THE WORKS OF HENRI BERGSON 



Professor at the College de France 



Time and Free Will 



An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness 



Authorized Translation by F. L. Pogson, New York 



Cloth, 8vo, $2.75 net 



"The translation is faithful and readable. There are added a sym- 

 pathetic preface by the translator and an admirably comprehensive 

 bibliography of articles about Bergson's philosophy in several lan- 

 guages. The first presentation of this important contemporary to 

 our public has been so well done that all readers of the book must 

 lament the sudden death of the young Oxford scholar to whom we 

 owe the service." Nation. 



"This is a great work, profoundly original, rigorous and keen in 

 analysis, clear in statement ; and while showing that language com- 

 pels us to treat life and its problems in a symbolical manner, yet it 

 also shows that a close analysis of experience clearly reveals the true 

 concrete life. Professor Bergson does not profess to cover the entire 

 field of philosophy in this volume, but what he has covered is done 

 in such an original and profound way that no one who pretends to 

 keep abreast of philosophical thought will ignore it." Boston Tran- 

 script. 



Matter and Memory 



Translated by Nancy Margaret Paul and W. Scott Palmer 



Cloth, 8vo, xx + 339 pages, index, $2.75 net; by mail, $2.93 



This translation has been made from the fifth edition, 1908, of " Ma- 

 tiere de Memoire," by Henri Bergson, Member of the Institute and 

 Professor at the College de France. It has the very great advantage 

 of being revised in proof by the author. A new introduction has also 

 been written which supersedes that which accompanied the original 

 work. The reader's attention is called to the fact that all the mar- 

 ginal notes are peculiar to the English edition ; and that M. Bergson 

 is not responsible for their insertion or character. 



Cloth, $1.23 net; by mail, $1.34 



The work has been highly successful in France, where it is in its sev- 

 enth edition. It has been translated into Russian, Polish, and Swed- 

 ish. German and Hungarian translations are under preparation. Its 

 success is due partly to the novelty of the explanation offered of the 

 comic, and partly also to the fact that the author incidentally dis- 

 cusses questions of still greater interest and importance. 



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