MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY, ETC. 5 3 



Green (J. H.)— spiritual philosophy: Founded on 

 the Teaching of the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge. By tlie 

 late Joseph Henry Green, F.R.S., D.C.L. Edited, with a 

 Memoir of the Author's Life, by John Simon, F.R.S., Medical 

 Officer of Her Majesty's Privy Council, and Surgeon to St. 

 Thomas's Hospital. Two Vols. 8vo. 25J. 



The late Mr. Green, the eminent surgeon, was for many years the 

 intimate friend and disciple of Coleridge, and an ardent student of 

 philosophy. The language of Coleridge's will imposed on Mr. 

 Green the obligation of devoting, so far as necessary, the reviainder 

 of his life to the one task of systematising, developing, and establish- 

 ing the doctrines of the Coleridgiau philosophy. With the assist- 

 ance of Coleridge's manuscripts, but especially from the knowledge 

 he possessed of Coleridge's doctrines, and inde-bendent study of at least 

 the basal principles and metaphysics of the sciences and of all the 

 phenomena of human life, he proceeded logically to work out a 

 system of universal philosophy such as he deemed would in the main 

 accord with his master's aspirations. After ?nany years of pre- 

 paratory labour he resolved to complete in a compendious form a 

 work which should give in system the doctrines mast . distinctly 

 Coleridgian. The j-esult is these two volumes. The first volume 

 is devoted to the genej'al principles of philosophy ; the second aims at 

 vindicating k priori (on principles for which the first volume has 

 contended) .the essential doctrines of Christianity. The work is 

 divided into four parts: I. "On the Intellectual Faculties and 

 processes which are concerned in the Investigation of Truth." 

 II. "Of First Principles in Philosophy." III. " Truths of 

 Religion." IV. " The Idea of Christianity in relation to Con- 

 troversial Philosophy. " 



Huxley (Professor.)— LAY SERMONS, ADDRESSES, 

 AND REVIEWS. See Physical Science Catalogue, 

 preceding. 



Jevons. — Works by W. Stanley Jevons, M.A,, Professor of 

 Logic in-Owens College, Manchester : — 



THE SUBSTITUTION OF SIMILARS, the True Principle of 

 Reasoning. Derived from a Modification of Aristotle's Dictum 

 Fcap. 8vo. 2s. bd. 



