[103] Cited by Baldwin, op. cit., p. 495, n.

[104] See Giddings, Principles of Sociology, 1905 ed., p. 194.

[105] Op. cit., p. 571.

[106] Op. cit., chap. xiii.

[107] Cf. Elwood, C. A., Some Prolegomena to Social Psychology, Chicago, 1901. Cf. infra in this chapter the note on Professor Elwood's view.

[108] Human Nature, etc., chap. i.

[109] Op. cit., chaps. v and vi.

[110] Ibid., pp. 52 et seq.

[111] This analogy is unhappy, if pushed very far—like most analogies between physics and psychics. It serves as a useful figure of speech, however,—which is all Professor Cooley designs it for.

[112] Social Organization, pp. 3-4.