46 



SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



and instructive. ^' 



Aristotle. '^'^ 



It will be an assistance to genuine students of 

 Guardian. ^'It is indeed a work of great skilL^^ — 



Saturday Review. 



Butler (W. A.), Late Professor of Moral Philosophy in the 

 University of Dublin : 



■ 



LECTURES ON THE HISTORY OF ANCIENT PHILO- 

 SOPHY. Edited from the Author's MSS., with Notes, by 



William Hepworth Thompson, M.A., Master of Trinity 



College, and Regius Professor of Greek in the University of 



Cambridge. 



Two Volumes. 8vo. i/. $s. 



century, and especially with the English and Scotch School of 

 Psychologists, has enabled him to illustrate the subtle speculatioits 

 of which he treats in a manner calculated to render them more 

 intelligible to the English mind than they can be by zvrittrs trained 

 solely in the technicalities of modern German schools. The editor 

 has verified all the references, and added valuable Notes, in zvhich 

 he points out somxes of more co7nplete information. The Lectures 

 constitute a History of the Platonic Philosophy — its seed-time^ 

 matm^ity, and decay, 



SERMONS AND LETTERS ON ROMANISM.- See Theo- 

 LOGICAL Catalogue. 



4 , 



Calderwood.— PHILOSOPHY OF the infinite : A 



Treatise on Man's Knowledge of the Infinite Being, in answer to 

 Sir W. Hamilton and Dr. Mansel. By the Rev. Henry 

 Calderwood, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy in 

 the University of Edinburgh. Cheaper Edition, 8vo. 7^, 6^. 



0n P''''' 



ia'otcd to t 



first Cau^"' 

 iij book of 



iisaissio^^'^ 



liese Lectures consist of an Lntroductory Series on the Science of Mind 

 generally, and five other Series on Ancient Philosophy, the greater 

 part of which treat of Plato and the Platonists, the Fifth Series 

 being an unfinished course on the Psychology of Aristotle, contain- 

 ing an able Analysis of the zvell known though by no fneans well 

 understood Treatise, ir^pl ^vxr]s. These Lectures are the result of 

 patient and conscientious examination of the original documents^ 

 and may be considered as a perfectly independent contribution to our 

 knowledge of the gixat master of Grecian wisdom. The author^ s 

 intimate familiarity zvith the metaphysical writings of the last late JOSEPH I 



tlam.'A P 



Catalogue, , 



Salton (Fran 



into its Law; 



Catalogue, ] 



(J.H.: 



tie Teaching o 



L, 



Memoir of the 

 Officer of II 



l^omas's PIosp 



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