chapter i
of his 'Contemporary German Psychology,' has given a good account of Herbart and his school, and of Beneke, his rival and partial analogue. See also two articles on the Herbartian Psychology, by G. F. Stout, in Mind for 1888. J. D. Morrell's Outlines of Mental Philosophy (2d ed., London, 1862) largely follows Herbart and Beneke. I know of no other English book which does so.
[508] See his Grundtatsachen des Bewusstseins (1883), chap. vi _et passim_, especially pp. 106 ff., 364.
[509] The most burdensome and utterly gratuitous of them are perhaps Steinthal's, in his Einleitung in die Psychologie, 2te Aufl. (1881). Cf. also G. Glogau: Steinthal's Psychologische Formeln (1886).
[510] Leçons de Philosophie, i. Psychologie, chap. xvi (1884).
[511] Mr. F. H. Bradley seems to me to have been guilty of something very like this _ignoratio elenchi_ in the, of course, subtle and witty but decidedly long-winded critique of the association of ideas, contained in book ii, part ii, chap. i, of his Principles of Logic.
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