III.

Ceremonial Institutions. (First part of Vol. II. of “Principles of Sociology.”) 12mo. Cloth. Price, $1.25.

IV.

Descriptive Sociology; Or, GROUPS OF SOCIOLOGICAL FACTS. Six Parts, in royal folio. Price, $4.00 each.

“Of all our thinkers he is the one who, as it appears to me, has formed for himself the largest new scheme of a systematic philosophy, and, in relation to some of the greatest questions of philosophy in their most recent forms, as set or reset by the last speculations and revelations of science, has already shot his thoughts the farthest.”—Prof. David Masson, in “Recent British Philosophy.”

“His bold generalizations are always instructive, and some of them may in the end be established as the profoundest laws of the knowable universe.”—Dr. James McCosh, in the “Intuitions of Mind.”

“One who, whether for the extent of his positive knowledge, or for the profundity of his speculative insight, has already achieved a name second to none in the whole range of English philosophy.”—Westminster Review.

“The work (‘Descriptive Sociology’) is a gigantic one; its value, when complete, will be immeasurable; and its actual influence on the study of sociology, and help to that study, greater perhaps than any book yet published. It is a cyclopædia of Social Science, but a cyclopædia edited by the greatest of sociologists.”—G. W. Smalley.

For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price.

D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers, New York.