BALDWIN'S 



HANDBOOK OF PSYCHOLOGY. 



VOL. I. SENSES AND INTELLECT. 



By James Mark Baldwin, Professor in Princeton University, xiv + 343 pp. 

 8vo. Second Edition. Teachers' price, %s. 6d., net; $ i.8o. 



VOL. n. FEELING AND WILL. 



xii + 394 pp. 8vo. Teachers' price, 8j. 6d., net; ^2.00. 



Revue . Philosophique. — "An excellent treatise on Psychology, superior, and 

 much superior, to perhaps any other that we know. ... It is profound without 

 losing in clearness, and complete without being too long." 



Nature. — "Well arranged, carefully thought out, clearly and tersely written, it 

 will be welcomed in this country as it has been welcomed in America." 



Mind {London). — " It is interesting to see the scholastic petrifaction of Aristotle 

 which, in various ways, has been handed on or restored in modern times . . . 

 breaking up under the influence of independent thought or new knowledge. The 

 opportunity may be seized (2d ed.) to recommend the book with some more 

 emphasis as a very serviceable manual for students." 



The Nation. — " Taken as a whole it is about the best we know." 



Revista de filosofia scientifica. — " Uniting with great ability the new and the 

 old, and making room for the results of the experimental method within the more 

 refined outlines of the classical scheme, he has succeeded in producing a work 

 on Psychology which is valuable and noteworthy, especially as an attempt at the 

 conciliation of the two schools." 



Friedrich Jodl inZEiTSCHRiFT fur Philos. und Philos. Kritik.— "Amerit 

 of the work of J. M. B. is that it maintains the standpoint of exact method. . . . 

 Most of the chapters are rich in material, terse and vigorous in form, logical in 

 arrangement. The whole thoroughly serves its purpose as an exponent of the 

 educational hterature of Psychology in which the Americans and English are far 

 ahead of us, and which makes for higher culture in general." 



Oxford Magazine. — " Senses and Intellect is the best manual we have seen, 

 and we look forward to the companion volume." 



Manchester Guardian. — "A noteworthy addition to psychological literature." 



Academy. — "To those in search of a general systematic account of mental 

 phenomena, thoroughly informed, and embodying the results of the most recent 

 inquiry, Professor Baldwin's ' Handbook ' may be most cordially commended. 

 It is indeed just the book a genuine student needs." 



Scotsman. — "The work is one of the most noteworthy that have appeared in 

 recent times to vindicate the claims and establish the position of Psychology as an 

 independent science. . . . The book is certainly a most able one, and one which 

 cannot fail to make its mark as a contribution to psychological study." 



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