[11] See "Protagoras the Humanist", and "Gods and Priests" in "Studies in Humanism", and "Useless Knowledge" and "Plato or Protagoras" in "Humanism."
[12] The Independent. Schiller's "Formal Logic" gave rise to much controversy. See for instance Mind, vol. 23, p. 1, 398, 558. One critic called it "a sympathetic appreciation of all known logical fallacies."
[13] "Logic versus Life" in The Independent, vol. 73, p. 375.
[14] The latter part of "Humanism" and of "Riddles of the Sphinx" is devoted to this topic. Schiller succeeded Bergson as President of the Society for Psychical Research in 1914.
[15] See Schiller's article on this in The Independent of September 15, 1904, or in Fortnightly Review, vol. 76, p. 430.
[16] Quarterly Review, 1913.
[17] "Eugenics and Politics" in The Hibbert Journal, January, 1914.
[18] "Practical Eugenics in Education."
[19] "Practical Eugenics in Education."
[20] Eugenics Review, April, 1910.