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the question stated in,
Clement XI., Pope,

302

his inscription on the gate of
St. Michele, 293
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor,
on the old "orthodox" Polit-
ical Economy, 96

on the first Reform Act, 213
on the Reformed House of
Commons, 241

on the distinction between per-
son and thing, 279
Commons, the House of,
the Unreformed, 141-143
the Reformed, 241
Compulsory voting,

as an antidote to the evils of
False Democracy, 226, 227.
Concubinage,

function of the State as to, 80
Conservatism,

characteristics of true, 157
Conservative party, the,
its stupidity, 120, 216, 243
committed to the principle of
False Democracy, 216

Contract,
human society not the outcome
of, 19

function of the State as to, 88-
115

what a, is, 89, 90

Cossa, Professor Luigi,
on Socialism, 124
Crime,

the usual conception of a, 256
the conception of, proposed by
criminal anthropologists,
257-260

scientifically considered, falls
under the domain of moral
philosophy, 268

the mens rea essential to, 280
punishment, the other half of,
283

graduation of punishment to,
286, 288-290

responsibility of society for,
303-306

Criminal,

true conception of a, 256, 280
how accounted of by criminal
anthropology, 257-260

see Crime.

Criminal anthropology,
how defined, 257
its object, 257

is frankly determinist, 258-260,
269

its diagnosis of a malefactor,
260, 261

its treatment of malefactors,
261-265

is, really, unscientific, 265
and, in practice, a ghastly
failure, 265-268, 277

is of account, chiefly, as a sign
of the times, 267

is incompatible with the appli-
cation of any penal law what-
ever, 277, 278

recommends the elimination of
the wilful murderer, 288
Criminal classes, the,

causes of the formation of, 304
remedies for, 305
Cruelty to animals,

function of the State concern-
ing, 85, 86

should be punished by the inflic-
tion of sharp bodily pain, 288

Danville, M.,

on crime, 258

Death penalty, the, 49, 288-290,
292-294

Declaration of Independence, the
American,

false proposition in, 19
Declaration of the Rights of the
Man and the Citizen, the,
good service done by, 37
Delusion,

epidemics of, 93
Democracy of numbers, the,
the final form of the degen-
eracy of all governments, 170
the prevailing disease of the
body politic, 170

its genesis, 170-175
designated by Mill "False De-
mocracy," 175

Mill's warnings against, 176-178
adopted by British Radicalism,
179

how expounded by Mr. John
Morley, 180, 181

why False, 180-183

the a priori apology for, 183-

186

the Utilitarian apology for,
186-190

the Sentimental apology for,
189-194

its working in France, 194-203
kept under in Germany, 203-
205

its working in the United
States, 205-212

in England, 212–217
why hitherto less noxious in
England than in France, 218-
220

its essence not political but
social, 220-222

its logical issue Socialism, 222,
223

seven antidotes proposed for,
223-247

reasons for believing that some
remedies or palliatives will
be adopted for, 248-252
Desjardins, M. Arthur,

on the principle of False Demo-
cracy, 174

on the necessity for the organi-
sation of Modern Democracy,

249
Determinism,
Fichte on, 269

the controversy concerning,
270-279

Devas, Mr. C. S.,

on the present condition of
multitudes of toilers, 98

on the benefit of Trade Unions,
105, 106

on an evil result of Trade
Unions, 106

Dicey, Professor,

on the Referendum, 233, 234
Divine Right,

in what sense may be truly pre-
dicated of the State, 20

Double Election,

as an antidote to the evils of
False Democracy, 227, 228

Drill, M., Dimitri,

on criminal anthropology, 257
Dumas fils, M.,

as a reformer of social morali-
ties, 78

Edmund, St., of Canterbury,

on the rich and the poor, 307
Education,

duty and right of the father in
respect of, 51
function of the State regard-
ing, 59-61

popular, as a remedy for the
evils of False Democracy,
223-226

Electoral register, the English,
chaotic state of, 237
Elmira Reformatory, the, 261-267
Emerson,

on the President of the United
States, 210

on the meanness of American
politics, 212

Equality,

religious, alleged right of, 64
political, false, 180-183
Ethics,

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Faddists,

the tyranny of, 87, 88
Family, the,

is historically the origin of the
State, 16, 74

rests upon the chastity of
women, 70

corruption of, is the dissolution
of the State, 74

Fauchet, the Abbé,

as Socialist, 125
Fichte,

on Determinism, 269
Fisher, Mr.,

on the American Government,
210

Force,

not a sufficient explanation of
government, 19

Fouché,

as Socialist, 126
Fouillée, M.,

his conception of a Parliament,
158

Foxwell, Professor,

on an outbreak of individual-
ism, 93
France,

non-existence of representative
or self government in, 146,
147
anarchical animalism prevail-
ing in, 164

result of Republican Govern-
ment in, 167

the working of False Demo-
cracy in, 194-202
Franchise, the electoral,

not only a right, but a trust, 47
chaotic state of the English law
concerning, 237

Free will,

the controversy concerning,
270-275
Freedom, personal,
the right to, 39, 40

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on the House of Lords, 241
Gneist, Herr von,

on the ruin of the British Con-
stitution, 216
Gothenburg system, the,
legitimate and laudable, 70
Grattan,

on power and property, 221
Green, T. H.,

on the law of nature, 9
on the value of the institu-
tions of civil life, 10
his account of a right, 33
on the benefit to the criminal
of just punishment, 293
Grey, Lord,

on the first Reform Act, 214
Griffiths, Major,

on the Elmira system, 265, 266
Guilds, Trade, the,

of the Middle Ages, 113, 114

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Hugo, Victor,

his Claude Gueux, 302

on the disaster of our time,
308

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the true account of, 273
Intention,

definition of, 280

Jacobins,

absurdities and atrocities of,
11, 57

Jessel, Sir George,

his statement of the general
principle of contract, 89

Junius,

on the responsibility of min-
isters, 152

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Laws,

of conduct, what they are, 1
of Political Economy, what
they generally are, 2

of nature, what they are, 2,
253
Lecky, Mr.,

on the prostitute, 81, 82
on the origin of English party
Government, 152
Legislation,

criminal, on what principle it
rests, 199, 200

Leo XIII., Pope,

on usury, 91

on the justum pretium of la-
bour, 101
Leroy-Beaulieu,

on contemporary politicians, 7
Lex talionis, the,

is the underlying principle of a
just sentence, 286, 288
Liberalism,

in the Church of England, 65
true, 156, 157
Liberty,

Spinoza's account of, 37
man's aboriginal right to, 38
four manifestations of, 38-48
personal, the right to, 39-42
political, the right to, 45-48
is the outcome of physical en-
dowments, 122
Liechtenstein, Prince,

on the reciprocal obligations
created by labour, 101
Liquor laws,

necessary, 68

reform of, in Russia, 69
legitimate and laudable, 70
"Local Option," 68
Locke, Mr. W. J.,

on the degradation of prison
life, 294
Lockouts, 103, 110
Lombroso, Signor,

a determinist and more, 258
on the number of malefactors
in the liberal professions, 297
Lords, House of,

the Prussian, 143

the Austrian, 144
the English, 242-247
Lorimer, Professor,

an opinion of a very learned
and ingenious friend of, 136
his proposed reform of the
electoral suffrage, 146

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