now that such constant intercourse has been established between England and other nations; and it is evident from the opposition which has ever been manifested to any material alterations by interested parties, that if such be effected, it will be so only by means of the pressure from without. The high character which M. Aimé Martin's work enjoys in France, and the favourable manner in which the translation has been received, encourage me to hope that its publication has not been without utility; and in order to render it more generally available, the price is now reduced to half the original cost. LONDON, November, 1859. IX. Of the instinct of man, and the impossibility of de- fining the faculties of the soul X.-The moral sense-a faculty of the soul. XI.-Sense of the beautiful-a faculty of the soul XX. XXV. Of the harmony between the intellectual and moral XXVI.-What constitutes intellect separated from the soul XXVII. Of the danger of separating the faculties of the soul III. Search after truth in logical reasonings IX. Of some attributes of the Divinity X.-Study of God in the works of nature XI.-Search after truth in the laws of nature XII. Of the sentiment of the divinity XXII.-Man always inclines to the great and beautiful XXIII. Of the perfectibility of the human race XXIV.-First appearance of political liberty on the earth Remarks on the prevailing modes of education, and their influence on health and happiness |