tue GNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 
Pragmatism and Its Critics. By Addison W. Moore, Professor 
of Philosophy in the University of Chicago. 
296 pages, t2mo, cloth; postpaid $1. 36 
This is the clearest and most satisfactory summing-up of the 
controversy that has yet appeared. Even the most technical 
matters are presented in such a way as to be intelligible to any- 
one who is genuinely interested in the movement. The book 
covers all the important points at issue, but special emphasis is 
laid on: (1) the historical development of the pragmatic move- 
ment; (2) its relation to the conception of evolution; (3) the 
social character of pragmatic doctrines. The treatment is 
sympathetic and incisive. 
Sectionalism in Virginia. By Charles H enry Ambler, Professor 
of History in Randolph-Macon College. 
376 pages, 12mo, cloth; postpaid $1.64 
From the earliest colonial times Virginia was a land of sec- 
tional differences, which influenced to an important degree the 
course of her history. These differences and their results are 
treated in Professor Ambler’s book. Extensive research in the 
archives at Charleston, Richmond, and Washington, and the 
American Historical Review. Though it professes only to review those 
matters which entered into or bore upon the long sectional quarrel 
tween the eastern and the western parts of the state, taken alto- 
gether, it is the best history of the Old Dominion since 1776 we have. 
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