+ + —Spec. 94: 894. Je. 17, ‘05. 1660w.

Munsterberg, Hugo. Eternal life. [**]85c. Houghton.

“Two friends are sitting at the hearth after a funeral, and one gives the other his thoughts on immortality, as recorded here in an imagined monologue. There is an Oversoul, whose will-attitudes are the norms of the good, the beautiful, and the true. These are eternal. These will-attitudes we may make ours, yet they become ours ‘only in so far as our consciousness, is the over-individual consciousness, the Oversoul.’”—Outlook.

“His interpretation of life in terms of will is done with extraordinary skill and perspicuity, considering the small space allotted to the problem in his paper. But his application of the theory of will-values to individual immortality appears to us unsatisfactory and weak.”

+ —Cath. World. 81: 537. Jl. ‘05. 690w.

“It is a spiritual structure built upon the sands of speculation.” Edward Fuller.

+ —Critic. 47: 245. S. ‘05. 200w.

“It is written in a charming manner, and is really a description of the author’s philosophy. The fault I find with Professor Munsterberg’s philosophy is really this: that it pretends to get rid of time and space in considering personality, and yet does not do so, and cannot, in the nature of things.” T. D. A. Cockerell.

+ —Dial. 38: 415. Je. 16, ‘05. 1290w.
Outlook. 80: 139. My. 13, ‘05. 150w.

Murfree, Mary Noailles. See Craddock, Charles Egbert, pseud.