53 SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



Maudsley ( H .) continued. 



THE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF MIND. 

 See MEDICAL CATALOGUE, preceding. 



Maurice. Works by the Rev. FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE, 

 M.A., Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Cam- 

 bridge. (For other Works by the same Author, see THEOLOGICAL 

 CATALOGUE.) 



SOCIAL MORALITY. Twenty-one Lectures delivered in the Uni- 

 versity of Cambridge. New and Cheaper Edition. Cr. 8vo. IGJ. 6d. 



In this series of Lectures, Professor Maurice considers, historically 

 and critically, Social Morality in its three main aspects : I. " The 

 Relations "which spring from the Family Domestic Morality" 

 IL ' * The Relations which subsist among the various constituents 

 of a Nation National Morality" III. tl As it concerns Uni- 

 versal Humanity Universal Morality" Appended to each series 

 is a chapter on " Worship :" first, "Family Worship;" second, 

 "National Worship;" third, "Universal Worship." " Whilst 

 reading it -we are charmed by the freedom from exclusiveness and 

 prejudice, the large charity, the loftiness of thought, the eagerness to 

 recognize and appreciate whatever there is of real worth extant in 

 the world, which, animates it from one end to the othei'. We gain 

 new thoughts and new ways ofvieiuing things, even more, perhaps, 

 from being brought for a time under the influence of so noble and 

 spiritual a mind" Athenaeum. 



THE CONSCIENCE : Lectures on Casuistry, delivered in the 

 University of Cambridge. New and Cheaper Edition. Crown Svo. 

 5* 



In this series of nine Lectures, Professor Maurice, with his wonted 

 force and breadth and freshness, endeavours to settle what is meant 

 by the word li Conscience," and discusses the most important 

 questions immediately connected with the subject. Taking " Casu 

 istry " in its old sense as being the "study of cases of Conscience," 

 he endeavours to show in what way it may be brought to bear at 

 the present day upon the acts and thoughts of our ordinary 

 existence. He shoivs that Conscience asks for laws, not rules ; 



