INDEX
- Abstract terms, [24]
- Action-pattern, [20]
- Adler, A., [171]
- Adrian, E. D., [27]
- Andreas Hofer, [132]
- All-or-none principle, [27-30], [109]
- Aristotle, [8], [15]
- Babbitt, Irving, [189]
- Bayliss, W. M. [27], n; [32]-n.
- Buddhism, [139]
- Butler, Joseph, [157-8]
- Charcot, J. M., [33]
- Circular reflex, [89], [185]
- Clarke, Samuel, [158-9]
- Composition, fallacy of, [98]
- Conditioned reflex, [26], [54], [89]
- Couterat, L., [90]
- Cox, C. G., [8]
- Crile, G. W., [20]
- Davis, W. M., [8]
- Democritus, [12]
- Descartes, [36], [190]
- Dewey, I., [8], [16], [17], [21], [170-171]
- Diogenes, [121]
- Dynamogenesis, law of, [33]
- Emerson, [13], [72]
- Empedocles, [13], [59]
- Everett, W. G., [175]
- Golden Rule, [194]
- Harvey, William, [15]
- Helvetius, [164]
- Hobbes, [8], [157]
- Holt, E. B., [8], [16], [20], [31], [127], [170]
- Homer, [19]
- Hypostatization, fallacy of, [163]
- Initial predication, fallacy of, [6]
- James, W., [13], [51], [75]
- Jesus, [29], [72], [136]
- Language, functions of, [17-18]
- Law, “moral,” [68], [162]
- Legal rights, [84-94]
- Leonardo da Vinci, [8], [201]
- Levy-Brühl, L., [8], [162], [189]
- Locke, J., [164-5]
- Lucas, Keith, [27]
- Mahommedanism, [139]
- Meaning, [21-24]
- Meyer, Max, [104]
- Mill, J. S., [8], [165]
- Milton, [59]
- Morality not the same as ethics, [73]
- “Moral” rights, [94-100]
- “Motor set,” [20]
- Murray, James, [156]
- Outgoing reaction, [56]
- Paulsen, F., [137]
- Perry, R. B., [6], n; 175
- Plato, [121], [130]
- Prince, Morton, [140]
- Protagoras, [187]
- Reciprocal innervation, law of, [32-35], [59]
- Regulus, [132]
- Reid, T., [162-3]
- Richet, C., [33]
- “Secret of Life,” [5]
- Sellars, R. W., [8], [58], [190]
- Shaftesbury, [158]
- Socrates, [7-8], [72], [132]
- “Specific response,” [20]
- Spencer, H., [8]
- Spinoza, [8], [99]
- Starling, E. H., [28], n; [32], n.
- Stoics, [193]
- “Stream of thought,” [14]
- Thigmotaxis, [131]
- Titchener, E. B., [20]
- Vitalist, [5-7]
- Vague, meaning of, [26]
- Withdrawing reaction, [66]
- Zoroaster, [13], [58-9]
A PARTIAL LIST OF
BORZOI TEXTS
EARLY CIVILIZATION:
AN INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY
By Alexander A. Goldenweiser, Lecturer on Anthropology and Sociology at the New School for Social Research, New York
Large 8vo, Cloth, XXIV 424 pages
While offering an elementary text for the beginner in anthropology, this volume is mainly designed as a source book of information and suggestion for students of sociology who may wish to amplify their familiarity with modern social phenomena by an inquiry into the nature of early civilization and the workings of the primitive mind.
SECRET HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH OCCUPATION OF EGYPT
By Wilfrid Scawen Blunt
Large 8vo, Cloth, 450 pages
This book makes clear the varying motives—imperialistic, economic, and personal—which brought about the English occupation of Egypt. Based on personal records and contemporary documents, its statements and conclusions have a profound interest and importance for students of history in general and of English history in particular.
THE GERMAN CONSTITUTION
By René Brunet, Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Caen (translated from the French by Joseph Gollomb, with an Introduction by Charles A. Beard)
8vo, Cloth, XIV 339 pages
This is a critical discussion of the new German Constitution, the actual text of which is included, in English, as an appendix. It gives a lucid and unbiased account of the German Revolution, describes the conflict of forces which ended in the establishment of the Republic, and concludes with a systematic analysis of the new plan of government.
THE FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL SCIENCE
By James Mickel Williams, Professor of Economics and Sociology in Hobart College
Large 8vo, Cloth, XVI 494 pages
A comparative study of the psychological aspects of the social sciences. It treats of the relation of social psychology to political science, jurisprudence, economics, history and sociology, analyzing the psychological assumptions underlying the behavior of men living in social relations.
PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
By James Mickel Williams, Professor of Economics and Sociology in Hobart College
Large 8vo Cloth, XII 459 pages
This book represents the first attempt that has been made to explain society concretely in psychological terms. It describes the essential processes that extend thruout the social organization, analyzing the conflict of the different types of behavior in all human relations.
THE HISTORY OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
By Franz Carl Müller-Lyer (translated from the German by E. C. and H. W. Lake, with Introductions by L. T. Hobhouse and E. J. Urwick)
8vo, Cloth, 362 pages
This volume is mainly designed as a text for beginners in social studies. It surveys broadly the various phases of man’s origin and progress, co-ordinating the general facts of social evolution from the earliest times and indicating the probable trend of future developments.
HUMAN NATURE IN POLITICS
By Graham Wallas, Professor of Political Science in London University
8vo, Cloth, 320 pages
This is a slightly revised edition, with a new Preface, of Professor Wallas’ famous work first published in England, in 1908, and for some time out of print. It offers a clear and forceful analysis of the psychological processes which underlie political thought and action, laying special emphasis upon the application of social psychology to politics.
HOW ENGLAND IS GOVERNED
By Rt. Hon. C. F. G. Masterman
8vo, Cloth, XVI 293 pages
An introductory study of the working of the British Constitution, written from the standpoint of one who has had actual experience of the working of the political machinery of England. Students of politics and government will find in this volume a most interesting and valuable source of information.
FACING OLD AGE
By Abraham Epstein, Formerly Director of the Pennsylvania Commission to Investigate Old Age Pensions
8vo, Cloth, XVI 352 pages
This book offers a scientific examination of the social and economic problems presented by the aged. Frankly a plea for social action, it presents in a most thoro and lucid manner the latest available data bearing upon this interesting and important question.
12mo, Cloth, 280 pages
OUR WAR WITH GERMANY
By John Spencer Bassett, Professor of American History in Smith College
Large 8vo, Cloth, 398 pages
This is a compact but complete account of the part played by the United States in the World War. It is in no sense a mere record of military events, but an analytical account of the political, economic and military events that marked the period of the war.
CONSUMERS’ COOPERATIVE SOCIETIES
By Charles Gide, Professor of Economics at the University of Paris (translation from the French, edited by Cedric Long)
8vo, Cloth, 300 pages
This translation of Professor Gide’s famous work is intended to meet the needs of American students of Distributive Co-operation. The first three chapters are devoted to an elucidation of the meaning and history of the co-operative movement, while the bulk of the volume deals with the practical problems of organization, administration and development of consumers’ societies themselves.
THE ETHICS OF HERCULES
By Robert Chenault Givler
12mo, Cloth 210 pages
A strictly behavioristic treatment of ethical values. Not only is human conduct the result of external and internal stimuli upon the human body, but even our notions of right and wrong are derived from the reactions of our nerves and muscles to the various stimuli which excite them.
THE ETHICS OF JOURNALISM
By Nelson Antrim Crawford
8vo, Cloth 270 pages
A clear-cut, objective exposition and analysis of contemporary journalistic practice with reference to advertising, news, and editorial, carefully documented. Here is a pioneer book on a subject which is attracting keen attention especially among practicing and prospective journalists.
THE BASIS OF SOCIAL THEORY
By Adam G. A. Balz, with the collaboration of William S. A. Pott
12mo, Cloth 253 pages
The writers of this book take the position that a science of Human Nature is requisite for the progress of all the social sciences, that Social Psychology is failing to accomplish its fundamental purpose of clarifying the uncertainties and ambiguities concerning the nature of social facts and causes.
THE TREND OF ECONOMICS
By Various Writers (edited by Rexford G. Tugwell)
8vo, Cloth 550 pages
A series of monographs contributed by thirteen outstanding American economists of the younger generation designed to set forth the present tendencies of economic thought and inquiry in the light of their historical development.