[*] “Force is not lacking in much of what Mr. Cooper advances.”

+N. Y. Times. 10: 774. N. 18, ‘05. 540w.

“Despite these criticisms, we think this volume a real contribution to the thought of the day, because characterized by three qualities not too often found in combination in treatises on our industrial problems, namely, a careful study of existing conditions, a sane and non-partisan judgment respecting them, and something of prophetic vision regarding the tendency of industrial progress and the direction in which it should be guided.”

+ + —Outlook. 81: 524. O. 28, ‘05. 360w.

[*] “He has no very definite plan of organization, but he has at least sounded a note of warning.”

+Pub. Opin. 39: 763. D. 9, ‘05. 210w.

Cooper, William Colby. Immortality: the principal philosophic arguments for and against it. $1. W: Colby Cooper, Cleves, O.

“A serious and very able discussion, from the purely philosophical viewpoint, of the logical arguments for and against the theory of the persistence of life after the crisis of death.” (Arena.) The author is a physician.

“The method of presentation, however, is less open to criticism than the typography.”

+ + —Arena. 33: 674. Je. ‘05. 590w.