PREFACE

The following essays are the substance of a course of lectures delivered at a Summer School at the Woodbrooke Settlement, near Birmingham, in August 1915. The general purpose of the course will be apparent from the essays themselves. No forced or mechanical uniformity of view was aimed at. The writers will be found, very naturally and properly, to differ in detail and in the stress they lay on different aspects of the case. But they agree in thinking that while our country's cause and the cause of our Allies is just and necessary and must be prosecuted with the utmost vigour, it is not inopportune to reflect on those common and ineradicable elements in the civilization of the West which tend to form a real commonwealth of nations and will survive even the most shattering of conflicts. That we on the Allied side stand fundamentally for this ideal is one of our most valuable assets.

The fact that the lectures were delivered at a settlement for training persons for social work in a religious spirit, suggested to more than one of those who took part in the course, how similar is the task which now lies before us in international affairs to that which Canon Barnett initiated thirty years ago for the treatment of the social question at home. We need in both cases to associate ourselves mentally with others in order to realize the common elements which underlie the seeming diversity in the civilization of the West.

The method of the course was primarily historical, though certain essays have been added of a more idealist type. It is hoped that the point of view suggested, though prompted by current events, may be found to have some permanent value. It could obviously be applied to many other aspects of European life, e.g. morality and politics, to which conditions of space have only permitted indirect reference to be made in this volume.

F.S.M.


CONTENTS

Page


[ANALYSIS][7]
Chapter[I]INTRODUCTORY: THE GROUNDS OF UNITY
By F. S. MARVIN.
[17]
Chapter[II]UNITY IN PREHISTORIC TIMES
By J.L. MYRES, Wykeham Professor ofAncient History, Oxford.
[35]
Chapter[III]THE CONTRIBUTION OF GREECE AND ROME
By J.A. SMITH, Waynflete Professor of
Mental and Moral Philosophy, Oxford.
[69]
Chapter[IV]UNITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES
By ERNEST BARKER, Fellow of New College,Oxford.
[91]
Chapter[V]UNITY AND DIVERSITY IN LAW
By W.M. GELDART, Vinerian Professor ofEnglish Law, Oxford.
[122]
Chapter[VI]THE COMMON ELEMENTS IN EUROPEAN LITERATURE AND ART
By the Rev. Dr. A.J. CARLYLE, UniversityCollege, Oxford.
[137]
Chapter[VII]SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY AS UNIFYING FORCES
By L.T. HOBHOUSE, White Professor ofSociology,
University of London.
[162]
Chapter[VIII]THE UNITY OF WESTERN EDUCATION
By J.W. HEADLAM, late Fellow of King'sCollege, Cambridge.
[180]
Chapter[IX]COMMERCE AND FINANCE AS INTERNATIONAL FORCES
By HARTLEY WITHERS.
[198]
Chapter[X]INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIAL LEGISLATION
By CONSTANCE SMITH, sometime BritishDelegate on
International Bureau forIndustrial Legislation.
[222]
Chapter[XI]COMMON IDEALS OF SOCIAL REFORM
By C. DELISLE BURNS.
[242]
Chapter[XII]THE POLITICAL BASES OF A WORLD-STATE
By J.A. HOBSON.
[260]
Chapter[XIII]RELIGION AS A UNIFYING INFLUENCE IN WESTERN CIVILIZATION
By H.G. WOOD, late Fellow of Jesus College,Cambridge.
[280]
Chapter[XIV]THE GROWTH OF HUMANITY
by F. S. MARVIN.
[301]

ANALYSIS