262 BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Huxley, T. H. "Romanes Lectures" as reprinted by Julian Huxley 



in Touchstone for Ethics (Harper, 1947). 



Keith, Sir Arthur. Evolution and Ethics (Putnam, 1946). 



Leake, C. D. "Ethicogenesis," Science Monthly, Vol. 60 (1945). 



Mead, Margaret. Growing Up in New Guinea (Mentor Books, 

 1953). Another interesting and revealing study of a primitive 

 culture. 



Montagu, M. F. Ashley. See Chap. 6. 



Otto, Max. Science and the Moral Life (Mentor Books, 1949). 



Plato. Dialogues of Plato (Pocket Books, 1951). 



Reiser, O. L. Philosophy and the Concepts of Modern Science 

 (Macmillan, 1935); also World Philosophy, A Search for Syn- 

 thesis (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1948); and Nature, Man 

 and God (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1951). 



Russell, Bertrand. Religion and Science (Holt, 1936). 



Simpson, G. G. See Chap. 6. 



Toynbee, a. J. See Chap. 8. 



Westermarck, E. Ethical Relativity (Paul Trench, 1932). 



Chapter 11 



Boyd, W. C. Genetics and the Races of Man (Brown and Co., 

 1950). 



Brown, Harrison. The Challe?ige of Man's Future (Viking, 1954). 

 The strains and stresses of the future have never been more con- 

 vincingly presented. 



Bruno, Giordano. See Singer, in Chap. 1. 



Darwin, Sir Charles Galton. The Next Million Years (Double- 

 day, 1953). The grandson of the author of The Origijj of Species 

 is alarmed by the unrestrained reproductive trends in man. 



Hampshire, Stuart. Spinoza (Penguin Books, 1951). A general in- 

 troduction to the teachings of the great seventeenth-century 

 philosopher and metaphysician whose system embraces the whole 

 range of the traditional problems of philosophy. 



Hrdlicka, a. "Man's Future in the Light of His Past and Present," 

 Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 68 

 (1929). 



Huxley, Jull^n. Evolution in Action (Harper, 1953). Man, ac- 

 cording to Huxley, is the result of two thousand million years of 

 biological evolution. He has every prospect of an equal, or even 

 greater, span of psycho-social evolution before him. A most in- 

 teresting discussion of actualities and possibilities. 



