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for Volume IV.
| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| Famous Contemporaries. Hoffmann | 1 |
| Speech delivered at the opening of the Vyatka Public Library, December 6, 1837 | 16 |
| Separate Thoughts | 19 |
| Separate remarks on Russian legislation | 22 |
| Stories of the Merovingian times | 26 |
| Regarding one drama | 31 |
| Moscow and St. Petersburg | 52 |
| Veliky Novgorod and Vladimir on the Klyazma | 60 |
| Dilettantism in Science: | |
| Chapter I | 67 |
| Chapter II. Romantic dilettantes | 81 |
| Chapter III. Dilettantes and the guild of scholars | 97 |
| Chapter IV. Buddhism in science | 115 |
| Public readings by Mr. Granovsky | |
| Letter one | 136 |
| Letter two | 140 |
| First letter about "Moskvityanin" 1845 | 146 |
| "Moskvityanin" and the universe | 147 |
| Two heads are better than one original idiom: "Умъ хорошо, а два лучше", literally "One mind is good, but two are better" | 153 |
| Travel notes by Mr. Vedrin | 157 |
| Letters on the study of nature: | |
| Letter one. Empiricism and idealism | 163 |
| Letter two. Science and nature—phenomenology of thought | 190 |
| Letter three. Greek philosophy | 203 |