2rUDIES IN : 
LOGICAL THEORY 
Edited by JOHN DEWEY 
CONTENTS 
Thought and Its Subject-Matter 
The Antecedents of Thought 
The Datum of Thinking 
The Content and Object of 
Thought 
By Joun Dewey 
Bosanquet’s Theory of Judgment 
By HELEN Braprorp THOMPSON 
Typical Stages in the Develop- 
ment of Judgment 
By Simon Fraser McLENNAN 
The Nature of Hypothesis 
By Myron Lucius AsHLEY 
Image and Idea in Logic 
By WILLarD CLark Gore 
The Logic of the Pre- Socratic 
Philosophy 
By Witan ARTHUR HEIDEL 
Valuation as a Logical Process 
By Henry Watcrave Stuarr 
Some Logical Aspects of Purpose 
By ADDISON WegsTER Moore 
xiv-+ 388 pp., 8vo, cloth, $2.50, nef 
a 
PUBLISHED BY Se Tas GRFOT TA OSG, 8 DET FS 
The University OF 1 fer ert mes 
Chicago Press Logical Theory.” I 
i 92:07 (17 Ce eee 
CHICAGO : : . ILLINOIS | Postage) in payment 
for same. 
COMMENTS 
+ +. a Statement, homogeneous in spite of so many 
operating minds, or a view of the world, both theoretical 
ae practical, — is so simple, massive, and positive 
that, in spite of the fact that many Lovie of it ba need to be 
worked out, it deserves the title of a new system of philoso- 
phy, a it be as true as it is or ginal, its publication. must 
be reckoned a baportant event.. The Bapesc reviewer, 
for sped strongly etuibed cts it of being true.,... prefer 
to be exceedingly summary, and manele to io the send? s 
pitehsion to the ‘ig ghee of this output sade far 
sige Aegan Tak o Boe, what Ber es 
it 
eality with which iti is filled. 
bly 
thing’ see be proud, Professor Wil- 
hal, , TET 
liam 1 pe OE poaomcsaly in the P y Fs 
It may at once be said that we have here a weighty 
contribution t which x mm 
ably y prove of hich wt interest to the historian of p en roe 
da 1 $ es, an 
Is the 
Bes or ary ier _ sea nsseho se peal 
ee sm” of Willia Cary s and his friends, 0 close 
th 
ment can fail to rte agora of the =o Meat 
Nateral Selection by Darwin and ba h 
work is one with which students of | ie yp will ave 
carefully = har cont ng sees ssor F.C. S. Schiller, of Oz- 
ford, in Review and M 
ce — ? seems to Mm 
i ly ang Zs tributions all 
re ; 2 : 
et discussion ~ gre lati on of hoages to life as: reality 
It is a very tim . Its criticisms alike o 
and a Empiricism are peculiarly tellin onalytiealy. #0 
of its ow n po sitive statement, so skilfully a “ ‘ tcaentive 
precisel articulated and so well saline with i per 
if of an Experimental Kiesles is it 
as must tax the i ing enui of its pe for ong tim 
is my — ian these Ar Studies’ in an Bote ‘way 
embod w that is bound to have attention; wen : 
be or 
Sy 
ae os may prove true of t ogee, faglae thelr ir coments 
they make a book that cannot fail to prs igams 
Alfred H, Lioyd, of The University of Mic 
) 
_To me the book i is ‘Significant for its dynamic con ‘all ae 
tion 0 
pts den 
categories of experience,— Professor H. Heath Bawae*, 
of Vassar Co leg ee 
e 
It is an important piece of work, whose gem 
ence will f salutary i - the a of making phi 
more concretely hum The Dia 
ral influ- 
losophy 
nd m 
et eeeeeeisciascnsreees 
