o did the Social Contract) dialect for the longing
in France and Germany to return to nature, ii. 193;
substance of, furnished by Locke, ii. 202;
examination of, ii. 197-280;
mischief produced by its good advice, ii. 206, 207;
training of young children, ii. 207, 208;
constantly reasoning with them a mistake of Locke's, ii. 209;
Rousseau's central idea, disparagement of the reasoning faculty,
ii. 209, 210;
theories of education, practice better than precept, ii. 211;
the idea of property, the first that Rousseau would have given to
a child, ii. 212;
modes of teaching, ii. 214, 215;
futility of such methods, ii. 215, 216;
where Rousseau is right, and where wrong, ii. 219, 220;
effect of his own want of parental love, ii. 220;
teaches that everybody should learn a trade, ii. 223;
no special foresight, ii. 224, 225;
supremacy of the common people insisted upon, ii. 226, 227;
three dominant states of mind to be established by the instructor,
ii. 229, 230;
Rousseau's incomplete notion of justice, ii. 231;
ideal of Emilius, ii. 232, 233;
forbids early teaching of history, ii. 237, 238;
disparages modern history, ii. 239;
criticism on the old historians, ii. 240;
education of women, ii. 241;
Rousseau's failure here, ii. 242, 243;
inconsistent with himself, ii. 244, 245;
worthlessness of his views, ii. 249;
real merits of the work, ii. 249;
its effect in Germany, ii. 251, 252;
not much effect on education in England, ii. 252;
Emilius the first expression of democratic teaching in education,
ii. 254;
Rousseau's deism, ii. 258, 260, 264-267, 269, 270, 276;
its inadequacy for the wants of men, ii. 267-270;
his position towards Christianity, ii. 270-276;
real satisfaction of the religious emotions, ii. 275-280.
Encyclopaedia, The, D'Alembert's article on Geneva in, i. 321.
Encyclopaedists, the society of, confirms Rousseau's religious
faith, i. 221;
referred to, ii. 257.
Evil, discussions on Rousseau's, Voltaire's, and De Maistre's
teachings concerning, i. 313, _n._, 318;
different effect of existence of, on Rousseau and Voltaire, i. 319.
FENELON, ii. 37, 248;
Rousseau's veneration for, ii. 321.
Ferguson, Adam, ii. 253.
Filmer contends that a man is not naturally free, ii. 126.
Foundling Hospital, Rousseau sends his children to the, i. 120.
France, debt of, to Rousseau, i. 3;
Rousseau the
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