[32] I endeavour to indicate what this Humanism and Personalism may be in my sixth chapter.
[33] Journ. of Phil. Psychol., 1906, p. 338.
[34] From vol. ii. (p. 322) of Baldwin’s Dictionary of Philosophy. Dr. C. S. Peirce, formerly a teacher of mathematics and philosophy at Johns Hopkins University, was made by James into the father or patron saint of Pragmatism. James confesses to have been stimulated into Pragmatism by the teachings of Peirce.
[35] Journ. of Phil. Psy., 1906, p. 340.
[36] See [pp. 78], [148]; and in reference to the last striking presentation of Absolutism, p. 230.
[37] See Bourdeau, Pragmatisme et Modernisme, and W. Riley in the Journ. of Phil. Psy., April and May 1911; the James article, Journ. of Phil., 1906; Journ. of Phil., 1907, pp. 26–37, on Papini’s “Introduction to Pragmatism”; The Nation (N.Y.), November 1907, on “Papini’s view of the ‘daily tragedy’ of life.”
[38] Reported to have been inaugurated by a Franco-Italian poet, Martinetti. Of the question of any possible connexion between this “Futurism” with the present Art movement bearing the same name I know nothing definite.
[39] I refer to the recent volume dedicated by some of his old pupils to Professor Garman—a celebrated teacher of philosophy in one of the older colleges of the United States.
[40] The two large volumes on the Psychology of Adolescence.
[41] The Psychology of Religion.