MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY, ETC. 25 



Calderwood. — continued. 



"A book of great ability .... written in a clear style, and may 

 be easily understood by even those who are not versed in such 

 discussions." — British Quarterly Review. 



A HANDBOOK OF MORAL PHILOSOPHY. Second Edition. 



Crown Svo. 6s. 



" It is, we feel convinced, the best handbook on the subject, intellectually 

 and morally, and does infinite credit to its author." — Standard. 

 il A compact and useful work, going over a great deal of ground 

 in a ?nanner adapted to suggest and facilitate further study. . . . 

 His book will be an assistance to many students outside his own 

 University of Edinburgh." — Guardian. " We cannot too heartily 

 recommend this excellent manual to all teachers who are anxious 

 that the faith of their pupils should be strengthened by sound 

 philosophy and substantial logic, and that their philosophy should 

 be enlightened by the purest of all lights— that from heaven." — 

 John Bull. 



Green (J. H.) — SPIRITUAL PHILOSOPHY: Founded on 

 the Teaching of the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge. By the 

 late Joseph Henry Green, F.R.S., D.C.L. Edited, with a 

 Memoir of the Author's Life, by John Simon, F.R.S., Medical 

 Officer of Her Majesty's Privy Council, and Surgeon to St. 

 Thomas's Hospital. Two Vols. Svo. 2$s. 



Huxley (Professor.)— lay sermons, ADDRESSES, 

 AND REVIEWS. See Physical Science Catalogue 

 preceding. 



Jevons. — Works by W. Stanley Jevons, M.A., Professor of 

 Logic in Owens College, Manchester : — 



THE SUBSTITUTION OF SIMILARS, the True Principle of 

 Reasoning. Derived from a Modification of Aristotle's Dictum. 

 Fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d. 



"Mr. Jevons' book is very clear and intelligible, and quite worth con- 

 sulting." — Guardian. 



Maccoll. — THE GREEK SCEPTICS, from Pyrrho to Sextus. 

 An Essay which obtained the Hare Prize in the year 1868. By 

 Norman Maccoll, B. A. , Scholar of Downing College, Cam- 

 bridge. Crown 8vo. y. 6d. 



"Mr. Maccoll has produced a monograph which merit the gratitude 

 of all students of philosophy. His style is clear and vigorous ; he 

 has mastered the authorities, and criticises them in a modest but 

 independent spirit." — Pall Mall Gazette. 



M' Cosh.— Works by James M'Cosh,LL.D., President of Princeton 

 College, New Jersey, U.S. 



' ' He certainly shows himself skilful in that application of logic to 

 psychology, in that inductive science of the human mind which is 



