Hermann Lotze Resource Page

The true reality that is and ought to be, is not matter and is still less idea,
but is the living personal Spirit of God and the world of personal spirits which he has created.
They only are the place in which Good and good things exist;
to them alone does there appear an extended material world,
by the forms and movements of which the thought of the cosmic whole
makes itself intelligible through intuition to every finite mind.

Primary Sources:
Microcosmus: An Essay Concerning Man and His Relation to the World, Hamilton and Jones, eds (2 vols)
Book 1: The Body
Conflicting Views of Nature
Nature as Mechanical
The Basis of Life
The Mechanism of Life
Structure of the Animal Body
Conservation of Life
Book 2: The Soul
The Existence of the Soul
Nature and Faculties of the Soul
Of the Train of Ideas
The Forms of Relating Knowledge
Of the Feelings, of Self-Consciousness, and of The Will
Book 3: Life
The Connection Between Body and Soul
Of the Seat of the Soul
Forms of the Reciprocal Action Between Body and Soul
Life in Matter
Beginning and End of Soul Life
Book 4: Man
Nature and Ideas
Nature Evolved From Chaos
The Unity of Nature
Man and Brute
Varieties of the Human Race
Book 5: Mind
Mind and Soul
Human Sentience
Speech and Thought
Knowledge and Truth
Conscience and Morality

Metaphysic: Ontology, Cosmology, and Psychology Bosanquet, ed. (2 vols)
Book 1: On the Connexion of Things
Introduction
On the Being of Things
Of the Quality of Things
Of the Real and Reality
Of Becoming and Change
Of the Nature of Physical Action
The Unity of Things
Conclusion
Book 2: Cosmology
Of the Subjectivity of Our Perception of Space
Deductions of Space
Of Time
Of Motion
The Theoretical Construction of Materiality
The Simple Elements of Matter
The Laws of the Activities of Things
The Forms of the Course of Nature
Book 3: Psychology
The Metaphysical Conception of the Soul
Sensations and the Course of Ideas
On the Mental Act of Relation
The Formation of Our Ideas of Space
The Physical Basis of Mental Activity

Outlines of the Philosophy of Religion
Proofs for the Existence of God
More Precise Determinations of the Absolute
The Metaphysical Attributes of God
Of the Personality of the Absolute
Of the Conception of Creation
Of Preservation
Of Government
Of the Conception of the World Aim
Religion and Morality
Dogmas and Confessions

Practical Philosophy
Aesthetic

Secondary Sources:
L. Stahlin: Kant, Lotze, and Ritschl, A Critical Examination (Simon, trans)