60 TRUBNER & CO’S MONTHLY LIST. 
THE ENGLISH AND FOREIGN PHILOSOPHICAL LIBRARY. 
LANGE’S HISTORY OF MATERIALISM. Translated from the 
German by Ernest C. THoMas. Post 8vo} cloth. Vol. I., Second Edition, price 10s. 6d. 
Vol. II., price 10s. 6d. [Vol. IIT. will be ready shortly. 
“Every section of Dr. Lange’s work is followed by a copious body of notes, abounding in references to 
authorities, and bearing ample testimony to the extensive reading of the author.”—Saturday Review. 
NATURAL LAW: An Essay in Ethics. By Epirn Simcox. Second 
‘ Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, price 1os. 6d. 
“Miss Simcox deserves cordial recognition for the excellent work she has done in vindication of naturalism, 
and especially for the high nobility of her ethical purpose.” —A ¢hene@um. 
THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM: Its Foundation contrasted with its 
Superstructure. By W. R. Grec. Sixth Edition. Two Vols., post 8vo, cloth, price 15s. 
“© Professional reproaches against a book so manly and modest, so evidently truth-loving, so high-minded and | 
devout as this of Mr. Greg’s, are but a melancholy imbecility. . . . . No candid reader of the “Creed of 
Christendom’ can close the book without the secret acknowledgment that it is a model of honest investigation 
and clear exposition, conceived in the true spirit of serious and faithful research.”— Westminster Review. 
TIELE’S OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF RELIGION. Trans- 
lated from the Dutch by J. E. CARPENTER. Second Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
“‘ Few books of its size contain the result of so much wide thinking, able and laborious study, or enable the 
reader to gain a better bird’s-eye view of the latest results of investigations into the religious history of nations. 
As Professor Tiele modestly says, ‘In this little book are outlines—pencil-sketches, I might say—nothing more.” 
But there are some men whose sketches from a thumb-nail are of far more worth than an enormous canvas covered 
with the crude painting of others, and it is easy to see that these pages, full of information— these sentences, cut 
and perhaps also dry, short and clear—condense the fruits of long and thorough research.”’—Scotsman. 
RELIGION IN CHINA. A Brief Account of the Three Religions of the 
Chinese. By Jos—EpH EDKINS, D.D. Post 8vo, cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
“* Dr. Edkins has been most careful in noting the varied and often complex phases of opinion, so as to give an 
account of considerable value of the subject.” — Scots7zaz. 
A CANDID EXAMINATION OF THEISM. By Puysicus. Post 8vo, 
cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
‘*Thisis a telling contribution to the question of questions. The author has pushed a step further than any- 
one before him the bearing of modern science on the doctrine of Theism.”’—AZaaminer. 
THE COLOUR SENSE: Its Origin and Development. By Grant 
ALLEN. Post 8vo, cloth, price Ios. 6d. , 
*‘Tt constitutes a very remarkable addition to the theory of natural selection, approached ina novel direction. 
ee . The book is attractive throughout, for its object is pursued with an earnestness and singleness of purpose 
which never fail to maintain the interest of the reader. .... We conclude by commending the book generally to | 
all who desire to become acquainted with the latest and best contribution to a most fertile subject of inquiry.”’— } 
Saturday Review. 
THE PHILOSOPHY OF MUSIC. Being the substance of a Course of 
Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in February and March, 1877. 
By W. Po.e, F.R.S., &c., &c. Post 8vo, cloth, price 10s. 6d. : 
“We may recommend it as an extremely useful compendium of modern research into the scientific basis of| 
music. Thereis no want of completeness.” —Pall Mali Gazette. 
EXTRA SERIES. 
LESSING. By James Sime. Second Edition. Two Vols., post 8vo, cloth, 
price 21s. 
“But to Mr. James Sime has been reserved the honour of presenting to the English public a full-length 
portrait of Lessing, in which no portion of the canvas is uncovered, and in which there is hardly a touch but 
tells. He has studied his subject with that patient care which only reverence and sympathy can support; he has 
attained the true proportion, which can alone be gained by penetration and clear insight into motive and purposes, 
We caa say that a clearer or more compact piece of biographic criticism has not been produced in England for 
many a day.”—Westminster Review. ! 
AN ACCOUNT OF THE POLYNESIAN RACE: Its Origin and 
Migrations. By A. FORNANDER. Vol. I. Post 8vo, cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
TES so seldom that a private settler in the Polynesian Islands takes an intelligent interest in local ethnolog 
and archeology, and makes use of the advantage he possesses, that we feel especially thankful to Mr. Fornander| 
for his labours in this comparatively little-known field of research.””—Academy. 
ORIENTAL RELIGIONS, and their Relation to Universal Religion, 
By SAMUEL JouNsoNn. JI. INDIA. Two Vols., post 8vo, cloth, price 215. 
“‘ The reader who is curious in the history of opinions will hardly find i \ ide i - 
‘The : j i y find a more instructive guide in the obscure 
labyrinth into which he is tempted by the study of Oriental reasonings and fancies. Mr. Johssad has LHOrGn EEE 
mastered the subject of which he treats, by the thoughtful researches of many years.’—New Vork Tribune. 
London: TRUBNER & CO., Ludgate Hill. 
