D. APPLETON & CO.’S PUBLICATIONS. 
NEW EDITION OF PROF, HUXLEY’S ESSAYS. 
OLLECTED ESSAYS. By Tuomas H. Hux tey. 
New complete edition, with revisions, the Essays being grouped 
according to general subject. In nine volumes, « new Intro- 
duction accompanying each volume. 12mo. Cloth, $1.25 per 
volume. 
VoL. I.—METHOD AND RESULTS. 
VoL, II.—DARWINIANA. 
VoL. IIL—SCIENCE AND EDUCATION. 
Voy. IV.—SCIENCE AND HEBREW TRADITION. 
Vor. V.—SCIENCE AND CHRISTIAN TRADITION. 
VoL. VI.—HUME. 
Vout. VII.—MAN’S PLACE IN NATURE. 
VoL. VIII.—DISCOURSES, BIOLOGICAL AND GEOLOGICAL. 
Vout. IX.—EVOLUTION AND ETHICS, AND OTHER ESSAYS. 
“Mr. Huxley has covered a vast variety of topics during the last quarter of a 
century. It gives one an agreeable surprise to look cver the tables of contents and 
note the immense territory which he has explored. To read these books carefully 
and studiously is to become thoroughly acquainted with the most advanced thought 
ona large number of topics.” New York Herald. 
“« The series will be a welcome one. There are few wnitings on the more abstruse 
problems of science better adapted to reading by the general public, and in this form 
the books will be well in the reach of the investigator. . . . The revisions are the last 
expected to be made by the author, and his introductions are none of earlier date 
than a few months ago [1893], so they may be considered his final and most authorita- 
tive utterances.” —Chicago Times. 
“(Tt was inevitable that his essays should be called for in a completed form, and they 
will be a source of delight and profit to all who read them. He has always commanded 
a hearing, and as a master of the literary style in writing scientific essays he is worthy 
of a place among the great English essayists of the day. This edition of his essays 
will be widely read, and gives his scientific work a per form.’’—Boston Herald. 
“A man whose brilliancy is so constant as that of Prof. Huxley will always com- 
mand readers; and the utterances which are here collected are not the least in weight 
and luminous beauty of those with which the author has long delighted the reading 
world.” —Phzladelphia Press. 
“The connected arrangement of the essays which their reissue permits brings into 
(fuller relief Mr. Huxley’s masterly powers of exposition. Sweeping the subject-matter 
iclear of all logomachies, he lets the light of common day fall upon it. He shows that 
the place of hypothesis in scence, as the starting point of verification of the phenomena 
to be explained, is but an ex ion of the ions which underlie actions in every- 
day affairs; and that the method of scientific investigation is only the method which 
rules the ordinary business of life.”—Londonx Chronicle. : 
New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 
