with, 186;translates some ofJ.'s papers, 186;his articles on Fouillée, 231;Principes de la Nature, 334;hisPhilosophy of History,2,44,47;his death, 204;MonadologieandPersonalisme, 204;mentioned,1, 138, 205.See Contents.Republican Party, the, in 1899,2,94.Reverdin, M.,2,267.Rhea, Jannet,1, 4n.Rhea, Matthew,1, 4n.Rhodes, James F.,History of the U. S.,2,27n.;mentioned, 10.Richet, Charles,1, 229n.,2,114,225.