THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE 
(Englant 
for exposition of a subject than the article in the Ninth 
the 40,000 articles in 
cent. are new, and 1 per cent. 
he best and 
most conscientious treatment of universal knowledge 
oe present day can affor 
The scholars aa Srecialiats of the whole world 
have lent cordial co-operation to the making of the 
w work; aot Van mbridge alone, but Oxford, London, 
b 
new 
prehensive summa hat is known in every 
department of human knowledge in 1910 
The 1,500 Contributors 
r | “AHE quality of utility, an attribute of the Encyclo- 
pedia Pesomtes the attainment of which has 
bee nspiring motive of the editors ever 
since the aa of the work in 1768, is Sanaa 
from authority. There is but one method of a: uring 
to any work of reference this essential ibhoke the 
employment of the serv: 
(1) of men of Se scholars who for- 
DEE a ahs ae ae ; 
o £ = r i = 
or master some one subject to which they have devoted 
special and long-continued investigation. In this 
class are university professors, scientists, nics 
ependent thinkers 
known of a subject flows as a stream from its fountain- 
head. 
(2) © men of cca lek. sailors, men of 
i architects, surgeons, 
artists, inventors, explorers, engineers, 
manufacturers, financiers—the men who apply their 
knowledge constructiv 
tent of their profession or vocation; an 
of practical experts who are engaged in the 
advancement of sorts undertakings for the wel- 
Encyclopedia Britannica being 
of all knowledge, it is just 
bout road-making, 
bridge-building, and ship-building, as that it should 
contain treatises on astronomy and geology—it sho 
instruct the reader on oil-engines and the boring ¢ 
oil wells and on the practical side of forestry, on th 
making of glass or paper, _ on — not les 
intelligent than it expounds Cane an theor 
n its purely practical side—the massing of ex 
knowledge covering every kind of activity to 
the genius of modern industry hi 
ing writers of articles of a purely theoretical sort. 4 
New Features of the New Encycl 
pzedia Britannica ‘ 
In this connection, it will be interesting to no 
what respects the new (Eleventh) Edition to be i 
by the University of Cambridge will be disting ne 
from the last edition, and to indicate where there ha 
been an improvement 
1. For the first time a university will issue an en 
pedia, an adequate and aR exposition of @ 
human knowledge, an authoritative and comprehensit 
survey of human thought, fara and achievemett 
pee enterprise has hitherto been Tepe : 
the issue of the Encyclopedia Britannica; but its po 
oO 
ave given it fin 
institution—a heritage of English-speaking people 
every part of the world. The scholarship of the univé 
sity is, in the last analysis, the inspiring force that . 
c 
the University beyond aéademic or local limits. 
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA (llth Editio 
