D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF PHI- 

 J- LO SOPHY. By William T. Harris, LL. D., United States 

 Commissioner of Education. Compiled and arranged by Mari- 

 etta Kies. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

 " Philosophy as presented by Dr. Harris gives to the student an interpretation and 

 explanation of the phases of existence which render even the ordinary affairs of life m 

 accordance with reason ; and for the higher or spiritual phases of life his interpreta- 

 tions have the power of a great illumination. Many of the students are apparently 

 awakened to an interest in philosophy, not only as a subject to be taken as a pre- 

 scribed study, but also as a subject of fruitful interest for future >ears and as a key 

 which unlocks many of the mysteries of other subjects pursued in a college course." — 

 From the Compiler's Preface. 



/I HIS TOR Y OF PHILOSOPHY IN FPITOME. 

 -**■ By Albert Schwegler. Translated from the first edition 

 of the original German by Julius H. SEELYE. Revised from 

 the ninth German edition, containing Important Additions 

 and Modifications, with an Appendix, continuing the History 

 in its more Prominent Lines of Development since the Time 

 of Hegel, by Benjamin T. Smith. 121110. Cloth, $2.00. 



" Schwegler's History of Philosophy is found in the hands of almost every student 

 in the philosophical department of a ( Jerman University, and is highly esteemed for its 

 clearness, conciseness, and comprehensiveness. The present translation was under- 

 taken with the conviction that the work would not lose its interest or its value in an 

 English dress, and with the hope that it might be of wider service m such a form to 

 students of philosophy here. It was thought especially that a proper translation of 

 this manual would supply a want for a suitable text-book on this branch of study, long 

 felt by both teachers and students in our American colleges."— From the Preface. 



DIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF PHILOSO- 



-L-J PHY, from its Origin j n Greece down to the Present Day. 



By George Henry Lewes. Two volumes in one. 8vo. 



Cloth. $3.50. Also in 2 vols., small 8vo. Cloth, $4.00. 



" Philosophy was the great initia'or of science. It rescued the nobler part of man 



from the dominion of brutish apathy and helpless ignorance, nourished his mind with 



mighty impulses, exercised it in magnificent efforts, gave him the unslaked, unslakable 



thirst for knowledge which has dignified his life, and enabled him to multiply tenfold 



his existence and his happiness. Having done this, its part is played. Our interest 



in it now is purely historical The purport of this history is to show how and why the 



interest in philosophy has become purely historical."— From the Introduction. 



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