MISCELLANEOUS WORKS OF HERBERT SPENCER.
SOCIAL STATICS.
New and revised edition, including "The Man versus The
State." A series of essays on political tendencies
heretofore published separately. 12mo. 420 pages. Cloth,
$2.00.
"Mr. Spencer has thoroughly studied the issues which are
behind the social and political life of our own time, not
exactly those issues which are discussed in Parliament or in
Congress, but the principles of all modern government, which
are slowly changing in response to the broader industrial
and general development of human experience. One will obtain
no suggestions out of his book for guiding a political party
or carrying a point in economics, but he will find the
principles of sociology, as they pertain to the whole of
life, better stated in these pages than he can find them
expressed anywhere else. It is in this sense that this work
is important and fresh and vitalizing. It goes constantly to
the foundation of things."—Boston Herald.
VARIOUS FRAGMENTS,
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Along with a considerable variety of other matter, these
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Evolutionary Ethics. His views on copyright, national and
international, "Social Evolution and Social Duty," and
"Anglo-American Arbitration," also form a part of the
contents.
EDUCATION: Intellectual, Moral, and Physical.
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CONTENTS: What Knowledge is of most Worth? Intellectual
Education. Moral Education. Physical Education.
THE STUDY OF SOCIOLOGY.
The fifth volume in the International scientific Series.
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CONTENTS: Our need of it. Is there a Social Science? Nature
of the Social Science. Difficulties of the Social Science.
Objective Difficulties. Subjective Difficulties,
Intellectual. Subjective Difficulties, Emotional, The
Educational Bias. The Bias of Patriotism. The Class Bias.
The Political Bias. The Theological Bias. Discipline.
Preparation in Biology. Preparation in Psychology.
Conclusion.
THE INADEQUACY OF "NATURAL SELECTION."
12mo. Paper, 30 cents.
This essay, in which Professor Weismann's theories are
criticised, is reprinted from the Contemporary Review, and
comprises a forcible presentation of Mr. Spencer's views
upon the general subject indicated in the title.
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PIONEERS OF SCIENCE IN AMERICA.
Sketches of their Lives and Scientific Work.
Edited and revised by WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS, M.D.
With Portraits. 8vo, Cloth, $4.00.
Impelled solely by an enthusiastic love of Nature, and
neither asking nor receiving outside aid, these early
workers opened the way and initiated the movement through
which American science has reached its present commanding
position. This book gives some account of these men, their
early struggles, their scientific labors, and, whenever
possible, something of their personal characteristics. This
information, often very difficult to obtain, has been
collected from a great variety of sources, with the utmost
care to secure accuracy. It is presented in a series of
sketches, some fifty in all, each with a single exception
accompanied with a well-authenticated portrait.
"Fills a place that needed filling, and is likely to be
widely read."—N.Y. Sun.
"It is certainly a useful and convenient volume, and
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specially to be commended for setting in just historical
perspective many of the earlier scientists who are neither
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Post.
"A wonderfully interesting volume. Many a young man will
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well done, well worth the doing."—Philadelphia Press.
"One of the most valuable books which we have
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"A book of no little educational value.... An extremely
valuable work of reference."—Boston Beacon.
"A valuable handbook for those whose work runs on these same
lines, and is likely to prove of lasting interest to those
for whom 'les documents humain' are second only to history
in importance—nay, are a vital part of history."—Boston
Transcript.
"A biographical history of science in America, noteworthy
for its completeness and scope.... All of the sketches are
excellently prepared and unusually interesting."—Chicago
Record.
"One of the most valuable contributions to American
literature recently made.... The pleasing style in which
these sketches are written, the plans taken to secure
accuracy, and the information conveyed, combine to give them
great value and interest. No better or more inspiring
reading could be placed in the hands of an intelligent and
aspiring young man."—New York Christian Work.
"A book whose interest and value are not for to-day or
to-morrow, but for indefinite time."—Rochester Herald.
"It is difficult to imagine a reader of ordinary
intelligence who would not be entertained by the book....
Conciseness, exactness, urbanity of tone, and
interestingness are the four qualities which chiefly impress
the reader of these sketches."—Buffalo Express.
"Full of interesting and valuable matter."—The Churchman.
New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.
PIONEERS OF EVOLUTION, from Thales to Huxley.
By EDWARD CLODD, President of the Folk-Lore Society;
Author of "The Story of Creation,"
"The Story of 'Primitive' Man," etc.
With Portraits. 12mo. Cloth. $1.50.
"The mass of interesting material which Mr. Clodd has got
together and woven into a symmetrical story of the progress
from ignorance and theory to knowledge and the intelligent
recording of fact is prodigious.... The 'goal' to which Mr.
Clodd leads us in so masterly a fashion is but the starting
point of fresh achievements, and, in due course, fresh
theories. His book furnishes an important contribution to a
liberal education."—London Daily Chronicle.
"We are always glad to meet Mr. Clodd. He is never dull; he
is always well informed, and he says what he has to say with
clearness and precision.... The interest intensifies as Mr.
Clodd attempts to show the part really played in the growth
of the doctrine of evolution by men like Wallace, Darwin,
Huxley, and Spencer.... We commend the book to those who
want to know what evolution really means."—London Times.
"This is a book which was needed.... Altogether, the book
could hardly be better done. It is luminous, lucid, orderly,
and temperate. Above all, it is entirely free from personal
partisanship. Each chief actor is sympathetically treated,
and friendship is seldom or never allowed to overweight
sound judgment."—London Academy.
"We can assure the reader that he will find in this work a
very useful guide to the lives and labors of leading
evolutionists of the past and present. Especially
serviceable is the account of Mr. Herbert Spencer and his
share in rediscovering evolution, and illustrating its
relations to the whole field of human knowledge. His
forcible style and wealth of metaphor make all that Mr.
Clodd writes arrestive and interesting."—London Literary
World.
"Can not but prove welcome to fair-minded men.... To read it
is to have an object-lesson in the meaning of evolution....
There is no better book on the subject for the general
reader.... No one could go through the book without being
both refreshed and newly instructed by its masterly survey
of the growth of the most powerful idea of modern
times."—The Scotsman.
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EVOLUTION OF MAN AND CHRISTIANITY.
New edition. By the Rev. HOWARD MACQUEARY.
With a new Preface, in which the Author answers his Critics,
and with some important Additions. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
"This is a revised and enlarged edition of a book published
last year. The author reviews criticisms upon the first
edition, denies that he rejects the doctrine of the
incarnation, admits his doubts of the physical resurrection
of Christ, and his belief in evolution. The volume is to be
marked as one of the most profound expressions of the modern
movement toward broader theological positions."—Brooklyn
Times.
"He does not write with the animus of the destructive
school; he intends to be, and honestly believes he is, doing
a work of construction, or at least of reconstruction.... He
writes with manifest earnestness and conviction, and in a
style which is always clear and energetic."—Churchman.
HISTORY OF THE CONFLICT BETWEEN RELIGION AND SCIENCE.
By Dr. JOHN WILLIAM DRAPER.
12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
"The key-note to this volume is found in the antagonism
between the progressive tendencies of the human mind and the
pretensions of ecclesiastical authority, as developed in the
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monograph will be found to possess no less originality of
conception than vigor of reasoning and wealth of
erudition."—New York Tribune.
A CRITICAL HISTORY OF FREE THOUGHT IN REFERENCE TO THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
By Rev. Canon ADAM STOREY FARRAR, D.D., F.R.S., etc.
12mo. Cloth, $2.00.
"A conflict might naturally be anticipated between the
reasoning faculties of man and a religion which claims the
right, on superhuman authority, to impose limits on the
field or manner of their exercise. It is the chief of the
movements of free thought which it is my purpose to
describe, in their historic succession, and their connection
with intellectual causes. We must ascertain the facts,
discover the causes, and read the moral."—The Author.
CREATION OR EVOLUTION? A Philosophical Inquiry.
By GEORGE TICKNOR CURTIS,
12mo. Cloth, $2.00.
"A treatise on the great question of Creation or Evolution
by one who is neither a naturalist nor theologian, and who
does not profess to bring to the discussion a special
equipment in either of the sciences which the controversy
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but Mr. Curtis will satisfy the reader, before many pages
have been turned, that he has a substantial contribution to
make to the debate, and that his book is one to be treated
with respect. His part is to apply to the reasonings of the
men of science the rigid scrutiny with which the lawyer is
accustomed to test the value and pertinency of testimony,
and the legitimacy of inferences from established
facts."—New York Tribune.
"Mr. Curtis's book is honorably distinguished from a sadly
too great proportion of treatises which profess to discuss
the relation of scientific theories to religion, by its
author's thorough acquaintance with his subject, his
scrupulous fairness, and remarkable freedom from
passion."—London Literary World.
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