APPENDIX
SOME SUGGESTIONS IN REGARD TO READING
It may happen that among the readers of this essay there will be some who will ask how they can most readily get a clearer idea of the various newer ways of looking at mankind and the problems of the day. The following list of titles is furnished with a view of doing something to meet this demand. It is not a bibliography in the usual sense of the term. It is confined to rather short and readily understandable presentations appropriate to the overcrowded schedule upon which most of us have to operate. All the writers mentioned belong, however, to that rather small class whose opinions are worth considering, even if one reserves the imprescriptible right not to agree with all they say. There may well be better references than those with which I happen to be acquainted, and others quite as useful; but I can hardly imagine anyone, whatever his degree of information, unless he happens to be a specialist in the particular field, failing to gain something of value from any one of the volumes mentioned.
For the astounding revelations in regard to the fundamental nature of matter and the ways in which the modern chemist plays with it, see John Mills, Within the Atom (D. Van Nostrand Company), and Slosson, Creative Chemistry (The Century Company).
A general account of the evolutionary process will be found in
Crampton, The Doctrine of Evolution (Columbia University Press),
chaps, i-v. For our development as an individual from the egg see
Conklin, Heredity and Environment (Princeton University Press).
The general scope of modern anthropology and the influence of this study on our notions of mankind as we now find it can be gathered from Goldenweiser, Early Civilization, Introduction to Anthropology (Knopf). This should be supplemented by the remarkable volume of essays by Franz Boas, The Mind of Primitive Man (Macmillan).
Of the more recent and easily available books relating to the reconstruction of philosophy and the newer conceptions in regard to mind and intelligence the following may be mentioned: Dewey, Reconstruction in Philosophy and Human Nature and Conduct (Holt); Woodworth, Dynamic Psychology (Columbia University Press); Trotter, Instincts of the Herd in Peace and War (Macmillan)—especially the first two sections, pp. 1-65; Bernard Hart, The Psychology of Insanity (Putnam), an admirable little introduction to the importance of abnormal mental conditions in understanding our usual thoughts and emotions; McDougall, Social Psychology (J. W. Luce); Everett D. Martin, The Behavior of Crowds (Harpers); Edman, Human Traits (Houghton-Mifflin). For the so-called behavioristic interpretation of mankind, see Watson, Psychology from the Standpoint of a Behaviorist (Lippincott). Haldane, Mechanism, Life, and Personality (Dutton), is a short discussion of some of the most fundamental elements in our modern conception of life itself.
When it comes to gaining an idea of "Freudianism" and all the overwhelming discoveries, theories, and suggestions due to those who have busied themselves with the lasting effects of infantile and childish experiences, of hidden desires—sexual and otherwise, of "the Unconscious" and psychoanalysis, while there are many books, great and small, there would be no unanimity of opinion among those somewhat familiar with the subjects as to what should be recommended. It would be well if everyone could read in Havelock Ellis, The Philosophy of Conflict (Houghton-Mifflin), the essay (XVIII) on Freud and his influence. Wilfred Lay, Man's Unconscious Conflict (Dodd, Mead), is a popular exposition of psychoanalysis, and Tansley, The New Psychology (Dodd, Mead), likewise. Harvey O'Higgins, The Secret Springs (Harpers), reports, in a pleasing manner, some of the actual medical experiences of Dr. Edward Reede of Washington. But much of importance remains unsaid in all these little books for which one would have to turn to Freud himself, his present and former disciples, his enemies, and the special contributions of investigators and practitioners in this new and essential field of psychological research and therapy.
Turning to the existing industrial system, its nature, defects, and recommendations for its reform, I may say that I think that relatively little is to be derived from the common run of economic textbooks. The following compendious volumes give an analysis of the situation and a consideration of the proposed remedies for existing evils and maladjustments: Veblen, The Vested Interests and the Common Man, also his The Engineers and the Price System (Huebsch); J. A. Hobson, Democracy after the War (Macmillan) and his more recent Problems of a New World (Macmillan); Tawney, The Acquisitive Society (Harcourt, Brace); Bertrand Russell, Why Men Fight (Century) and his Proposed Roads to Freedom (Holt), in which he describes clearly the history and aims of the various radical leaders and parties of recent times.
As for newer views and criticism of the modern state and political life in general, in addition to Mr. Hobson's books mentioned above, the following are of importance: Graham Wallas, The Great Society (Macmillan); Harold Laski, Authority in the Modern State and Problems of Sovereignty (Yale University Press); Walter Lippmann, Preface to Politics and Drift and Mastery (Holt).
J. Russell Smith, The World's Food Resources (Holt), is a larger and more detailed discussion than most of those recommended above, but contains a number of general facts and comment of first-rate importance.
One who desires a highly thoughtful and scholarly review of the trend of religious thought in recent times should read McGiffert, The Rise of Modern Religious Ideas (Macmillan).
End of Project Gutenberg's The Mind in the Making, by James Harvey Robinson