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THE MAN VERSUS THE STATE: containing " The New Toryism,'* 



"The Coming Slavery," "The Sins of Legislators," and "The Great Politi- 

 cal Superstition." By Herbert Spexcer. With a Postscript. Small 8vo. 

 Paper, 30 cents. 



" Though written by an Englishman, with primal reference to abuses in his own land, 

 every word of them is just as applicable to mischievous teudeucies or results in the United 

 States. No American has yet attacljed our besetting sins of over-legislation with the vigor 

 of Mr. Spencer. Men of ali p.irties should read his earnest warnings against the perilous 

 drift of that spirit of interference and meddling with private concerns of which every 

 year we see many evidences at Washington and all the State capitals."— xYfii^; York Jour- 

 nal of Commerce. 



DYNAMIC SOCIOLOGY, or Applied Social Science, as eased upon 

 Statical Sociology and the Less Complex Sciences. By Lester F. 

 Ward, A. M. Two volumes, 12mo. Cloth, $5.00. 



"In his two volames, containing upward of 1,300 pages, Mr. Ward takes us from the 

 primordial atom, througli the three stages of atomic aggregatinn indicated by • Cosmogeny,' 

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 presented to the student of life, mind, morals, and society. Especially interesting are 

 Mr. Ward's reflections upon the Rsproductive Forces, which he very sensibly and success- 

 fully vindicates from the opprobrium with which superficial prejudice has surrounded 

 them, and we would particularly recommend to all those who take interest in social ques- 

 tions, and who are capable of free and unbiased thought, his remarks upon Marriage In- 

 stitutions. 



" We are glad to find that Mr. Ward strongly dissents from the views erpressed with 

 such curious emphasis by Mr. Herbert Spencer upon the subject of compulsory state educa- 

 tion. A consideration of the matter, means, and method of education brings to its cnn- 

 clusion a work from which all readers, whether or not they agree with the doctrines therein 

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 its consideration a mind divested of prejudice, and only desirous of the truth."— y/te 

 Westminster Recitw. 



CONFLICT IN NATURE AND LIFE: A Study of Antagonism in 

 THE Constitution of Things. For the Elucidation of the Problem of Good 

 and Evil, and the Reconciliation of Optimism and Pessimism. 12mo, cloth, 

 82.00. 



"It is a thoughtful and philosophical consideration of a great many important subjects, 

 from the natural and physical environments of mankind on earth, to the social, industrial, 

 sanitary, and moral questions that are now more and more everywhere thrusting them- 

 selves into prominence. If the reconciliation of the two great forces of Good and Evil is 

 not here made complete to the understanding of every reader, the author can at least feel 

 that he has conn! as near the nnrk as any one — and he has certainly presented a mass of 

 very interesting facts to the reader, the result of what must have been a lifetime of active 

 study and thoughtful observation."— //aT-^/b/'rf Times. 



" A semi-religious work covering one of the most interesting fields of thougbt and 

 observation."- Aew York Chi istlan Union. 



REFORMS: THEIR DIFFICULTIE.S AND POSSIBILITIES. 



By the author of " Conflict in Nature and Life." 12mo. Cloth, $1.00. 



This work is in a sense a sequel to " Conflict in Nature and Life," and readers of that 

 work who recognized its pcnetratinsr and judicial spirit will welcome the present volume, 

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 a etyle to enlist the interest of all intellectual readers. 



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