“As under the category of ‘Fichte-studien,’ the book deserves the highest praise, not only for careful scholarship, but also for clearness and articulation of argument. It is a characteristic product of the thoroughness of training which is shown in the ‘Cornell studies.’” W. H. Sheldon.
| + + | J. Philos. 4: 471. Ag. 15, ’07. 1190w. |
“[The author] expresses herself with simplicity and great clearness; her temper is judicial; and in her interpretation she is faithful to the philosopher’s writings undistorted by her own preconceptions, or by deductions as to what he ‘ought to have thought.’”
| + + | Nation. 84: 264. Mr. 21, ’07. 210w. |
“The work as a whole is an admirable discussion of the main principles of Fichte’s philosophy, and one could not ask, for one entering upon the study of Fichte, a much better guide. Such monographs as the present one are not mere pieces of philosophical archaeology. They set the contributions of great thinkers in a clearer light, and so furnish points of departure for the systematic investigations of the present.” J. A. Leighton.
| + + | Philos. R. 16: 437. Jl. ’07. 1710w. |
Talbot, Rt. Rev. Ethelbert. My people of the plains. **$1.75. Harper.
6–39742.
Descriptive note in Annual, 1906.
| A. L. A. Bkl. 3: 49. F. ’07. S. |