BIBLIOGRAPHY' 



Anderson, B. M., Jr. Social Value. Boston, 191 1. 

 Angell, J. R. Chapters from Modern Psychology. New York, 191 2. 

 Bagehot, Walter. Physics and Politics. New York, 1902. 

 Baldwin, J. M. Development and Evolution. New York, 1902. 



Social and Ethical Interpretations. New York, 1899. 



The Individual and Society. Boston, 1910. 



The Story of the Mind. New York, 1 901. 



Barth, Paul. Die Philosophic der Geschichte als Sociologie. Leipzig, 1897. 

 Bateson, W. Materials for the Study of Variation. London, 1894. 



Mendel's Principles of Heredity. London, 1909. 



Bergson, H. (Mitchell). Creative Evolution. New York, 1911. 



Time and Free Will. New York, 1910. 



Block, M. Traite de Statistique. Paris, 1886. 

 Bluntschli, J. K. The Theory of the State. Oxford, 1901. 



Boas, F. Abstract Report on Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of 

 Immigrants. Washington, 191 1. 



The Mind of Primitive Man. New York, 1911. 



Boodin, J. E. American Journal of Sociology, vol. xix. 

 Bowley, A. L. Elements of Statistics. New York, 1907. 



Bowne, B. P. Introduction to Psychological Theory. New York, 1886. 



Metaphysics. New York, 1898. 



Personalism. New York, 1908. 



Principles of Ethics. New York, 1892. 



• The Christian Life. New York, 1899. 



Theism. New York, 1887. 



Theory of Thought and Knowledge. New York, 1897. 



The Philosophy of Herbert Spencer. New York, 1881. 



Bradley, F. Appearance and Reality. London, 1893. 



Ethical Studies. London, 1876. 



Brinton, D. G. Races and Peoples. New York, 1890. 



The Basis of Social Relations. New York, 1902. 



Brooks, J. G. The Social Unrest. New York, 1903. 



Buckle, H. T. History of Civilization. 2 vols., New York, 1897. 

 Butler, N. M. The Meaning of Education. New York, 1898. 

 Caird, Edward. The Social Philosophy and Religion of Comte. Glasgow, 

 1895. 



1 The books listed in this Bibliography are not merely the ones cited in the 

 preceding pages, but also those which have furnished the background for the criti- 

 cism of the various authors, and for the social philosophy sketched in the Intro- 

 duction and Conclusion. 



