MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY, ETC. 59 



Maurice (F. D .)— continued. 



for freedom, not chains ; for education, not suppression. He 

 has abstained from the use of philosophical terms, and has touched 

 on philosophical systems only when he fancied "they wei'e inter- 

 fering with the rights and duties of wayfarers." The Saturday 

 Review says: "We rise from them with detestation of all that is 

 selfish and ??iean, and with a living impression that there is such a 

 thing as goodness after all." 



MORAL AND METAPHYSICAL PHILOSOPHY. New 

 Edition and Preface. Vol. I. Ancient Philosophy and the First to 

 the Thirteenth Centuries ; Vol. II. the Fourteenth Century and the 

 French Revolution, with a glimpse into the Nineteenth Century. 

 2 Vols. 8vo. 25 J. 



This is an Edition in hvo volumes of Professor Maurice's History of 

 Philosophy from the earliest period to the present time. Jt was 

 fornierly scattend throughout a number of separate volumes, and it 

 is believed that all admirers of the author and all students of 

 philosophy will welcome this compact Edition. The subject is one 

 of the highest impoiiance, and it is treated here with fulness and 

 eandour, and in a clear and interesting manner. In a long intro- 

 duction to this Edition, in the form 0/ a dialogue, Professor Maurice 

 justifies some of his own peculiar views, and touches upon some oj 

 the most important topics of the time. 



Murphy.— HABIT AND INTELLIGENCE, in Connection 

 with the Laws of Matter and Force : A Series of Scientific Essays. 

 By Joseph John Murphy. Two Vols. 8vo. i6j. 



The author's chief purpose in this work has been to state and to dis- 

 cuss what he regards as the special and characteristic principles of 

 life. The most important part of the work treats of those vital 

 principles which belong to the inner domain of life itself as dis- 

 tinguished from the principles which belong to the border-land 

 where life comes into contact with inorganic matter and force. In 

 the inner domain of life we find two principles, which are, the 

 author believes, coextensive with life and peculiar to it: these are 

 Habit and Intelligence. He has made as full a statement as 

 possible of the laws under which habits form, disappear, alter under 

 altered circumstances, and vary spontaneously. He discusses that 



