ANNOUNCEMENTS 



The Life of Reason; or, The Phases of Human 

 Progress, by George Santayana, Assistant 

 Professor of Philosophy at Harvard University. 

 Two volumes. 5s, net each. 



Contents of Vol. I : The Birth of Reason — First Steps and 

 First Fluctuations — Discovery of Natural Objects — On Some 

 Critics of this Discovery— Nature Unified and Mind Discerned — 

 Discovery of Fellow Minds — Concretions in Discourse and in Ex- 

 istence — Relative Values of Things and Ideas — How Thought is 

 Practical^The Measure of Values in Reflection — Abstract Con- 

 ditions of the Ideal — Flux and Constancy in Human Nature. 



Contents of Vol. II : Love — The Family — Industry, Govern- 

 ment and War — The Aristocratic Ideal — Democracy — Free Society 

 — Patriotism — Ideal Society. 



The Citizen, A Study of the Individual and the Gov^ 

 ernment, by Nathaniel Southgate Shaler, 

 Professor of Geology in Harvard University, 

 and Dean of Lawrence Scientific School. Crown 

 8vo., pp. viii.+346. 6s. net. 



Some of the Contents : The Origin of Mankind — The Begin- 

 nings of Government — On the Limits of Freedom — Wealth, Its 

 Origin and Distribution — Foreign Possessions — The Future of the 

 Commonweath, etc. 



The IngersoII Lectures* 



The Conception of Immortality, by Josiah Royce, 

 Professor of Philosophy at Harvard University. 

 i6mo. 2s. 6d. 



" His lecture is stimulating and helpful. . . . we have no hesita- 

 tion in commending it to the thoughtful reader." — Westminster 



Gazette. 



Science and Immortahty, by William Osler, 

 M.D., F.R.S., Regius Professor of Medicine at 

 Oxford University. 2s. 6d. 



" Thoughtful and suggestive." — Lancet. 



Human Immortality. Two Supposed Objections 

 to the Doctrine, by William James, Professor 

 of Philosophy at Harvard University. 2s. 6d. 



" One of the most suggestive and original writers, and as certainly 

 the most brilUant psychologist living." — Spectator. 



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