CAMBRIDGE COUNTY GEOGRAPHIES 



General Editor: F. H. H. Guillemard, M.A., M.D. 



A series of County Geographies, price i^. bd. each, 

 suitable for general use as hand-books to the various counties 

 and also intended for use in schools. Each volume gives an 

 account of the history, antiquities, architecture, natural history, 

 industries, and physical, geological, and general characteristics 

 of the county, and each has two coloured maps (one physical 

 and the other geological) and a large number of photographic 

 illustrations; 



The latest additions to the series are: — 



LinlithgoTJo shire. By T. S. Muir, M.A., F.R.S.G.S. 

 Middlesex. By G. F. Bosworth, F.R.G.S. 

 Rutland. By G. Phillips. 



A list of the forty-five volumes already published will be 

 sent on application. Volumes on the remaining counties of 

 England, Scotland, and Wales are in an active state of pre- 

 paration ; arrangements for a series of Irish geographies have 

 also been made. 



The Realm of Ends or Pluralism and Theism. 



The Gifford Lectui-es delivered in the University of 



St Andrews in the years 1907-10. By James Ward, 



Sc.D. {Camb.), Hon. LL.D. {Edin.), Hon. D.Sc. (Oxon.), 



Professor of Me^ital Philosophy, Cambridge. Second 



Edition, with Some Replies to Criticisms. 



Demy %vo. 1 2s. 6d. net. 



Mind. — It is superfluous to summarise the argument of a book which all 



who care seriously for philosophy in Great Britain may be expected to 



study closely, sentence by sentence, for themselves, and elaborate 



criticism is hardly possible to a reviewer who agrees so thoroughly with 



all the main positions contended for, that his natural impulse is simply 



to thank God that we have such a philosopher as Dr Ward among us. 



Heredity and Memory. By James Ward, Sc.D. Being 

 the Henry Sidgwick Memorial Lecture delivered at 

 NeivnJiam College, 9 November 191 2. Croivn Svo. is. net, 

 paper covers ; \s. 6d. net, bound in cloth. 



23 



