t 



MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY, ETC, 



51 



'^iew of 



^'fi they 

 '^tion of 



' ' Moral 

 'ia-l and 



ihrown 



"The 



'uitional 

 hods, is 



nntance 

 %lect the 

 ""ness^ as 

 )rner, of 



OPHY; 



V to Mr. 



'osophy, ' 

 oroitghly 

 ■jtfi hints 

 hich Dr. 

 simply to 

 'ed by an 

 J ''In 



■essity, he 

 ' ' Such 



le vt'an to 

 ice to the 

 fast ad 

 Princeton 



a 



Text- 



the 'n^" 

 regard to 



-\ 



^ 



1 



M^Cosh (J.) — contmiied, * -•■ 



1 



w/itc/i the views of the school of Locke and Whately are regarded 

 by the author as very defective^ and the views of the school of Kant 

 and Hamilton altogether erroneotis. The author believes that 

 er^'ors spring far more frequently from obscure^ inadequate^ indis- 

 '- tinct, and confused Notions, and from not placing the Notions in 



their proper relation in judg7?ient, than from Ratiocination. Ln 

 this treatise^ therefore, the Notiojt (with the term, and the Relation 

 of Thought to Language) zvill be found to occupy a larger relative 

 place than in any logical work writte^t since the time of the famous 

 Art of Thinking. ' ' The amount of sumiuarized infor^nation 

 which it contains is very great; and it is the only tvork on the very 

 important subject with which it deals. Never was such a zvork 

 so much needed as in the present day.''''- — London Quarterly 



Review, 



CHRISTIANITY AND POSITIVISM : A Series of Lectures to 

 the Times on Natural Theology and Apologetics. Crown 8vo. 



h 



These Lectures %vere delivered in Neiv York, by appointment, in the 

 beginning of 187 1, as the second course 07t the foundation of 

 the Union Theological Seminaiy. There, are ten Lectures in all^ 

 divided into three series : — /. ''' Christianity and Physical Science^^ 

 (three lectures). IL '''Christianity and Mental Science^'' (four 

 lectures). HI. '' Christianity and Historical Livestigation'" (three 

 lectures). The Appendix contains articles on ''Gaps in the Theory 



I 



of Development ; 



jj 



? 



Man 



?? 



(f 



Principles 



of Herbert Spencer's Philosophy.'" In the course of the Lectures 



I 



1 



M 



Dr. M'Cosh discusses all the most impoj^tant scientific problems 

 which are supposed to affect Christianity. 



.SSOn.— RECENT BRITISH PHILOSOPHY : A Review, 

 with Criticisms ; including some Comments on Mr. Mill's Answer 

 to Sir William Hamilton. By David Masson, M.A., Professor 

 of Rhetoric and English Literature in the University of Edinburgh. 

 Crown 8vo. 6x. 



The author, in his usual graphic and forcible ?nanncr, revieius in 



considerable detail, and poi^its out the drifts of the philosophical 



speculations of the previous thirty years, h-inging under notice the 



' work of all the principal philosophers who have been at tvork during 



