The Unpopular Review, Vol. 2, No. 4, October-December 1914, including Vol. 2 Index

Part 20

Chapter 201,325 wordsPublic domain

=Psychical Research, Our Debt to=, 372 --attitude toward the occult of scientific men, 372-373 --of the public, 373 --psychology’s debt to psychical research, 374 --Frank Podmore, 375 --aim and spirit of the Society for Psychical Research, 375 --hypnotism and its value, 375-376 --work of Janet and Gurney, 376-377 --subconscious ideas, 377 --Gurney’s experiments and subconscious mentation, 378-380 --subconscious perception and subconscious memory, 381 --crystal gazing, Mrs. Goodrich-Freer’s demonstration of memory registration of subconscious percepts, 381-384 --dissociated subconscious memories and Lowes Dickinson, 384-386 --some of the first-fruits of systematic psychical research, 386 --practical value of automatic writing, crystal-gazing and hypnotism, 387 --French savants, 387 --Pierre Janet’s experiments in hypnotic telepathy and their bearing on hysteria and other nervous diseases, 387-391.

Psychology, 394.

Psychotherapy, 391.

Publishers, 206.

=Railway Junctions=, 91 --fine phrase of R. L. Stevenson, 91 --Essex Junction and E. J. Phelps’s verses, 92 --pleasure to be got from places, 93 --picture of possible pleasure at Essex Junction, 93-94 --enjoying railway junctions, 94-95 --a Bavarian junction near Rothenburg, 95-96 --Bobadilla, Spain, 96-97 --Dol, France, 97-98 --Nevers and Pyrgos, 98-99 --true enjoyment of travel, 99-100 --American haste, 100 --anecdote of R. L. Stevenson, 101 --Thos. Browne, quoted, 101 --enjoyment of the present, 102 --anecdote of a wait at Basel, 102 --possibilities of adventure in the dullest places, 103.

=Republic of Megaphon, The= (the evils of the modern newspaper shown by a Socratic dialogue), 248 --its apparent value and trifling cost, 249-251 --Nature of its news, 252 --its low price necessitates profits from advertising, 254 --its lowering of quality, 254-255 --its falsification of truth, 256 --its willingness to sell itself, 257 --its low taste and vulgar language, 257 --its vulgar advertising of worthless goods, 258 --its vulgarization of art, 258 --its immoral advertising, 259 --its flattery of the people and faultfinding with the few, 260 --its tendency to set class against class, 261 --its teaching of skepticism in religion, of baseness in leaders, and selfishness in all men and consequent injury to the state, 262-263 --how the truth may be told and how the newspapers tell it, 264-265.

Rhodes, Cecil, 424, 425.

=Rich, Minor Uses of the Middling=, 104 --charges general and specific against the rich, 104 --historic view of wealth, 105 --newly rich, multimillionaires, and middling rich, 105-106 --character of the middling rich, 107 --honesty and virtue implied in moderate wealth, 108 --discipline, efficiency and good manners of the middling rich, 109 --strong position in comparison with the capitalist and the wage-earner, 110 --usefulness of this class in conservation of civilization, 111 --usefulness on the lighter side of life, 112 --newspapers, 112-113 --poverty likely to decrease, 113 --socialism, personality of wealth, 113-114 --great fortunes, 114 --prospects, 115.

Rogers, Anna A., 267, 277.

Russell, Chas. Edw., 232.

Russia. _See_ War.

Schreiner, Olive, 269, 270, 271.

Servia. _See_ War.

=Setting Bounds to Laughter=, 210.

Sex discussion, 294.

Shaw, Geo. B., 267, 332.

_Showerman, Grant_, ‘The Republic of Megaphon,’ 248.

Sill, E. R., 306.

=Simplified Spelling=, 217, 442.

Single Tax, 4, 17.

Slavs. _See_ War.

_Slosson, Preston W._, ‘Is Socialism Coming?’ 236.

Smith, G. A., 379.

Social justice, 1, 14.

Socialism, 27, 113, 114.

=Socialism, Is [it] Coming?= 236 --Karl Marx and his method of realizing democracy, 236-237 --the present position of Socialism, 237-238 --factors that make for concentration in production, 238-239 --advantages of the rich industry, 239-240 --objections to the Socialist’s contention, 240-245 --the tendency in agriculture toward small holdings, 240-242 --the future of agriculture, 242-243 --decentralizing factors in industry, 243-245 --electricity, 244 --skilled labor, 245 --the problem of distribution, 245-246 --rational competition, 246 --picture of a democratic individualism in the future, 246-247.

Socratic dialogue on newspapers, 248.

=Some Free-Speech Delusions.= _See_ Free-Speech Delusions.

Spanish-American War, 409.

=Special to our Readers=, 205, 440.

Spelling. _See_ Simplified Spelling.

Sportsmanship, 334.

Stevenson, R. L., 91, 101.

Stillman, W. J., 160-162.

Strikes. New Zealand, 29; Wisconsin University, 347.

=Stubborn Relic of Feudalism, A.= _See_ Feudalism.

=Suggestion Regarding Vacations, A=, 216.

Syndicalism, 238.

=Syndicalism, An Experiment in=, 29 --New Zealand’s Court of Arbitration, 29 --its success, 30 --Australian antagonism, 31 --Waihi gold mine strike and resulting conditions, 31-32 --failure of Federation of Labor, 33 --introduction of Syndicalist methods, 33-34 --new unions to undermine the old, 35-36 --strike of Waterside Workers and Seamens Unions, 37-38 --apparent success, 39 --public interference and its methods, 39-41 --new unions to defeat the syndicalists, 42 --failure of federationists, 42 --lesson for America, 43 --reasons for the result, 43-44.

=Tabu and Temperament=, 280 --meaning of temperament, 280 --the revolt against convention, 281 --primitive conventionality, 282 --need and advantages of convention, 283 --manners and morals, 284 --originality, 285 --essence of good manners, 286 --charm, 286-292 --need of some social code, 288-289 --on being shocked, 289-290 --requisites for being charming, 290-291 --the unreliability of temperament, 291 --unconventionality and the moral order, 292 --the free discussion of vice, 293 --advantage of avoiding sex discussion, 294 --brutality and danger of discussing questionable topics, 294-297 --the rightness of _tabu_, 298 --absurd position of present-day iconoclasts, 299 --need of self-control, 299-300.

Tarbell, Ida M., 266, 268, 277.

Telepathy, 152.

Teloteropathy, 163, 164.

Temperament, 280.

Thring, Edw., 363.

Tipping, 21.

Tobacco, 259.

_Todd, Arthur J._, ‘Labor: “True Demand” and Immigrant Supply,’ 45.

=Trade Unionism in a University=, 347 --relation of the State of Wisconsin to the University of Wisconsin, 347 --character of the University, 348 --the student legislative body, 348-349 --student labor trouble and threatened strike, 349-353 --significance of the occurrence as to university development and results, 353-355.

Triple Entente, 404, 406, 407.

Universities, 356.

University efficiency, 59.

UNPOPULAR REVIEW, 155, 206.

=Unsocial Investments.= _See_ Investments.

=Vacations, A Suggestion Regarding=, 216.

Verrall, Mrs., 167.

Victorian literature, 319.

Virginia, University of, 356.

Waihi gold mine strike, 31.

War, in Europe not possible, 197; woman and, 270.

=War, The=: _By a historian_, 392 --the first shock, 392 --immediate causes, 393-395 --war parties, 395-396 --Russia’s position ambiguous, 396-398 --Austria’s blunder, 398 --Germany’s conduct, 399-400 --Germany’s error, 400 --her statements, 401 --France, 401 --England’s part, 401-403 --Germany and England, 402 --Belgium, 402 --the rights of neutrals, 403 --police aspect of the war, 403 --possibilities, 404 --central European empire in history, 405 --Austria, Germany, and the Hapsburg and Hohenzollern dynasties, 405-406 --the transformation of German temper, 406 --further possibilities, 406-407 --the Kaiser, 407 --possibilities as to the cause of peace, 407-410 --war and peace as such, 408-410 --neutralization, 409 --present peril, 410.

=War, The=: _By an economist_, 411 --usual course of war histories, 411-412 --underlying forces of the present war, 413 --colonial possessions, 413 --the _Morgenland_ dream, 413-416 --Germany’s population and welfare, 415-416 --the delusion of colonial trade, 417-418 --concessionary interests, 418-419 --Pearson and Waters-Pierce as illustration, 419 --relation of capital proper and speculative enterprise, 420-422 --speculative enterprise in England, Germany and the United States, 422-424 --relation of patriotism to speculative enterprise, 424-427 --a fruitful source of international strife, 427-428 --the concession and the closed trade, 428 --some predictions, 428.

=War, The=: _By a man in the street_, 429 --old contest of the savage and the civilized in every man, 429 --responsibility for the present war, 430 --change in the character of the German nation, 431-432 --the Kaiser, 431-432 --the higher Germany and the lower, 432-433 --survival of old ideas, 433 --the Kaiser’s responsibility, 434 --his conduct, 434-435 --Germany’s moral degradation, 435 --the outcome, 436 --absurd side, 436-437 --international code of honor, 437-438 --place of International Law, 437-439.

=Way to Flatland, The.= _See_ Flatland.

Wealth, 104.

Webster, Arthur G., 137.

Wells, H. G., 332.

West, Prof., 137.

Wilson, Woodrow, 409.

Wisconsin, University strike, 347.

Women, 266; education, 189.

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Transcriber’s Notes:

_The Unpopular Review_, Vol. 2, July-December, 1914, consisting of Issue No. 3, July-September, 1914, and Issue No. 4, October-December, 1914, was published by Henry Holt and Company, New York, and copyrighted 1914 by that company.

Footnotes have been moved to the end of each chapter and relabeled consecutively through the document.

Punctuation has been made consistent.

Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

A change was made as follows:

p. 328: hancient changed to ancient (the ancient Britons.)