[Footnote 36: OEuv. ii. 170.]
[Footnote 37: No. 111.]
[Footnote 38: OEuv. ii. 74.]
[Footnote 39: No. 285.]
[Footnote 40: ’A man may as well pretend to cure himself of love by viewing his mistress through the artificial medium of a microscope or prospect, and beholding there the coarseness of her skin and monstrous disproportion of her features, as hope to excite or moderate any passion by the artificial arguments of a Seneca or an Epictetus.’—Hume’s Essays (xviii. The Sceptic).]
[Footnote 41: OEuv. i. 163.]
[Footnote 42: Nos. 296-298, 148.]
[Footnote 43: Sur le Libre Arbitre. OEuv. i. 199.]
[Footnote 44: Politique Positive, iii. 589.]
[Footnote 45: Ib. i. 194.]
[Footnote 46: Politique Positive, 205.]
[Footnote 47: Ib. 206, 207.]
[Footnote 48: No. 330.]
[Footnote 49: Nos. 462, 463.]
[Footnote 50: Correspondance. OEuv. ii. 163.]
[Footnote 51: OEuv. i. 310.]
[Footnote 52: OEuv. i. 325.]
[Footnote 53: OEuv. i. 326.]
[Footnote 54: No. 236.]
[Footnote 55: OEuv. ii. 188.]