Footnote 30: [(return)]
In the winter of 1907-8 I happened, on different occasions, to discuss the method of approaching political science with two young Oxford students. In each case I suggested that it would be well to read a little psychology. Each afterwards told me that he had consulted his tutor and had been told that psychology was 'useless' or 'nonsense.' One tutor, a man of real intellectual distinction, was said to have added the curiously scholastic reason that psychology was 'neither science nor philosophy.'
Footnote 31: [(return)]
Passim, e.g., vol. ii. p. 728.
Footnote 32: [(return)]
Ibid., p. 649.
Footnote 33: [(return)]