by machine process, 352 f.; and the Great Society, 357. Institution, the, Chs. XII and XIII;
as a moral educator, 203 ff.; re- lation to self illustrated, 207 f.; how superior to the individual, 214 f.; and the self-made man, 215 f.; limitations of, 218 f.
Jacks, L. P., 249, 275, 330, 370. Jackson, Andrew, 53, 72. James, William, 271, 380.
Jefferson, Thomas, 39, 43, 51, 53, 59,
72, 74, 135, 281.
Jenks, J., 161.
Jenks, T. W., 301, 396. Jones, E. H., 145.
Joseph, H. W. B., 370.
Judgment, organic social, 156 f.
Jury, as interpreter of the social conscience, 176 f.
Kant, Immanuel, 112, 139, 183. Keasby, L. M., 396.
Kingsley, Charles, 391-392. Kipling, Rudyard, "M'Andrews' Hymn" and the machine, 334 n. Kropotkin, P., 393. Kuyper, A., 31 n., 42.
La Rochefoucauld, III. Laski, H. J., 439.
Law, disrespect for, 91 f.; and the
status of the worker, 363 f.; in- validated by rise of Great So- ciety, 366 f.; made superior to Demos, 426 f.
Lecky, 19, 127, 190, 220-221, 265- 266, 297 n., 372.
Lee, G. E., 21.
Letourneau, 322.
Levy, H., 42, 257-258, 306.
Lichtenberger, J. P., 244.
Lippman, Walter, 98, 387. Lloyd, A., 20, 22, 225. Lloyd, H. D., 322.
Locke, John, 28, 49, 50, 56, 59, 135,
287, 304, 425, 434. Lovejoy, A. O., 98, 396. Low, A. Maurice, 24, 42. Lowell, A. L., 21, 147, 156, 160, 166, 171-172, 178, 426.
Luther, Martin, 49, 215, 232, 253.
Macaulay, Thomas B., 19. MacGregor, D. H., 396.
Machine, distinguished from a tool, 324 f.
Machine process, place in Ameri-
can life, 66 f.; rôle in the Great Society, 69 f.; effect on home, 237 f.; influence on daily life, 324 f.; two phases of, 326 f.; based on causation, 328 f.; and Germany, 335 f.; and the worker, 336 f.; impersonality of, 337 f.; social gains through, 348 ff.; tendency to standardize, 352 f.; why opposed by labor, 361 f. Madison, James, 52, 307. Majority, tyranny of, 166 f. Mallock, W. H., 21, 160.
Man, the average and democracy, 6-8; the characteristics of the average man, 8-12; the keeper of the social conscience, 20, 21; the self-made, 215 f.
Mandeville, Bernard de, 385. Mann, Horace, 282.
Marot, Helen, 370.
Marshall, Chief Justice, 309.
Marshall, L. C., 81, 322, 323, 370,
McAdoo, William G., 407. McBain, H. L., 421.
McDougall, William, 104, 105, 113,
122, 225, 226, 244. McIver, R. M., 225. McMaster, J. B., 59.
Mecklin, J. M., 22, 113, 145, 224 n., 233 n., 244, 275.
Mediævalism, Father Tyrrell on, 260.
Meily, Clarence, 30-31, 42. Mill, John Stuart, 421. Milton, John, 149, 232, 234. Mitchell, W. C., 377.
Money, the prevailing measure of values, 376 f.
Montesquieu, 15, 16.
Moody, W. V., on the machine,
146 ff.; distinguished from social conscience, 149 f.; relation to so- cial conscience in American democracy, 155 f.; rôle in or- ganic social judgment, 156 f. Organization, Ch. VI; rôle in de- velopment of character, 100 f. Overstreet, H. A., 322.
Paine, Thomas, 39, 59. Parker, Carleton H., 241. Patten, S. N., 201. Pattison, Mark, 148. Paulhan, F. G., 113. Peel, Sir Robert, 19, 146. Perry, R. B., 113, 201. Personality, emphasis of, in Puri- tanism, 45.
Plato, 4, 31, 112, 114, 125, 183, 274, 328, 397, 399. Pound, Roscoe, 440.
Predestination, influence upon in- dividualism, 48 f.
Press, commercialization of, 414 f. Profits, and Calvinism, 33, 36; the business incentive, 381; its un- moral character, 382; economic and moral justification, 385 f. Progress, moral, confused with change and evolution, 179 f.; the- ories of, 180 f.; dependent upon insight, 185 f.; illustrated by bet- terment of status of English worker, 186 f.; elements in, 187; as affected by change, 188 f.; by irrational factors, 190 f. Property, nature of right, 302 f.; as a natural right, 306; and the Constitution, 307 f.; and the Fourteenth Amendment, 309 f.; Hadley quoted on the impreg- nable constitutional position" of, 309 f.; as instrument of social control, 312 f.; as providing a measure of values, 315 f.; social- ization of, 317 f.
Puritanism, influence on American civilization, 24 f.; business ethics of, 32 f.
Ransom, W. L., 440. Rauschenbusch, W., 275.
Referendum, and the social con- science, 165.
Religion, predominance in early American life, 23 f. Revolution, the Industrial, in Eng- land, 61 f.; in America, 67 f. Rights, Woman's, 235 f.; definition
of, 302; natural and the worker, 364 f.; and the Constitution, 425 f. Riley, W. I., 42.
Ritchie, D. G., 42, 49, 59, 322. Robbins, C. L., 301. Rodrigues, G., 21, 296. Roe, G. E., 440.
Roosevelt, Theodore, 78.
Ross, E. A., 78, 81, 98, 160, 414. Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 28, 40, 49,
50, 195, 286, 287.
Rowe, L. S., 420-421.
Ryan, John A., 322, 381 n., 395. Ryan, O., 421.
Sandys, Sir Edwin, 228. Santayana, George, 89, 98. Schmoller, G., 161.
School, see Ch. XVI; its origin and purpose, 277 f.; Colonial, 278 f.; influenced by democracy, 281 f.; socialization of, 284 f.; ethical norms it should cultivate, 286 f.; feminization of, 291 f.; as training for citizenship, 293 f.. Science, social, limitations of, 99 f.; rôle in liberalizing the social con- science, 296.
Seager, H. R., 74.
Self, evolution of, in the institu- tional setting, 205 f.; composite nature, 207 f.; the super-institu- tional, 209 f.; relation of institu- tional to individual, 211 f.; traits of institutionalized, 221 f. Seneca, 261.
Sentiments, moral, Ch. VI; defini- tion, 106 f.; relation to instincts and emotions, 107; relation to ideas, 108 f.; dominant rôle in character formation, 109 f.; rela- tion of moral to other sentiments, III f.; disinterested, 121 f.; rôle in religion, 267 f.
Shand, A. F., 105, 113, 140. Sharp, F. C., 294, 295, 301.
Shaw, George Bernard, 21, 82, 89. Shaw, C. G., 122.
Sheldon, W. L., 322.
Sidgwick, H., 145. Slater, Samuel, 67. Sloane, W. M., 22. Small, A. W., 82, 83, 98.
Smith, Adam, 34, 56, 65, 74, 216, 363, 381, 391, 395, 421. Smith, G. B., 275.
Society, the Great, Ch. IV; rise of, in England, 61 f.; evolution of,
in America, 66 f.; the problem of, 71 f.; traits of, 72 f.; its fu- ture, 79 f.; and the instincts, 357.
Socialism, causes of spread in the cities, 415 f.
Sovereignty, popular and democ- racy, 3; of God in Calvinism, 26; political, theories of, 433 ff. Spencer, Herbert, 121, 197, 198,
State, as instrument for moral dis- cipline, 422 f.; Darwinian versus Newtonian conceptions of, 435 f. St. Benedict, 127, 183. Steinmetz, C. P., 59, 81.
change, 127 f.; encouraged by business, 371 f..
Wages, and Calvinistic ethic, 37, 257.
Walker, W., 42.
Wallace, A. R., 180, 201.
Wallas, Graham, 60, 70, 80, 81, 357. Wallis, Louis, 42.
Ward, L. F., 225, 301. Wealth, and churchly ethic, 258. Webb, Sidney and Beatrice, 370. Webb, Sidney J., 193, 370. Weber, Max, 33, 42. Wells, H. G., 9, 429. Wesley, John, 254.
Stephen, L., 145, 184, 185, 201, 225, Westermarck, E., 145, 322.
Weyl, W. E., 22, 55, 56, 59, 399-400. White, A. D., 297 n.
Whitfield, George, 39.
Wilcox, W. F., 239 n., 244.
Willoughby, W. W., 396. Wilson, L. E., 417, 421.
Wilson, Woodrow, 91, 98, 435. Wilson, W. W., 275. Winchester, B. S., 275. Witherspoon, John, 31 n. Woodburn, J. A., 31 n.
Woman, place in the Colonial home, 230 f.; legal status, 232 f.; and pioneer home, 234 f.; strug- gle for rights, 235 f.; prevalence in teaching, 291 f.
Work, in the Calvinistic ethic, 37. Worker, see Ch. XIX; and the
church, 247 f.; status and the machine, 336; never completely dominated by machine, 351 f.; at- titude towards machine process, 359 f.; law as affecting the status of, 363 f.
Wright, Carroll D., 239 n., 328. Wundt, W., 116, 145. Wyclif, John, 49.
Wyman, Bruce, 366, 396. Yarros, V. S., 161.
« SebelumnyaLanjutkan » |