T. and T. Clark's Publications. 



LOTZE'S MICteOCOSMUS. 

 In Two Volumes, 8vo, THIRD EDITION, price 36s., 



MICROCOSMUS: 



CONCERNING MAN AND HIS RELATION TO THE WORLD. 

 BY HERMANN LOTZE. 



CONTENTS: Book I. The Body. II. The Soul. III. Life. IV. Man. 

 V. Mind. VI. The Microcosmic Order; or, The Course of Human Life. 

 VII. History. VIII. Progress. IX. The Unity of Things. 



4 These are indeed two masterly volumes, vigorous in intellectual power, 

 and translated with rare ability. . . . This work will doubtless find a place 

 on the shelves of all the foremost thinkers and students of modern times.' 

 Evangelical Magazine. 



4 The English public have now before them the greatest philosophic work 

 produced in Germany by the generation just past. The translation comes at 

 an opportune time, for the circumstances of English thought, just at the 

 present moment, are peculiarly those with which Lotze attempted to deal 

 when he wrote his " Microcosmus," a quarter of a century ago. . . . Few 

 philosophic books of the century are so attractive both in style and matter.' 

 Athenceum. 



' Lotze is the ablest, the most brilliant, and most renowned of the German 

 philosophers of to-day. ... He has rendered invaluable and splendid service 

 to Christian thinkers, and has given them a work which cannot fail to equip 

 them for the sturdiest intellectual conflicts and to ensure their victory.' 

 Jia/itit Mat/azine. 



In Two Volumes, 8vo, price 21s., 



NATURE AND THE BIBLE: 



LECTURES ON THE MOSAIC HISTORY OF CREATION 

 IN ITS RELATION TO NATURAL SCIENCE. 



BY DR. FR. H. REUSCH. 

 REVISED AND COKKECTKD IIY THE AUTHOR. 



Translated from the. Fourth Edition by KATHLEEN LYTTELTON. 



Other champions niuc'i more competent and learned than myself might 

 have been placed in the field ; I will only name oue of the most recent, Dr. 

 lleusch, author of " Nature and the Bible.'" The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE. 



' The work, we need hardly say, is of profound and perennial interest, and 

 it can scarcely be too highly commended as, in many respects, a very success- 

 ful attempt to settle one of the most perplexing questions of the day. It is 

 impossible to read it without obtaining larger views of theology and more 

 accurate opinions respecting its relations to science, and no one will rise from 

 its perusal without feeling a deep sense of gratitude to its author.' Scottish 

 Ittview. 



' This graceful and accurate translation of Dr. Reusch's well-known treatise 

 on the identity of the doctrines of the Bible and the revelations of Nature is 

 a valuable addition to English literature.' Whitehall, Revieio. 



We owe to Dr. Reusch, a Catholic theologian, one of the most valuable 

 treatises on the relation of Religion and Natural Science that has appeared 

 for 7ii uny years. Its fine impartial tone, its absolute freedom from passion, 

 its glow of sympathy with all sound science, and its liberality of religious 

 Views, are likely to surprise all readers who are unacquainted with the fact, 

 that, whatever may be the errors of the Romish Church, its more enlightened 

 members are. as a rule, free from that idolatry of the letter of Scripture which 

 s one of the most dungorous faults of ultra-Protestantism.' Literary World. 



