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$68. 



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PHILOSOPHY. 



49 



Norman Maccoll, B.A., Scholar of Downing College, Cam- 

 bridge. Crown 8vo, "^s. 6d. 



L 



This Essay consists of five pa7'ts : /. '^ Intj^oductton,^^ 



and Timonr III. ^' The New Academy, 



;j 



IV. 



IL "Fyrrho 

 ^ ' The Later 



Sceptics, " V, '' The Pyrrhoncans and New Academy con- 



trasted. 



jj 



C( 



Mr. Maccoll has prodttced a moitogi^aph zvhich merits 



the gratitude of all students of philosophy. His style is clear and 

 vigorous ; he has mastered the authorities^ and criticises them in a 

 modest but independent spirit,^'' — Pall Mall Gazette. 



M'Cosh — Works by James M'Cosh, LL.D., President of Princeton 

 College, New Jersey, U.S. 



^^ He certainly shozvs hvn self skilful in that application of logic to 

 psychology, in that inductive scie^ice of the human mind -which is 

 the fine side of English philosophy. His philosophy as a whole is 

 worthy of atteittion.'''' — Revue de Deux Mondes. 



+ 



THE METHOD OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT, Physical 

 and Moral. Tenth Edition. 8vo. los. 6d. 



This work is divided into four books. The first presents a general 

 view of the Divine Gove7'n77tent as fitted to throtv light on the 

 character of God; the second deals with the method of the Divine 

 Govei^mrient in the physical world ; the third treats of the principles 

 of the human mi7td through which God gove^^ns mankind; and the 

 fourth is on Pastoral and Revealed Religion^ and the Restoratio7t 

 of Man. An Appendix^ consisting of seven articles, investigates 

 the fundainental principles which underlie the speculations of the 

 treatise. " This work is distinguished from other similar ones by 

 its being based upon a thorough study of physical science, and an 

 accurate knozvledge of its present condition, and by its entering in a 

 deeper and more unfettered manner than its predecessors upon the dis- 

 cussion of the appropriate psychological, ethical, and theological ques- 

 tions. The author keeps aloof at once from the a priori idealism and 

 dreaminess of German spectdation since Schelling, and from the 

 onesidedness and narrozvness of the empiricism and positivism 

 zvhich have so prevailed in England. "^^ — Dr. Ulrici, in "Zeitschrift 

 fiir Philosophic." 



THE INTUITIONS OF THE MIND. A New Edition. 8vo. 



/ 



cloth, loj. 6^/. 



D 



