PHILOSOPHICAL CLASSICS FOR ENGLISH READERS. 



EDITED BY PROFESSOR KNIGHT, ST ANDREWS. 



In Crown Octavo Volumes, with Portraits. Each price 3s. 6d. 



DESCARTES. By Professor J. P. MAHAFFY, Dublin. 



BUTLER. By the Rev. W. LUCAS COLLINS, M.A. 



BERKELEY. By Professor A. CAMPBELL ERASER, Edinburgh. 



FICHTE. By Professor ADAMSON, M.A., Glasgow. 



KANT. By Professor WALLACE, Merton College, Oxford. 



HAMILTON. By Professor VEITCH, Glasgow. 



HEGEL. By EDWARD CAIRO, D.C.L., LL.D., Master of Balliol. 



" Professor Caird's monograph on Hegel is a most satisfactory piece of work Life and 



philosophy are interwoven in a most skilful and interesting fashion in the first half of the 

 book ; while in the second half the principles and outlines of the Hegelian philosophy are 

 stated with a breadth and perspicuity that place in clear relief the relations of this way of 

 thinking to all the main problems of modern life." Scotsman. 



LEIBNIZ. By JOHN THEODORE MERZ. 



"The position of Leibniz is fairly gauged his famous views and monads on pre-established 

 harmony, on the principle of sufficient reason, and his theological optimism, can be learned by 

 readers with accuracy and considerable fulness and clearness in these pages." Scotsman. 



VICO. By Professor FLINT, D.D., Edinburgh. 



"Professor Flint has presented the pith of Vico's writings with great clearness and tact. 



He has indeed done his work in such a masterly manner that Vico can no longer be said 



to be practically unknown in England." British Quarterly Review. 



HOBBES. By Professor GROOM ROBERTSON, London. 



"A model of what work of the kind should be, exact and learned, yet never dull ; sympa- 

 thetic, yet perfectly dispassionate in a word, a thoroughly appreciative survey of the life and 

 work of one of the most fertile and comprehensive of English thinkers." London Quarterly 

 Review. 



HUME. By the EDITOR. 



"It would not be easy to speak of this little volume in too high terms. It is at once genu- 

 inely popular and genuinely philosophical The more carefully this admirable study is 



considered, the more highly it will be valued." Spectator. 



SPINOZA. By the Very Rev. Principal CAIRO. 



"A masterly piece of exposition, and, as such, will be welcomed by all students of philo- 

 sophy A metaphysical disquisition, extremely able, and very valuable." Globe. 



BACON. PART I. The Life. PART II. Philosophy. By Professor 



NICHOL, Glasgow. 



"As a manual for the university student, or for the general reader, we know of no volume 

 on Bacon's philosophy so highly to be commended as this one." London Quarterly Review. 



LOCKE. By Professor A. CAMPBELL FRASER, Edinburgh. 



" The account of the philosophy of the ' Essay ' is the most comprehensive and best con- 

 sidered to which either student or common reader can now turn." Mind. 



WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. 



