Page:Nietzsche the thinker.djvu/554

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538
INDEX

"Things-in-themselves," current misuse of, 190.

Thomson, J. A., 408.

Thomson, Sir William, 165.

Thucydides, 289.

Tienes, G. A., 430, 512.

Tintoretto, 481.

Tolstoy, 75.

Tounies, Ferdinand, 498.

Toy, C. H., 506.

"Transvaluation of values," 3, 260.

Treitschke, von, 465, 475.

Trendelenberg, 479.

Trevelyan, G. M., 517.

Truth, proposal to change the meaning of, 188, 320; truth and utility distinguished, 52-5, 113-4, 188; is there an unconditional obligation to speak the truth? 314; or to know it, 315-322.

Tyndall, 98.

Tyrrell, Father, 323, 502.

Unegoistic actions, illusion in the idea of, 119; differing senses of "unegoistic," 282, 489.

Universal suffrage, 425, 442.

Urban, Wilbur M., 518.

Utilitarianism (or Utilitarians), 121-3, 205, 237, 253-4, 327, 346, 348, 378, 467, 511, 523.

Vaihinger, Hans, 14, 303, 475, 494, 496, 497.

Values, created by the mind, 153, 186, 218, 316, 321, 335, 510, 512.

Vanity, 29, 124, 369, 490.

Vauvenargues, 98, 490.

Venice, 383, 392.

Vice, 376, 423.

Vinci, Leonardo da, 400.

Virtues, Nietzsche's four, 329; virtue as strength, 375.

Volkelt, J., 276.

Voltaire, 23, 99, 100, 158.

Voluntarism, pluralistic, 194, 498.

Wagner, Cosima, 7, 81, 89.

Wagner, Richard, 3, 5, 15, 25, 31, 34, 35, 66, 68, 69, 70, 71, 78-91, 102, 291, 314, 315, 319, 399, 400, 465, 466, 475, 480, 485, 486, 487, 513.

Wallace, William, 302, 305, 475.

War, 2, 75, 142-3, 410-1, 414, 510; the Franco-Prussian (see under ibid.); the present European war, v, 3, 414, 459, 478; war between ideas, 411, 461; rules of Nietzsche's "war-practice," 483-4; the great war to come, 2, 414, 473.

Warbeke, J. M., 508, 514.

Wealth, 131-2, 137, 388, 405-7, 418-9, 455.

Weber, Ernst, 485.

Weigand, W., 322, 506.

Weinel, Heinrich, 474, 477, 495, 506, 507, 509, 515.

Welcker, 67, 505.

Westermarck, 505.

Wilamowitz-Möllendorf, von, 178, 485.

Will to believe, 95, 316.

Will to power, the bottom thing in man and the world, 192-201; more than an impulse for self-preservation, 197, 350; primarily a psychological and cosmological (not ethical) doctrine, 194, 354; details of the view, 196-201; relation of to the moral aim proposed by Nietzsche, 354-378; how morality comes to be contrasted with, 363-4.

William II (Hohenzollern), 467.

Wilson, Woodrow, 349.

Winckelmann, 39.

Windrath, E., 479.

Wolf, A., vi, 476.

Wolf, Friedrich August, 479.

Woman, 7, 24, 407, 408, 416, 468, 486, 524.

Wordsworth, 120, 287.