THE MONIST
The Monist is a Quarterly Magazine, devoted to the Philosophy of Science. Each copy contains 160 pages; original articles, correspondence from foreign countries, discussions, and book reviews.
The Monist Advocates the Philosophy of Science
which is an application of the scientific method to philosophy.
The old philosophical systems were mere air castles (constructions of abstract theories,) built in the realm of pure thought. The Philosophy of Science is a systematisation of positive facts; it takes experience as its foundation, and uses the systematised formal relations of experience (mathematics, logic, etc.) as its method. It is opposed on the one hand to the dogmatism of groundless a priori assumptions, and on the other hand to the scepticism of negation which finds expression in the agnostic tendencies of to-day.
Monism Means a Unitary World-Conception
There may be different aspects and even contrasts, diverse views and opposite standpoints, but there can never be contradiction in truth.
Monism is not a one-substance theory, be it materialistic or spiritualistic or agnostic; it means simply and solely consistency.
All truths form one consistent system, and any dualism of irreconcilable statements indicates that there is a problem to be solved; there must be fault somewhere either in our reasoning or in our knowledge of facts. Science always implies Monism, i. e., a unitary world conception.