“It is done with just the proper combination of sympathy and criticism.”—British Weekly.
“This little book on Eucken’s Philosophy is of quite exceptional interest and importance.”—The Inquirer.
“Professor Boyce Gibson . . . has performed a real service in promoting the acquaintance of English, and American students with a thinker whose distinctive views give him a special claim to their attention. . . . Professor Gibson has achieved a notable success, writing briefly, lucidly, and sympathetically.”—The New Age.
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FOOTNOTES:
[1] Windelband (Geschichte und Naturwissenschaft, 3 Auflage, 1904) gives the name “nomothetic” to the whole of our “science” and calls the method of history “idiographic.” We thought it better to establish three fundamental types of all possible branches of knowledge.
[2] See J. Arth. Thomson, The Science of Life, London, 1899.
[3] E. B. Wilson, The Cell in Development and Inheritance, New York, Macmillan, 1896.