REFERENCES TO BOOKS 



N.B. The student cannot do better than begin by reeding the 

 various Introductions to the Sciences which this Library affords. 



BACON, FRANCIS. Novum Organum (1620). 

 BAIN, ALEXANDER. Logic (1870). 



BBRGSON, HENRI. Creative Evolution. Translation (1911). 

 This remarkable work deals in great part with the philos- 

 ophy of biology. 



BOUTROUX, E. Science et Religion (1909). 



So far as we know, the best of the many discussions of the 

 relations of Science and Religion. 



CAIRD, JOHN. Lectures and Addresses (1899). See Lecture 

 on The Progress! veness of the Sciences. 



CASE, THOMAS. Scientific Method as a Mental Operation, 



in Lectures on the Method of Science (1906). 

 This valuable work contains a series of lectures by leading 

 authorities who discuss the methods of the various Sciences. 



CLIFFORD, W. K. The Common Sense of the Exact Sciences. 

 Aleo his stimulating Lectures and Essays (1879). 



DRIESCH, HANS. Science and Philosophy of the Organism, 



2vols. (1908). 

 A profound contribution to the philosophy of biology. 



FLINT, R. Philosophy as Scientia Scientiarum, and a His- 

 tory of the Classification of the Sciences (1904). 

 A very learned account of the numerous attempts to classify 

 knowledge. 



FOSTER, SIR MICHAEL. Presidential Address at the Meeting 

 of the British Association at Dover in 1899. Report, 

 Brit. Association for the Advancement of Science (1899^. 

 A noteworthy discourse on the characteristics of the scien- 

 tific mood. 



251 



