7125 S69^ A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHILOSOPHY BEING THE SECTIONS RELATING TO THAT SUBJECT IN ^be 3Sc0t Books and Zbc IReaber's (5u(&e BY WILLIAM SWAN SONNENSCHEIN SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO Lim? PATERNOSTER SQUARE 1897 fyxntll HmvOTitg Jilrt^Mg THE GIFT OF ..^m .(KUi^iL(«L4refli. lUdtUM}-^.. lu.o.'-[..f(e..i z^ /(^l^ny Cornell University Library Z7125 .S69 + Bibliography of philosophy : being the s 3 1924 029 621 525 olin Overs ^^ Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029621525 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHILOSOPHY BEING THE SECTIONS RELATING TO THAT SUBJECT IN ttbe Best Boofts and ^be IReaber'e (5uit)e BY WILLIAM SWAN SONNENSCHEIN gentian SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO Lim5 PATERNOSTER SQUARE 1897 f In response to numerous requests the several sections of " SbC JBest asoohs" and "tbe 1Rea^cc's ©ui&e" Aave been re-issued separately, uniform, in i,to, BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THEOLOGY. 6s. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF MYTHOLOGY AND FOLKLORE. 2s. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHILOSOPHY. 2s. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ECONOMY, LAW AND EDUCATION, es. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF GEOGRAPHY. 4s. ed. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HISTORY AND HISTORICAL BIOGRAPHY. 45. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ARCH/EOLOGY AND ANTIQUITIES. 2s. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SCIENCE. 3s. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF MEDICINE. 2s. 6d. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ARTS, TRADES AND ^PORTS. 5s. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF LITERATURE. 5s. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHILOLOGY AND ANCIENT LITERATURE. 10s. 6d. LONDON; SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO Limd. CLASS C -PHILOSOPHY. I. Jnttobuction to the pbtloeopbtcal Set ences in (Benetal 1. BIBLIOGRAPHY. INTRODUCTION. ENCYOLOPJEDIA. Bibliography. Blakey, Robert History of the Philosophy of Mind 4 vols. o.p. [fb. 60/- ; w. 25/-] 8° Longman 48 Vol. iv. conts. a useful (because the only English) survey of Europ. and Amer. philos. liter, fr. 1800-1848. Krauth, Prf. C. P.[Am.] — in his Vocabulary of the Philosophical Sciences, ut infra. Mind [quarterly philos. journal, ed. Prf. Croom Robertson]^&;- newest books vols, i.-xiii., ea. qtly.pt. 3/-, ann. vols. ea. 13/- 8° Williams l^infrog. Ueberweg, Dr. F. — ut C § 2 jj the most useful guide, but its references end at 1865 ; has appendices on Engl, and Amer. Philos. [by Dr. Noah Porter (Am.)] and on Mod. Ital. Philos. [by Prf. V. Botta (tr.)]. Intpoduetion. $2 8° New York STUCKENBERG,Dr.J.H.W.[Am.] Introduction to the Study of Philosophy Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences, and Dictionary. Fleming, Prf. William A Vocabulary of Philosophy 10/6 c 8° Griffin [58] 87 This edn. has been largely reconstructed by Prf. H. CALDERWOOD, w, assist, of J. SETH and others ; previous editions of the smallest use. KRAUTH.Prf.C. P. [Am.] A Vocabulary of the Philosophical Sciences $3.50 %° New York [78] 81 Includes a reprint of Fleming, ut supra, fr. second edn. of x8&3 and also fr. third (ed. CALDERWOOD) of 1876, with a useful but not very well selected list of books at the end. Neither of the two above books are at all satisfactory. The three best German works on philosophical " encyclopEedia," are that by A. H. Ritter : F.ncyc. d. philosoph. Wissenscha/ten. 3 vols. 8" Gottinsen '62-'64 ; that by Jos. BECK : Philosojih. PropadeuHh, 2 pts, 5/6 8° Stuttgart ['41 -'44] '80 ; and that by K. ROSENKRANZ : System lUr Wissetisthaften, 8/- 8? KQnigsburg '50. None of these, however, contain bibliographies. II. 1bi6torig of pbilosopbis (EutopeanX Entire Period. Bax, E. Belfort •Erdmann, Prf. J. E. Lewes, G. H. [Pos.] Maurice, Rev. F. D. *Schwegler, A. Seth, Prf. Andrew Tennemann, W. G. His Geschichte der Ueberweg, Dr. F. X Ancient and Medisval 2. HISTORY OP PHILOSOPHY: GENERALLY. A Short History of Philosophy 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. Easier reading than SCHWEGLER and more up to date than TENNEMANN, but the student must supplement it. Hist, of Philos., tr. under direc. of Dr. W. S. Hough, v. i. 15/-; ii. ij/-; iii. 12/- 8° Sonnenschein By far the best and fullest general history, with copious extracts from the philosophers. Biographical History of Philosophy 1 16/- 8° Parker History of Philosophy from Thales to Comte 2 vols. 32/- 8° Longman Practically a new edition of the former work : the biograph. portion is the only part of much value. Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy 2 vols. 16/- 8° L : to xiii. century ; ii, : to 1800. Notsuitedto students owing to its lack of deiinlteness. History of Philosophy, tr, and annotated J. H. Stirling 6/- c 8° a dear and concise presentation of the history of philosophy : Hegelian point of view. — article Philosophy in Encyclo. Brit. , vol. xviii. [brief view of its scope] 30/- 4° Black [86] 89 89 [46] 57 [67] 80 Macmillan [50-53] 73 Edinburgh [63] 79 Manual of History of Philosophy, tr. A. Johnson 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. 85 [36] 52 Philosophie (ii vols., 1798-1819) has not been translated. This book is too brief to be of much value, but is useful as a repository of notices and references concerning philosophers. History of Philosophy ; from Thales to the present time [Am. tr.] 2 vols. 39/- r 8° Hodder [74,74185,80 Philosophy, zfl/- ; s. Modern Philosophy, ai/-. Contains admirable condensed exposition of methods ; and good bibliogs.. ending, however, c. z8(S£. 15s Philosophy^ ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY, MODERN. [History C §3-4 Series. *Sonnenschein*s Library of Philosophy, ed. J, H. Muirhead Series I. : Schools of Philosophers. £valuiio?fists. Scientific [Comte to spencer] . , . Prf.T. WATSON [Can.] Idealists, Early [Descartes to Leibnitz] . . , , W. L, COURTNEY „ /;«i^ [Kant to Hegel] Prf. W. Wallace Idealistic Moralists [Kant to Green] . . . , Jl/om/5tf?(jtf /^r»V«rj- [Shaftesbury to Martineau] . . Prf. W. KNIGHT Realists, Later \l-€\\m\Xz. to \.Ge)Re^ Prf. A. SETH- ^-fl. Metaphysics, tr. by a Cambridge Graduate. Bk. i. [Bk. ii. a?/;wj] 5/- c 8° Macmillan On the Parts of Animals, tr, with notes W. Ogle 12/6 8° Paul 158 6/- c 8° Paul 81 7/6 p 8° Longman [69] 76 7/6 p 8° Thornton, Oxon. [66]77 82 82 Philosophy] PERIPATETICS. STOICS. EPICUREANS. [Ancient Philosophers •Organon. Aristotle on Fallacies, tr. E. Poste [Sophistic! Elenclii] 8/6 8° Poetics : text and tr. E. R. Wharton 2/6 c 8° Politics, tr. J. E. C. Welldon ~ 10/6 8° ,, Bks. i., iii., iv. (vii.) with tr. W. E. BoUand and Essays A. Lang [latter also separately, 2/6] 7/6 8' ,, tr. with intro. and notes Prf. B. Jowett, 2 vols. 32/- 8' I. Intro. Anal, and Notes ; II. I. : Notes; II. ii. ; Nine Essays. The Analysis is the most useful feature. [Psychology] Hep! "^ux^s, in Gr. and Eng., w. intro. and notes E. Wallace x8/- 8' Rhetoric, tr. J. E. C. Welldon [with analysis and critical notes] 7/6 c 8' A. STAHR has made admirable Germ, translations of the Ethics and Politics, and SCHWEGLER of the Metaphysics. C §§10-12 Macmillan 66 Parker 83 Camb. Press [83] 88 Longman 7^ Clar. Press 85-88 Camb. Press Macmillan 82 86 History and Criticism. Blackie, Prf. J. S Bradley, A. C. Cope, E. M. Grant, Sir Alex. Green, Prf. T. H, 'Grote, Geo. Hatch, W. M. Lang, Andrew Lewes, G. H. •Newman, W. L. [ed.] Shute, R. Trendelenburg,F.A. Wallace, Edwin Wilson, Prf. J. C Zeller, Prf. Ed. ; 8° Douglas, Ed. [71] 74 4 12" Rivington Macmillan Longman Black Blackwood Clar. Press Murray 80 67 [58] 84 7S 77 88 [72] 84 Four Phases of Morals [Socrates, Aristotle, Xnty., Utilitarianism] 5/- c — essay Aristotle's Conception of the State in Hellenica [v. C § 3] 16/- Introduction to Aristotle's " Rhetoric," with analysis and notes. 14/- Aristotle's "Ethics," with English notes Sir A. Grant, 2 vols. 32/- — article Aristotle in Encyclo. Brit., vol. ii. 30/- Aristotle [Anc. Class, for Eng. Readers ; popular] 2/6 — essay on Arist; i«i4«i Wks. v. iii. [repr. fr. N.B. Review; crit. of Grant (l) sup. ] 2 1/- 8° Aristotle, ed. Prfs. A. Bain +G. C. Croom Robertson [posthumous] 18/- 8° Contams Life of Aristotle, full ace. of the OrgaitO}t, short ace. of De Anitna, and abstract of six books of Metaphys. The Moral Philosophy of Aristotle 18/- 8° Tr. of Nichomachean Ethics and Paraphrase attributed to ANDRONICUS, with analysis of each book. The Politics of Aristotle : introductory essays 2/6 c 8 Aristotle : a chapter from the history of science IS/- 8' An account of the physical treatises. Chap. i. is a Life of Aristotle. Aristotle's Politics, vol. i. [Introduction]; vol. ii. [Essays, text of bks. i.-ii., notes — rest not pub. yet], 2 vols. 28/- The hitrodtiction is the most important piece of work yet pub. on Aristotle's Politics; and, when complete, this edn. will be the edn. of the texL Hist, of the Process by which the Arist. Writings arrived at their pres. form 7/6 8° Clar. Press Elementa Log. Aristot. [tr. l/- Simpkin '81] 2m. 50 8° Leipig Outlines of the Philosophy of Aristotle [w. Greek extracts ; student's book] 4/6 c 8° Camb. Press [82] 83 Aristotelian Studies, i. : " Ethics," bk. vii., chaps. l-io. 5/- '2° Clar. Press 79 Aristotle and the Peripatetics, tr. J. H. Muirhead e 8° Longman tnprep. Longman Smith & Elder 8° Clar. Press 79 86 64 87 88 78 10. PERIPATETICS. Works (translated). Thegphrastus Characters : text, with tr. and notes Prf. R. C. Jebb 6/6 c S° Macmillan History and Criticism— ». also O §9 : Aristotle, and A § 119 : Hist, of [Christian] Doctrine, s.v. Scholastic Age. Seth, Prf. A. —article Peripatetics in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xviii. 30/- 4° Black •Zeller, Prf. Ed. Aristotle and the Peripatetics, tr. J. H. Muirhead c 8° Longman 77 in prep. 11. STOICS AND STOICISM. Works (translated). ANTONiNUS.Marc.Aurel. Thoughts, tr. with notes Geo. Long _ ijf> „ „ ,, tr. Jeremy Collier [Camelot Series] i/- Meditations, bk. iv. : text and tr. H. Crossley 6/- Epictetus Discourses, with Encheiridion and Fragments, tr. Geo. Long 5/- Encheiridion, tr. T. W. RoUeston [incorporated in his other book, infrd\ 3/6 Teaching of [consist, of trs. of Encheir. , sel.of Dis.hFrag. ] tr. T.W. RoUeston, [Cam. Ser.] i/- Works, tr. T. W. Higginson [Am.] o.p. Seneca, L. Ann. Morals [a selection of his prose, tr. W. Clode ; Camelot Series] i/- -, „ Minor Dialogues, w. his dialogue on Clemency, tr. Aubrey Stewart 5/- History and Criticism. Arnold, Matthew Marcus Aurelius- Capes, Rev. W. W. Farrar, Archd. F. W. I-IicKS, H. D. Jordan, T. •Zeller, Prf. Ed. in his Essays in Criticism Stoicism [Chief Ancient Philosophies ; popular] Seekers after God [Seneca, Epictetus, M. Aurelius] —articles Seneca and Stoics—in Encyclo. Brit., vols, xxi., xxiii. ea. Stoic Moralists in the first two centuries Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics, tr. O. J. Reichel c8° 16° 8° c8° c8° 16° 12° 16° c8° 9/- c 8° 2/6 12 6/- c 8° 30/- 4° lS/-c8° Bohn's Lib. 69 Walter Scott [17-] 87 Macmillan 82 Bohn's Lib. 77 Paul 81 Walter Scott 86 Boston 6^ Walter Scott 88 Bohn's Lib. 89 Macmillan [69] 7'; S.P.C.K. 80 Macmillan [68] 77 Black 86,87 Hodges, Z?«W.[8o]84 Longman [70J 80 12. EPICUREANS. Works (translated). LUCREXIUS •De Reriim Natura, ed. H. A. J. Munro, re-ed. J. Duff, vol. ii. : translation [prose] 3 vols. 24/- 8° Bell [ „ ] The Scheme of Epicurus. By T. C. Baring [verse tr. of De Rerum. Natura\ 7/- s 4 Paul Works, tr. Rev, J. S. Watson [prose] 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. IS9 [64] 86 84 51 Philosophy] SCEPTICS. ECLECTICS. NEO-PYTHAGOREANS. [Ancient Philosophers C §§13-15 History and Criticism. Courtney, W. L. — «waj/ »»» Epicurus 2« /(u Studies in Philosophy [refir. fr. Kellemca.] 12/- Mallock, W. H. Lucretius [Ancient Classics for English Readers ; popular] 2/6 Masson, John The Atomic Theoiy of Lucretius [compar. w. evolutiomt doctrines] 9/- *Pater, W. H. Marius, the Epicurean : his sensations and ideas 2 vols. 12/- An imaginary account of the intellectual development of a Roman scholar, lemjl. M. Aurelius. Epicureanism, Stoicism, the Platonism of Apuleius, and Christianity influence him iu turn. Veitch, Prf. John Lucretius and the Atomic Theory 3/6 c 8° MacLehose, Gias. 75 Wallace, Prf. W. Epicureanism [Chief Ancient Philosophies; popular] 2/6 12° S.P.C.K 80 ,, „ — a?-^«V/i? Epicureanism «'« Encyclo. Brit., vol. iii. 3°/" 4 Black 78 *Zeller, Prf. Ed. Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics, tr. Rev. O. J. Reichel 15/- <= 8 Longman [70] 80 8° Rivington 82 12° Blackwood 78 8° Bell 84 8° Macmillan [85] 88 13. SCEPTICS AND SCEPTICISM (GREEK). History and Criticism. Maccoll, N. The Greek Sceptics from Pyrrho to Sextus 3/6 P 8° Macmillan 69 Owen, Rev. John • — itvo chapters in his Evenings witli the Sceptics, 2 vols. 32/- 8° Longman 81 Seth, Prf. A. — article Scepticism, in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xxi. [historical] 30/- 4° Black 85 *Zeller. Prf. Ed. Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics, tr. Rev. O. J. Reichel IS/- c 8° Longman [70] 80 14. ECLECTICS. Works (translated). Cicero. *Acaderaica, De Amicitia, De Divinatione, 'De Finibus, De Natura Deorum, tr. Prf. J. S. Reid — V. De Officiis, infra. tr. with notes W. C. Green by Prf. J. S. Reid. Vol. iii. ; translation tr. Prf. C. D. Yonge+F. Barham Contains also trss. aiDe Divin., De Faio, and De Legibusi De Ofiiciis : ot Moral Duties, tr. C. R, Edmonds Contains also trss. of De Amicitia and De Seneciute. ,, tr. with notes Rev. A. P. Peabody [Am.] De Senectute — v. De Officiis, supra. History and Criticism. 5/6 8° Macmillan 2/6 f 8° 8/- 8° 5/-c8° 5/- c 8° 6/- 12° Hall, Cainb. Camb. Press Bohn's Lib. Bohn's Lib. Bodon 80 76 83 [53] 71 50 84 W. L. E. Collins, Rev. Forsyth, W. Jeans, Rev. G. Levin, T. W. Mayor, Prf. J. E. B. Middleton, Rev. C. Trollope, Ant. •Zeller, Prf. Ed. Cicero [Ancient Classics for English Readers ; popular] 2/6 12° Blackwood [71] 85 Life of Cicero 10/6 8° Murray [64] 69 Life and Letters [tr.] of Cicero [w. historical and critical notes] 8/6 c 8° Macmillan [80] 88 Six Lectures Introductory to the philosophical writings of Cicero 7/6 8° Deighton, Ca;«i. 71 Sketch of Ancient Philosophy from Thales to Cicero 3/6 12° Camb. Press 8r Intended mainly for students reading Cicero. Life of Cicero [" standard "] o.p. [w. 5/-] c 8° Life of Cicero 2 vols. 24/- 8° History of Eclecticism in Greek Philosophy, tr. S. F. AUeyne io/5 c 8° Bohn [1741] 42 Chapman 80 Longman 83 ZELLER'S & LEVIN'S books are the only two of the above which deal directly or at all extensively with Cicero's philosophy. 15. NEO-PYTHAaOREANS. NEO-PLATONISTS. JEWISH-ALEXANDRIANS. Works, Translations. Apuleius, A. Works, tr. [Golden Ass, God of Socr., Florida, Magic] 5/- c 8° Iamblichus Life of Pythagoras, tr. Thos., Taylor ["the Platonist"] o.p. 8° ,, Egyptian Mysteries, tr. Thos. Taylor ["lire Platonist"] o.p. 8° Philo-JuD/EUS [Gk. Alex, i cent.] Works of, ed. C. E. Richter, 8 vols. 18/- 8° ,, Fragments of, ed. J. R. Harris 12/6 4° Plutarch , Morals, tr. Goodwin, w. Introduction R. W. Emerson [Am.], 5 vols. 63/- 8° „ Morals, tr. Rev.. A. R. Shilleto [with notes and index] 5/- c 8° „ Theosophic Essays [=Morals], tr. C. W. King 5/- c 8° History and Criticism— z-. also a § 119 : Hist, of Xtn. Doctrine— to Council of Nicrea. The Christian Platonists of Alexandria " [Bampton Lectures, i8S6] 10/6 Philo-Judseus, or the Jewish-Alex. Philos. in itsdevel. & completion, 2 v. 21/- Alexandria and her Schools [four lectures del. at Cambridge] o.p. \w. 5/-] c 8° Cambridge Investigation of the Trinity of Plato and of Philo-Judreus, rev. Holden 4/- 08"" — article lamblichus in Encyclo. Brit. , vol. xii. 30/- 4' ApoUonius of Tyana : an essay [tr.] o.p. [pb. & w. 2J6] c 8' An essay on his life, and on the attempt made by Empress Julia Doinna in 3rd cent, to revive pag:anism by means of his name. Tredwell, D, M. [Am.] Sketch of the Life of ApoUonius of Tyana $3-50 c 8° Mw York Based on the narrative of PHILOSTRATUS : with full bibliographical references. Trench, Abp, R. C. Plutarch : his Life, his Lives, and his Morals [5 lectures] 3/6 12° Paul 160 Bigg, Dr. Chas. *Drummond, Pre. J. Kingsley, Can. Chas. Morgan, Can. Czesar Sorley, Prf. W. R. RiviLLE, Dr. Alb. Bohn's Lib. [ ]88 London 18 Chiswick 21 Leipzig 28-30 Camb. Press 86 Lo'w 70 Bohn's Lib. 88 >j 82 Clar. Press 87 Williams 88 Cambridge '';4 Camb.Press[i797]c3 Black 81 Hotten 66 86 [73] 74 Philosophy] BACON. BAIN. BENTHAM. BERKELEY. [Modem Philosophers C §§16-19 IV. nn^obern pbtlosopbers : Motke, Xives, anb Criticism* 16. BACON, Francis, Lord, 1561-1626. Works, collected and ed. J. Spedding + R. L. Ellis + D. D. Heath, 7 vols. 73/6 Vols, i.-iii. : Philosophical Works ; iv.-v. : Translations ; vi.-vii. : Literary and Professional Works. Letters and Life, including his Occasional Works, ed. w. comm. Spedding, 7 vols. 84/- Essays [1597], ed. with notes Dr. E. A. Abbott, 2 vols. [text only, 2/6] 6/- „ „ ed. with annotations Abp. R. Whately 10/6 „ ,, and Colours of Good and Evil, ed. with notes W. A. Wright 4/6 „ „ ed. with notes and indexes F. Storr + C. H. Gibson 3/6 „ ,, as he left them [Morley's Universal Lilirary] l/- ,, ,, ed. Reynolds Advancement of Leai-ning [1605], ed. W. Aldis Wright [also (id. Cassell's National Lib. '89] 4/6 *Novum Organon [1*620], with intro. and notes Prf. T. Fowler 14/- ,, ,, ed. w. Eng. notes Dn. G. W. Kitchin, 9/6 ; tr. G. W. Kitchin 9/6 History and Criticism. Abbott, Dr. E. A. Earlier Life of Bacon Church, Dn. R. W. Craik, Dr. G. L. Dixon, W. Hepworth Fischer, Kuno Fowler, Prf. T. Macaulay, Ld. *NiCHOL, Prf. John *Spedding, J. 10/6 Francis Bacon [admir. ace. of life and wks., w. a good index] 14/- Bacon 5/- Bacon [English Men of Letters Series ; chiefly literary] (/- Bacon ; his writings and his philosophy 3/6 Personal Life of Bacon, 12/-; Story of Bacon's Life [chiefly literary] 7/6 F. Bacon ofVerulam: real. phil. & its age, tr. J.' Oxenford 0^. [pi. 7/6; w. 6/-] Bacon [English Philosophers Series] 3/6 Bacon, — in his Essays 2/6 Bacon : his life & philosophy, pt. i. Life ; ii. Philos. [Pliil. Class, f. E. Read.] 3/6 Life and Times of Bacon [extr. fr. ed. of Letters and Life, sttp.l, 2 vols. 21/- Evenings with a Reviewer : Macaulay and Bacon, 2 vols. iS/- To Spedding is due the final .construction of the text of Bacon's life. 8° Longman [57-70] 70 8° 62-74 18° 76 8° [56] 66 18° Macmillan 62] 8 1 12° Rivington 85 c 8° Routledge S3 Clar. Press in prep. 12° 69 8° 78 8° 55.55 8° Seeley 77 8° Macmillan 85 c8° 88 c8° [84] 89 c 8° Grifftu [46-47] 60 8° Murray 61,62 8° Longman 57 c 8° Low 81 c 8° Longman [37] 89 f8° Blackwood 88 8° Triibner 78 8° Paul 81 17. BAIN, Prf. Alexander [living). 8° Longman The Senses and the Intellect, with supplement by Grote lS/~ The Emotions and the Will 15/- On the Study of Character [w. an estimate of phrenology] »./. [pb. 9/-; w. J 16] 8° Parker Mental and Moral Science [psychology & ethics] pt. i., 6/6 ; pt. ii., 4/6 in l vol. 10/6 c 8° Longman Logic : deductive, 4/- ; inductive, 6/6 in i vol. lo/6 c 8° "" ' [Internat. Scientific Ser.] 4/- c 8' Mind and Body : theories of their relations Education as a Science Practical Essays Life of James Mill, 2/- John Stuart Mill : a criticism [largely practical ; Intern. Sclent. Ser.] 5/- c 8° 2/- c 8° i/- c 8° [55] 73 [59] 75 61 [68] 72 [70, 70] 82, 82 [74] 78 [79] 85 Longman 84 82, 81 Paul 18. BENTHAM, Jeremy, 1747-1832. Works, ed. [Sir] J. Bowring; II vols. [incl. his Deontology (theory of ethics; posth.)] \pb. igS/-; w. 70/-] r 8° Edin. 38-43 Vol. X. contains a selection from his correspondence, and some biographical statements ; vol. xi. is an Index to the Works. Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation [1789] 6/6 c 8° Clar. Press ' 76 Theory of Legislation [1802], tr. R. Hildreth [Am.] 7/6 P 8° Triibner [40] 87 Fletcher, G. W. H. Analysis of Bentham's T^^ory <7/Zej;V/a//D« 2/6 12° „ 64 This. BENTHAM'S most import, work, was first pub. in French [Paris, 1802}, "Iraduit par M. Dumont d'aprfes les MSS. confi^s par I'auteur." BuRiON, Dr. J. Hill [ed. ] Benthamiana [select extracts from Bentham] o.p. ipb. 9/- ; w. 6/-] 8° Blackwood 43 j J, Graham, W. HnxLEY, Prf. T. H. McCosH, Prf. J. [Am.] Mill, J. Stuart S4" Blackwood [66] 83 Clar. Press 71 Blackwood 81 Longman 72 Macmillan in prep. Edinburgh 86 Longm.[S9-67]73-75 New York «5 20. BRUNO, Giordano, 1548-1600. History and Criticism. Frith, [Miss] I. Life of Giordano Bruno, revised Mor, Carriere Whittaker, T. — article in Mind, vol. ix. p. 236 sqq. [Eng. & For. Phil. Lib.] 14/- p 8° Trubner 87 qtrly. pt. 2/6 8° Williams 21. BUTLEK, Bishop Jos., 1692-1752. Works vol. i.. Sermons [1726]; ii., Analogy of Religion [1736] The Sermons are against Hobbes, Mandeville, Shaftesbury, "and other free-thinkers.' Analogy of Religion to the Constitution and Course of Nature, w. notes Dr. Jos. Angus History and Criticism. Adamson, Prf. R. — article Butler in Encylo. ea. 5/6 8° Clar. Press 74 2/- f 8° R. T. S. [55] 86 ANGtJS, Dr. Jos. Chalmers, Dr. T. Collins, Rev. W. L, Farrar, Dr. A. S. Hunt, Dr. John Napier, Jos. NoRRls, Ven. J. P. Brit., vol. iv. 30/- 4° Analysis of Butler i/- c 8° Natural Theology, includes lectures on Butler's Analogy 6/- c 8° Butler [Philos. Classics for English Readers] 3/6 12° • — in his Critical History of Freethought [Bampton Lectures, '62] 16/- 8° — in his History of Religious Thought in England, 3 vols. ea. 10/6 8° Lectures on Butler's Analogy 4/6 c 8° Lectures on Butler's Analogy 2/- f 8° Black 76 R. T. S. 82 Douglas, .£(^j«. [24]77 Blackwood 81 Murray 62 Isbister [70-73] 84 Simpkin 64 R. T. S. 87 22. COLERIDaE, Sam. Taylor, 1772-1834. Complete Works, w. introd. essay Prf. W. G. T. Shedd [Am.] & index A. Oilman [Am.] 7 vols. 63/- 12° Biographia Literaria [exhibiting Schelling's philosophy] 3/6 c 8° Aids to Reflection [agst. current Eng. philos.] ; & Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit [posth. ] 3/6 c .8° The Friend [essays on morals, politics, and religion] 3/6 c 8° OHgiually published as a periodicaj, which ran through 27 numbers. A few articles are by other hands. Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit [posthumous ; v. also sufira] i/6 12° Dissertation on Science of Method , \repi-.from Encyclo. Metropolitana] 2/- c 8° History and Criticism. Caine, T. Hall Life of S. T. Coleridge [Great Writers Series ; literary and biographical] l/- 16° Walter Scott 87 Green, J. H. Spiritual Philosophy, founded on teaching of S. T. Coleridge, 2 vols. 25/- 8° Macmillan 65 Traill, H. D. Coleridge [English Men of Letters, literary and biographical] i/- c 8° „ [84] 89 New York 84 Bohn's Lib. [17] 66 [25] 84 [12] 65 Ward & Lock [40] 8 1 Griffin 49 23. COMTE, AtJGUSTE, 1793-1857— and Positivism. Works : Translated. System of Positive Philosophy [1830-42] 4 vols. o.p. \_pb. So/-; w. 70/-] 8° Longman 75-77 I. General View, tr. Dr. J. H. Bridges. \ph. 21/-] ; 2. Social Statics, tr. F. Harrison, [/*. 14/-] ; 3. Social Dynamics, tr. Prf. E. S. Bcesley, [ib, ai/-] ; 4. Future of Man, tr. Dr. R. Congreve, and Index by Harrison, \fb. 24/-]. 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Loins, ^6^-^^l. 163 [48 49] 89 [70] 89 47 [70] 89 Philosophy] GREEN. HAMILTON. HARTMANN. HEGEL. [Modern Philosophers C §§ 29-32 History and Criticism. Adamson, Prf. R. Fichte [Philos. Class, for Eng. Readers ; also art. in Encylo. Brit.] 3/6 c 8° Blackvyopd 81 Everett, Prf.C.C. [Am.] Fichte's Science of Knowledge [crit.exposition ; Grigg's Philos. Class.] $1.25 16° Chicago 83 Smith, Dr. W. Memoir of J. G. Fichte , [>-«/>r. «» Pop. Writings, «/ J'»/.] 4/- p 8° Triibner [47] 48 29. GKEEN, Pbp. T. H., 1836-1882. * Works, ed. R. L. Nettleship, 3 vols. vols, i.-ii. ea. 16/-; iii. 21/- 8° Longman 85, 86, 88 Vol. i. — Philosophical — contains Introductions to Hume's Treatise on Human Nature ['74], and Criticism ofti. Spencer and G. H. Lewes [pt. iv. now first pub. ; other pts. in Contemp. Rev., '77-81]. Vol. ii. — Philosophical — Lectures on Kant's Crit. of Pure Reason and Met. of Ethics ; On the Logic of the Formal Logicians andof}. S. Mill ; On the Principles of Political Obligation. 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Cbntrtr, qf beginning of Wissetischa/t der Logik. f'l'ofealso 3'nKLmc's P/ti/as. a^ Law , [6/- 8° Longman '73] and his notes to his tr. of SCI-IWEGLER, ut d a, Wallace, Prf. W. — article Hegel in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xi. 30/- 4° Black 80 33. HERBART, J. F, 1776-1841. History and Criticism. Ward, Prf. Jas. -^article Herbart in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xi, 30/- 4° Black 80 34. HERBERT OF CHERBURY, LORD [1582-1648]. Autobiography, ed. S. L. Lee ; portraits 21/- 8° Nimmo [1764] 86 „ ed. with intro. W. H. Dircks [Camelot Sen] l/- 16° Walt. Scott 88; [National Lib.] dd. 18° Cassell 87 The only important work on HERBERT is in French; C. deREMUSAT'S Lord Herbert de Clterbury: sa vie ei ses oeuvres, lo/- 8" /'«;-ij '74. 35. HERDER, J. G., 1744 1803. History and Criticism. Sully, James — article Herder in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xi. 30/- 4° Black 80 36. HOBBES, Thos., 1588-1679. Works, by Sir W. Molesworth [v. i.-vii. philosophical] II v. Eng., 5 v. 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Grose, 4 vols. 56/- 8° Longman [74-75] 82 The intro, [by Green alone ; repub. in his Phil. Works,' v. i., ut C §, 29] is an original and very valuable discussion of HUME fr, the Neo-Kantian.standpoint, , Separately! Essays [1742! z v, 28/. ; .7'reaHse on Human Nature [1739-40], 2 v. 28/-, Treatise on Human Nature, irepr. of orig. ed. [3 vols. 1739-40], ed. L. A. Selby-Bigge 9/- c 8° Clar. Press 88 Essays, Literary, Moral, and Political [1742] 3/6 c 8° Ward & Lock [72] 75 Letters to W. Strahan [king's printer, chfly.rel.tohis .ffw/ary; fr.1756-76], ed. Dr. Birkb. Hill, w. notes 12/6 8° Clar. Press 89 History and Criticism. Adamson, Prf., R. — ar^«V:/« Hume /« Encyclo. Brit., vol. xii. 30/- 4° Black 81 Burton, Dr. J. Hill Life and Correspondence of David Hume, 2 vols. «./. [/i. 25/- ; w. 7/6] 8° Blackwood 46 ,, „ [ed.] Letters of Eminent Persons addressed to Hume o.p.[pb. 10/6; iw. 6/r] 8° „ 49 Huxley, Prf. T. H. Hume [English Men of Letters] l/- c 8° Macmillan , [79] 87 A clear reproduction of the more popular -results of HUME'fi pliilosoohv. it>s 16- 8° Longman 6? 24/- 8° „ 70 21/- 8° „ 78 8° Williams 84-88 PhNosophy] HUTCHESON. KANT. LEIBNITZ. LEOPARD!. [Modern Philosophers C §§39-41* Knight, Prf. W. Seth, Prf. And. Stephen, Leslie Hume Scottish Philosophy [Phil. Classics for English Readers] 3/6 c 8° Blackwood 86 [Balfour Lectures, '85] s/- c 8° „ 85 A comparison of Germlul and Scottish answers to HUME. Hume— z» his History of English Thought in the i8th Century 2 vols. 28/- Giyes the best popular presentation of his theological views from Agnostic standpoint. 8° Smith&Elder[76]So 39. HUTCHESON, Francis, 1694-1746. History and Criticism. Fowler, Prf. T. Shaftesbury and Hutcheson „ „ — article Hutcheson in Encyclo. Brit., vol, xii. [English Philosophers] 3/6 c 8° Low 30/- 8° Black 83 81 40. KANT, Immantiel, 1724-1804.— Translations. For a list of KANT'S worics, v. Journal ofSfecul. Phiios., 1881. Critique of Pure Reason [1781], tr. Prf. Max Miiller [w. histor. intro. by Noire] 2 vols. 32/- „ „ tr. Prf. J. P. Mahaify+Rev. J. Bernard ,, „ tr. Prf. J. M. D. Meiklejohn ,5/- Critique of Practical Reason [1788], tr. T. K. Abbott 12/6 The first edition was published under the title of Theory of Ethics. Contains also a memoir of KANT. Metaphysic of Ethics [1797], tr. J. W. Semple, w. intro. Prf. H. Calderwood 6/- Philosophy of Law [1798] : principles of jurisprud. as science of right, tr. W. Hastie S/~ Logic [1800] : inti-Q. and essay on mistaken subtilty of the four figures, tr. T. K. Abbott 6/- Prolegomena and Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science [1783], tr. E. B. Bax S/- The principal contents of this work were subsequently incorporated by KANT into the second edn, of his Crit. of Pure Reason — v. Principles of Politics, tr. with intro. W. Hastie Contains the celebrated essay on perpetual peace and the principle of federation. Watson, Prf. J. [Canad.; tr.] Philosophy of Kant as cont. in extracts fr. his own writings [tr.] 7/6 By far the largest part is devoted to Critique of Pure Reason (with much of theZJiW^tWi:). History and Criticism. Adamson, Prf. R. Philosophy of Kant 8° Macmillan 81 08° „ [72-74389 c 8° Bohn's Lib. 55 8° Longman [73] 83 c 8° Clark, Edin. [69] 86 c8° „ „ 87 8° Longman 85 c 8° Bohn's Lib. 83 also STIRLING, infra. c 8° Triibner 89 c8° MacLehose,G'/aj:?-.88 [Shaw Lects., '79] 6/- 8° ,, ,, — ar/zW« Kant i« Encyclo. Brit., vol. xii. 30/- 4° Balfour, A. J. A Defence of Philosophic Doubt [criticism of Kant and Spencer] 12/- 8° *Caird, Prf. Edw. Critical Account of Philosophy of Kant, 2 vols. 8° MacLehose, Reviewed in T. H. GREEN'S Works, vol. ill. [Miscellanies], 21/- 8" t-ongman '89. Courtney, W. L. — essays vii. andsm. in his Studies in Philosophy 12/— 8° Cousin, Victor The Philosophy of Kant [1842], tr. A. G. Henderson [lectures] 6/- p8° Fischer, Prf. Kuno A Critique of Kant, tr. Prf. W. S. 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[Canad.] Kant and his English Critics : comp. of crit. and empirical phiios. 12/6 Edinhtrgh 79 Black 81 Macmillan 79 Glasgow\^T\ in prep. Rivington 82 Triibner [54] 70 Sonnenschein 88 8° Longman 66 8° Clar. Press 86 8° Dublin 74 16° Chicago 8S 16° „ 86 8° Williams 82 8° Edinburgh 81 8° Macmillan 82 12° Blackwood 82 8° MacLehose, Glas. 8i 41. V. LEIBNITZ, G. W„ 1646-1716. History and Criticism. Caird, Prf. E. Dewey, Prf. J. [Am.] Fraser, Prf. A. C. Merz, Theod. SORLEY, Prf. W. R. — in Historical Introduction to his Crit. Account of Philosophy of Kant 18/- Leibnitz's New Essays concerning the Human Understanding [crit. expos. ; Grigg's Phil. Class.] $1.25 Life and Philosophy of Leibnitz — in his Essays in Philosophy o.p. Leibnitz [Phil. Classics for Eng. Readers] 3/6 — article Leibnitz in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xiv. 30/- 8° MacLehose, G/.[77]8s 16° Chicago Edinburgh Blackwood Black 88 56 84 82 41*. LEOPARDI, GiAooMO, 1798-1837. Essays and Dialogues, tr. Chas. 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Lessing : his life and times i 42-46 Macmillan 75 Paul [72]-83 Bohn's Lib. 79 21/- 8° Triibner [77] 79 30/- 4° Black 82 $5 12° Boston 66 [chiefly literaiy] 10/6 p 8° Longman 78 43. LEWES, G. H., 1817-1878. Biographical History of Philosophy History of Philosophy from Thales to Comte, 2 vols. Comte's Philosophy of the Sciences [tr.] Problems of Life and Mind, ser. i. : Foundation of a Cr^ed „ ,, ,, ser. ii. : Physical Basis of Mind ; ill. „ ser. iii., pt. i, 7/6; pt. 2, 15/- Critieism, Sully, James 16/- 8°. Parker [46] 57 [enlargement of above] 32/- 8° I^ongman [67] 80 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. 53 2 vols. 28/- 8° Trubner [74] .84 ; 75 16/- 8° „ 77 [for contents, ». C § 71] 2 pts. 22/6 8° ,, 79, 79 — article Lewes in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xiv. [quite short] 30/- 4° Black 82 44. LOCKE, John, 1632-1704. Complete Works, 9 vols. Philosophical Works, with notes J. A. St. John ; 2 vols. 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[Essays, Journey into Italy, Letters} $9 8° Boston [ ] Essays [1580] tr. C. Cotton [i7S9]i «./. [pb, 21 j- ; w. 7/6] p 8° Smith & Elder 60 Smith, J. F. — article Schleiermacher in Encyclo. Brit., vol. xxi. 30/- 4° Black 86 59. SCHOPENHAUER, A., 1788-1860.— Translations. Fourfold Root of Principle of Sufficient Reason, and on Will in Nature, [tr.] 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. 89 The World as Will and Idea [1819], tr. R. B. Haldane+J. Kemp, 3 vols. 50/- 8° Triibner 84-86 History, Criticism and Bibliog-raphy. Griesbach, E. [ed.] Edita und Inedita Schop^haueriana [a bibliography] lo/- s 4° Leipzig 88 Laban, Ferd. [ed.] Die Schopenhauer-Literatur [chronologically arranged] 2/6 8° „ 80 Wallace, Prf. W. — ^or/jV/^j Schopenhauer (2r» Pessimism zwEncy. Br., vols. xxL&xviii.rej;^. ea. 30/- 4° Black 86,85 ZiMMERN, Helen Schopenhauer : his life and philosophy 7/6 p 8° Longman 76 60. SHAFTESBURY, [3ra.] Earl, 1671-1713. Characteristics of Men, Manners, Opinions & Times, ed. Rev. W. M. 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A Short Introduction to the Study of Logic [Thomistic] Principles of Science : treatise on logic and scientific method Elementary Lessons in Logic : deductive & inductive [w. vocab. of terms] Primer of Logic [Science Primers] Studies in Deductive Logic [exercises, with notes] Substitution of Similars, the true principle of reasoning Pure Logic, o.p. [pb. 3/6 ; w. Members of. Studies in Logic —V. C § 40. Studies and Exercises in Formal Logic [for teachers & advanced students] —V. C § 45- History of Logic in Modern Times [Library of Philosophy] —V. C § 47. —V. O § 49. Elementary Notions of Logic ; with 41 figures Based on Aug. de MORGAN'S Formal Logic: or the Calcitlus of Inference, iieeessary a)id probable Introduction to Logic — V. Milnes, stipra. The Science of Thought Three Intro. Lectures on the Science of Thought [del. at Roy. Institution] " No reason without Iang;uage, no language without reason. intro. and notes Prf. T. S. 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[Am.] Suicide : history of the penal laws relating to it Morselli, Prf. E. Suicide : an essay in moral statistics A scientific inquiry, on the basis of scientific method, into the laws of suicidal phenomena. O'Dea, Dr. Jas. J. Suicide : its philosophy, causes and prevention $i-7S ^ '■ ' ' ■ ^ With several interesting statistical tables at end. 175 [a criticism of Darwin] 5/- c 8° WiUiams [Hibbert Essay] 5/- 8° „ $1 8° New York [Internal. Scient. Str.] 5/- c 8° Paul 8° New York 87 82 83 [81] 82 83 Philosophy] PSYCHOLOGY. [Special Departments C §71 71. PSYCHOLOGY. Bibliography : in Sully's Outlines of Psychology 12/6 8° Longman [84] 85 Gonstruetive and Systematic Works. Students' Manuals. Bain, Prif. Alex. 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[Am.] The Elements of Physiological Psychology, 113 ill. 21/- 8° Longman 87 From the physical and experimental side ; partly based on WUNDT'S Pkysiolosische Psychologie. Lewes, G. H. Problems of Life and Mind ; ser. ii. [Physical Basis of Mind] ill. 16/- 8° Trubner 77 Nature of Life, Nervous Mechanism, Automatism, Reflex Theory. • ,, „ The' same, iii. pt. I [the Study of Psychology] 7/6 8° „ 79 ., „ iii. pt. 2 '15/- 8° „ 79 Mind as Function of the Organism; Sphere of Sense and Logic of Feeling ; Sphere of Intellect and Logic of Signs. -^ , Locke, John — v. C 44. LoTZE, Hermann — v. C § 45. McCoSH, Prf. Jas. [Am.] Psychology : the cognitive powers, 6/6 ; Psychology : the active powers i5/6 c 8° Macmillan 86, 87 ,, ,, Psychology : the motive powers [emotions, conscience, will] 6/6 c 8° ,, 87 Old-fashioned " common-sense " ; b'lt inucli used in America, MILL, J. Stuart — v. C § 49. Murray, Prf. J. [Canad.] A Handbook of Psychology [student's book] 7/6 c 8° Gardner, Paisley [85] 88 Raue, G. Elements of Psychology, on the principle of Beneke, ed. Dressier 6/- c 8° Parker 71 Practically a tr. of BENEKE'S Lekrbufk der Psychotogif als Naturwisseiischa/t. Rosmini-Serbati, a. — V. C § 55. Ryland, F. Student's Handbook of Psychology and Ethics [cram-book, but useful] 3/6 c 8° Bell [81] 86 ,, ,, [ed.] Questions on Psychology, Metaphysics and Ethics 3/6 c 8° Sonnenschein 87 *Spencer, Herbert — v. C § 62. *SULLY, Prf. James Outlines of Psychology, w. spec, refer, to theory of education [w. bibl. refs.] 12/6 8° Longman [84] 85 „ „ Teacher's Handbook of Psychology [based on his " Outlines "] 6/6 c 8° ,, [86] 87 Thompson, D. G. [Am.] A System of Psychology, 2 vols. 36/- 8° ,, 84 *Ward, Prf. James —a?-/«V/« Psychology m Encyclo. Brit., vol. xlc. 30/- 4° Black 86 Greek and Roman Psychologists— z/. c §§ 5-15, passim. History of Psychology— ». also c §§ 2-4. Adamson, Prf. R. 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[evolutionist] i6/- Animal Intelligence [Internat. Scient. Ser.] 5/- c The Five Senses of Man Sensation and Intuition Psychic Research and Spiritualism Religious Sentiment— ». A §4; b§i. Senses, The. Bernstein, Prf. A. Sully, James Sight. Allen, Grant Berkeley, Bp. G. Abbott, T. K. Bailey; Sam. ! Monck, W. H. S. Clifford, Prf. W. K. Taste Mental Evolution in Animals Contains a posthumous essay on Instinct by Charles DARWIN. Mental Evolution in Man : origin of human faculty On Intelligence [tr.] Displays a large knowledge of Morbid States. ■ A,§g4- 14/- 18/- [74] 87 8° J /Tacmi iUan 69 8" ,, 74 8'^ 11 •83 8° Paul 8° Paul 5° Mactriillan 5° Paul 12/- 8° 8° Lovell Reeve 74 [69] 79 [82] 86 83 88 71 ill. [Internat. Scient. Ser.] S/- c [psychology and aesthetics] 10/6 The Colour Sense : its origin and development [Eng. & For. Philos. Lib.] 10/6 Theory of Vision— «k his Works, vol. i. [still an important pontribution]— z;. C § Sight and Tou,ch , ,. , [anti-Berkeleian] 5/6_ Review of Berkeley's Theory of Vision [aiiti-Berkeleian] o.p, \_pb. 7/-J Space and Vision [anti-Berkeleian] o.p. {_pb. 2/6] Seeing and Thinking [Nature Series ; popular, but very good] 3/6 c — ». O § 72. J77 8° Paul 8° „ 8° Triibner 19- 8° Longman 8° Ridgway 8° Simpkin 8° Macmillan 76 [74] 80 79 64 42 72 80 Philosophy] /ESTHETICS. PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY. [Special Departs. i 72-73 72. .ESTHETICS. [associational] i/- c 8° Ward & Lock [12] 75 9/- 8° Paul 77 [popular] $1.50 %° New York [62] 81 1/6 c 8° Bohn's Lib. [1757] 89 75^. 12° Boston 75 Alison, Rev. Arch. Essays on Nature and Principles of Taste Allen, Grant Physiological Esthetics Aristotle — v. C § 9. Bain, Prf. Alex. — z/. C § 17. Bascom, Dr. John [Am.] j^sthetics : or the science of beauty Burke, Edmund drigin of Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful Also in National Lib., 6rf., Cassell, '87. Curious as intreducing physiological considerations into the explanation of the feelings of beauty, Cousin, Victor — v. C § 24. Emerson, R. W. [Am.] Culture, Behaviour, Beauty HEGEt, G. W. F. —V. C § 32. Holmes-Forbes, A. W. The Science of Beauty : an analytical inquiry Jeffrey, Francis, Lord Essays on Beauty and on Taste Kant, Immanuel — v. C § 40. Kames, Lord [Hy. Home] Elements of Criticism, ed. A. Mills [Am.] Kedney, J. S^ [Am.] The Beautiful and the Sublime — z/. C § 42. —V. C § 8. —for his Works, v. CLASS I. His theory of aesthetics is given in his Modtnt Pixinlers, vol. ii. Essays: sesthetical and philosophical [tr.] 3/6 c 8° Bohn's Lib. 74 ^Esthetic and Miscell. Works [Xtn. Art, Limits of the Beautiful, etc. ; tr.] 3/6 c 8° „ „ [48] 75 Essays (Origin and Function of Music), and Psychology (chap, on ./Esthet. Sentiments) — v. C § 62 Sensation and Intuition [psychology and aesthetics] 10/6 8° Paul ^ — article .(Esthetics in Encyclo. Brit., vol. i. 30/- 4° Black Philosophyof Art [tr.] 3/- 12° Ballifere Esthetics, tr. W. H. Armstrong 7/6 p 8° Chapman Lessing, G. E, Plato RusKiN, John V. Schiller, J. F. V. Schlegel, Friedrich Spencer, Herbert SuLl.Y, Prf. James It it Taine, Henri Veron, Eugene 3/6 p 8° Trubner [81] 89 [modific. of Alison's views] 3/6 c 8" Wd.&Lock[24,ll]79 [no Eng. edn. in print] $1.75 12° New York [1762] 55 $i.2S 12° „ „ 80 " Of Ideas of Beauty." [74] 80 75 65 78 History of .Esthetics— z/. aUo c §§ 2-4. Bosanquet, B. The History of Esthetics Love. FiNCK, T. H. Romantic Love and Personal Beauty [development, relations, etc.] 2 v. l8/- c 8° Macmillan Philosophy of Art— j-- i § 83- Philosophy of Poetry-^'- k § 62- Musical Acoustics— «'■ ' § "s. [Library of Philosophy] 10/6 8° Sonnensch. in prep. 87 73. PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY. Arnold, Dr. Thos. Introductory Lectures in Modern History [del. 1841-42] 7/6 S° Longman [42] 74 Recognises a Divine Providence, fulfilling definite plans of human progress. Bagehot, Walter Physics and Politics [analysis of causes of progress] 4/- c 8° Paul [73] 75 Bisset, a. Essays on Historical Truth 14/- 8° Longman 7 1 Blackie, Prf. J. S. What does History Teach? [two lectures] 2608° Macmillan 86 Buckle, H. T. History of Civilization in England and France, Spain and Scotland 3 vols. 24/- c 8° Longman [57-61] 67 Evolves and explains all possible occurrences and phenomena according to an a priori necessity from which there is no release. BuNSEN, Bar. C, Carlyle, Thos. C.J. 8° Longman 54 Outlines of Philos. of Universal Hist. [appl. to lang. and relig. ; tr.] 2 v. o.p. On History [repr. fr. Fraser's Mag. , '30], and On History Again [fr. Fraser, '33] in vols. ii. and iv. of his Essays ea. 2/- 16° Chapman [30, 33] 72 — his Positive Philosophy conis, Applic. of Posit. Philos. to History — v. O § 23. C^ also C § 23, '-v. Cairo ; and Harrison, infra. Civilization and Progress : outlines of a new system of philosophy 5/- 8° Longman [85] 88 Argues that the controlling factor of civilization is the material and social condition of man, and that things make their own relations (i.e. morality) in spite of politicians. Draper, Dr. J. W. [Am.] History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, 2 vols. 10/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. [63] 76 Makes physiology the basis of his philosophy of history, resolving all historical into physiological phenomena, whether material, vital, or spiritual. Pretty much the same Necessitarian point of view as BUCKLE. — in his Works, z/. K § 90. Studies in the Philosophy of Religion and History o.p. [pi. & w. 9/-] The Philosophy of History in France and Germany 15/- A history of the Philosophy of History— very critical, — in his Short Studies on Great Subjects, 4 series [and elsewhere] ea. 6/- c 8° Longm.[67-7 '] 82-&^ . ii. : Scientific Method Applied to History. Believes in the caprices and energy of human passions and individual freedom. 178 Comte, Auguste Crozier, Dr. J. B. Emerson, R. W. [Am.] Fairbairn, Pre. A, M. *Flint, Prf. R. Froude, J. A. la vol L ! The Science 0/ History 8° Strahan 8° Blackwood 76 74 Philosophy] POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY. [Special Departs. Harrison, Fred. The Meaning of History [Positivist view] dd. 8° Trubner Hegel, G. W. F. Lectures on the Philosophy of History [1837], tr. Rev. J. Sibree 5/- c 8° Bohn's Lib. In thrae ^eat epochs Lecky, W. E. H. Lewis, Sir G. C. Lilly, W. S. de Montesquieu, Bar, Oriental, Crasco-Koman, Gennanlc. Maintains that every epoch In history is dominated over by some specific idea. 16/- 8° Lohgman Thornton, Oxfor c 8° Chapman c 8° Bohn's Lib. Ritchie, D. G. History of European Morals : Augustus to Charlemagne, 2 vols, Inquiry into the Credibility of Early Roman History, 2 vols. 8' — his Introduction to his Chapters in Europ. Hist, is on phil. of hist., 2 v. 21/- The Spirit of Laws, 2 vols. [1748, tr.] ea. 3/6 Lays great stress on the influence of clunate and physical surroundings on civilization. —article Rationality of Hist, in Essays in Philos. Criticism, ed. Prf. A. Selh 9/- ROGERS, Prf.J.E.Thorold The Economic Interpretation of History [Oxford Lectures] 16/- A series of detached essays rather than an exhaustive treatise. y.ScHLEGEL, Friedr. The Philosophy of History [tr. ; lectures] 3/6 c 8° Bohn's Lib. >> ,, Lectures on Modern History [tr.j 3/6 c 8° ,, ,, SHEDD,Prf.W.G.T.[Am.]Lectures upon the Philosophy of History 75c \2° New York ,> .. Nature and Influence of the Histor. Spirit, «■« /«V Theolog. Essays $2.50 12° ,, „ Smith, Prf. Goldwin Lectures on the Study of History [del. at 0.\ford, '59-61 ; teleokgicalj 3/6 s 8° Parker 8° Longman Unwin C §74 62 [57] 78 [69] T) 86 78 83 [35] 69 49 [56] 73 77 [61] 65 History of Civilization-/or«/»///,j/o^fo<,/.j Methods of Study of History- ». f § 3. . F§4. 74. POLITICAL and SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY. History of Political Philosophy— i/. aUo c §§ 2-4. RITCHIE+ MUIRHEAD, Generally. Aristotle Bacon Bentham Cicero COMTE FiCHTE Green Hegel HOBBES Hume Kant Leslie, Prf. T. E. Cliffe Locke Machiavelli Mill, J. S. Paley Plato Rousseau SiDGWicK, Prf. H. Smith, Adam Spencer, Herbert Spinoza Vico J. H. The History of Political Philosophy, 2 vols. [Library of Philos.] ea. 10/6 Vol. i. : Plato to Rousseau (RiTCHia) ; vol. ii. : Burke to Present Day (MUIRHEADj. 8° Sonnensch. in prep. —V. C § 9- —V. C § 16. —V. C § 18. —V. C § 14. -^. C § 23. —V. C § 28. —V. C § 29. —V. C § 32- -V. C § 36. -v. C § 38. —V. C § 40. Essays in Political and Moral Philosophy —V. C § 44. —V. C § 46. —V. C § 49. — f. C § 52, — z/. C § 8. —V. C § 56. The Elements of Politics —V. C § 61. —J/. C § 62. —V. C § 63. —V. C § 65. 10/6 8° Hodges, Dub. [79] i 8' Macmillan 89 Ideal Commonwealths. Harrington, James Oceana, w. pref. Prf. H. Morley [1656] [Morley's Univ. Lib.] i/- c 8° Routledge Ideal Commonwealths ed. w. intro. Prf. H. Morley [Morley's Univ. Lib.] i/- c 8° ,, Plutarch's Lycurgtts, MORE'S Utopia, Bacon's New AHanlU, Campanella's City of the Sun, and a fragment of HALL'S Mundus Alter et Idem. More, Sir Thos. Utopia [1516], tr. Ralph Robinson [1551], ed. Prf. E. Arber i/- f 8° Arber, Birm. a slcetch of a State based on the principles of community of property and consequent uselessness of money. This reprint is from ROBI.VSON'S second and revised edition [1556]. Plato Republic, tr. Prf. B. Jowett [w. analyses and introduction] 12/6 8" Clar. Press [81J 89 „ ,, tr. J. L. Davies + D. J. Vaughan [w. notes ; Golden Treas. Ser.] 4/6 18° Macmillan [52] 66 Economics : Political and Social. 87 8s 69 Qeneral Treatises —v. O § 114. Capital and Iiabour —v. D § 118. Colonial Systems and Policy — v. D § 136. Co-operation, Trades Unions, eto. — v. D § 120. Crime, Punislmient, etc. —v. D § 123. Democracy ft Political Institutions— v. O § 139. Free Trade —v. D § 122. Land and Land Question —v. D § 119. Local and Municipal Government— z'. D § 124. Pauperism, Population, etc. —v. D § 127. Politics, Current —v. D § 142, 147. Bepresentation, Civil Liberty, etc.— ». D § 135. 179 Slavery —v. D § 130. Sooiallsm, Oonununism, etc. —v. D § 126. Sociology and Ethnology —v. E. Taxation and Public Finance —v. D § 117. Women : Position, Bights, etc. —v. O § iji 'Worldng Classes, The —v. O § 117. Philosophy] PHILOSOPHY OF LAW. [Special Departments c §75 75. PHILOSOPHY OF LAW. Bibliography —in Kant, tr. Hastie, ut infra. Generally. Kant, Immanuel The Philosophy of Law, tr. W. Hastie 5/- c 8° Clarke, Edin. %^ LlOY, Prf. Diodato The Philosophy of Law, tr. W. Hastie c 8° Trubrier 89 Maine, Sir Henry Ancient Law : its connection w. the early history of society 12/- 8° Murray [61] 87 Of a philosophical character, tracing many of the principles and rules of positive legislation back to their first beginnings. For his other works, v. CLASS F § Primitive Society, Miller, W. G. Lectures on the Philosophy of Law 12/- 8° Griffin 84 Designed as an Intro, to the study of International law : Liw from tlic metaphysical standpoint. Stirling, J. H. Lectures on the Philosophy of Law Constitutional Law— z/. d § 27. International Law— t/. d § 113. Jurisprudence — v. D § i. 5/- 8' Longman 7J CLASS C-PHILOSOPHY. (EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN.) I . Jnttobuction to tbe pbilosopbical Sciences in (Benetal 1. INTRODUCTION. Generally. Carus, Dr. Paul [Am.] A Primer of Philosophy [quite elementary] $i 8° Open Court Pub. Co., Chicago 93 Harris, Dr. W. T. [Am.] Introduction to the Study of Philosophy $1.50 12° Appleton, N. Y. 90 Ladd, Prf. G. Trumbull [Am.] Introduction to Philosophy 8° ^^ f ,'1''^";^ ' '^' 91 An inquiry after a rational system of scientific principles in their rel. to ultimate reality. Salter, W. M. [Am.] First Steps in Philosophy c 8° ^'^^'s^'o^^SX^' In 3 pts. (i) Pkysieal, discussing the conception of matter, and (2) Ethical, discuss, that of duty. The author's philos. position is epitomized in Herb. Spencer's sentence quoted by him, that " what we are conscious of as properties of matter, even down to its weiifht and resistance, are but subjective affections produced by objective agencies wh. are unknown and unknowable," i>. it isnrst Idealist and second Agnostic. Quite short; and pleasantly written. Classification of the Sciences— i;. c § 68. Ppoblem of Contemporary Philosophy. Caird, Prf. Edw. The Problem of Philosophy at the Present Time— ri» his Essays, «/ K § 17. An extremely interesting and earnest paper by one to whom Pliilosopliy is no mere intellectual enjoyment or refinemt. of culture, but an absolute necessity of human life. Relation of Philosophy to Theology-j'. a § 4 : Philosophy of Religion. II. Ibistot^ of lp>bil06opb^» 2. HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: GENERALLY. SERIES. Entire Period. *Erdmann, Prf. J. E. Hist, of Philosophy, tr. [by several hands] & ed. Prf. W. S. Hough [Am.] 3 v.m 8° ^^^^^yX^9\9i Vol, i. AficietU and Meditxval, is/-; ii. Modem, 15/-; Modem: Since Kant, 12/-, Forms the introduction to the Library 0/ Philosophy, utinfra. A very learned, methodical, and luminous history, w. admirable criticisms and comprehensive bibliographies. Quite indispensable to the student of the hist, of philosophy, and infinitely superior to any other general history, Hegel, G. W, F, [1770-1831] Lectures on tlie History of Philosophy^?/^ C § 32. Practically an Introduction to his own philosophy under the name of a hist, of previous systems. WiNDELBAND, Prf. W. History of Philosophy, tr. Prf. Jas. H. Tufts [Am.] 21/- nt. ($5 nt.) 8° Macmillan 93 a hist, of philosophy, ace. to topics, not of philosophers, the biogr. statemts. bg. very brief. Select bibliographies given. Series. ........ . T TT >,r • 1 T ■ 00 ea. 10/6 Sonnenschein q_ „„„ ■„ i„- *Sonnenschein's Library of Philosophy, ed. Jno. H. Muirhead s eVi^.js MacmiUan, jv. v. ^9 ^ll- > "'frg. Introduction to the Library : Ebdmann, Prf. J. E. History of Philosophy, 3 vols — ut sufra. First Series : History of Particular Schools. tCouRTNEY, Dr. W. L. Early Idealism : Descartes toLeibnitz tHoUGH, Prf. W. S. [Am.) Sensationalists : Locke to Mill tSETH, Prf. A. Modern Realists : Leibnitz, Herbart, Lotze tSoRLEY, Prf; W. R. The Utiliiariaiis : Hume to Contemporary Writers tWALLACE, Prf. Wra. German Idealists : Kant to Hegel tWATSON, Prf. J. [Canad.] Principle of Evolution in its Scientific and Philosophical Aspects Second Series : History of Theory in Particular Depts. t Adamson, Prf. R. History of Psychology : Empirical and Rational BoNAR, Dr. J. Philosophy and Political Economy in tlieir Historical Relations [ui D § 114] 93 Bosanqubt, Dr. B. History of/Bsthetic [«/ C § 72] 92 Pfleiderer, Prf. O. The Develafment of Rational Theology since Kani\utf>.% 119] [90)93 tRlTCHlE+ Muirhead, -.^ History of Political Philosophy tRovCE, Prf. J. History of Philosophical Tendencies of Nineteenth Century Third Series : Original Contributions to Philosophy. Bradley, F. H. Appearance and Reality [«< C § 69] 93 tCAiRD, Prf. Edw. The Theory of Ethics ■ tDEWEY, Prf. J. [Am.] Principles of Instrumental Logic tMACKENZiE, Prf. J. S. First Principles of Philosophy tSTOUT, Dr. G. F. Principles of Psychology tWARD, Dr. J. Epistemology ; or the Theory of Knowledge Fourth Series : Translations of Foreign Works. tSlGWART, Dr. Logic ; tr. Helen Dendy, 2 vols. \ c=not published yet. 131 Philosophy] GENERAL HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY. [History C §§ 3-5 3. HISTORY OF ANCIENT PmLOSOPHY. *BURNET, Jno. Burt, B. C. [Am.] *Erdmann, Prf. J. E. Marshall, Rev. Jno. Early Greek Philosophy— «<^ C § 5. A Brief History of Greek Philosophy $1.2$ 12° G'mn, Boston Critical and interpretative as well as purely historical— Clc. philos. on its native soil and in Rome. History of Philosophy [tr.], vol. i. : Ancient and Mediaeval — tit C § 2. ■' "I no 61 - Rivington Sc Perc. A Short History of Greek Philosophy c s 5,.,„ Macmiuan. /V. i'. Intended to be used as a running commentary on RITTER+PREI-LER [k^ 3B.3B, CS3]: but those who prefer "a clear fire, a clean hearth and the rigour of the game " will do wisely to take RiTTER-f-PAELLER without Mr. MARSHALL as a guide. Mitchell, Ellen M. [Am.] A Study of Greek Philosophy $1.25 12° Griggs, Chicago Series. Chief Ancient Philosophies 89 91 91 ea. 2/6 f 8° S.P.C.K. Zo-^qinprg. A series of popular bks. dealing with the history of ancient philosophy as bearing on modern speculation. ArisMelicmism.. Revs. T.Greg. Smith+W. Grundy [k^C§9] 2(689 I Stoicism Rev. W. W. Capes [Ki ffi.ffi. C § 11] 2/6 80 'E/ictirmnism Prf. Wm. 'VVallace [ut ffi.ffi. C § i?] a/6 80 | 4. HISTORY OF MEDIAEVAL and MODERN PHILOSOPHY. MediaevaL *Erdmann, Prf. J. E. Renaissance. Owen, Rev. Jno. Modern. *Erdmann, Prf. J. E. McCoSH, Pi-f. J. [Am.] Collective Essays. Caird, Prf. Edw. History of Philosophy [tr. ] vol. i. : Ancient and Medizeval — ttt C § 2. Of special value and fulness for the mediaeval period. The Skeptics of the Italian Renaissance — ut A § 119. The Skeptics of the French Renaissance — ttt A § 119. History of Philosophy [tr.], vol, ii. : Modern ; vol. iii. : Since Kant — ut C § 2. The Prevailing Types of Philosophy : can they logically reach reality ? c S — i?t his Essays in Literature and Philosophy, 2 vols. , «i<.Macmi iii;i7Au^9i Claims to have for the first time completely solved the " Nuptial Number," and to have shewn its importance for the understanding of the Platonic philosophy, 9. ARISTOTLE and ARISTOTELIANISM. Aristotle [b.c. 385-322]. Texts —V. K § 194. Translationsi Athenaion Politeia : —v. K § 194. Ethics, Nicomachean : m o . ,• h Gillies, Jno. [tr.] Aristotle's Ethics, comprizing his pract. philos. :tr .[Lubbock's lOO Best Bks. ] 3/6 i 8 Routledge Ll786j93 Welldon, J. E. C. [tr.] The Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle : transl. 7/6 ($2) c 8° Macmillan 92 By the Headmaster of Harrow Sch., uniform w. his trs, of the Politics [ut 3B.3B, C § 9] and Rhetoric [ut ibid.'], the style and methods being much the same. Only moderately good, but analyses and critical notes usefuL Based on BHKKER'S te.tt [ut ffi.ffi. K § I94], w. occas. ref. 10 readings adopted by BERNAYS and BYWATER [ut K § ■94], Politics : Ellis, Wm. [tr.] Ari.stotle'sPolitics: transl.;intro.Prf.Hy.Morley;tr.[Lubbock'sBest iooBks.]i/6 c 8 Routledge [i779J 93 Twining, Tlios. [tr.] The Politics of Aristotle : tr. [Cassell's National Library] 31^. , c/. eif. 18° Cassell [1789] 89 In same vol. is an anon. tr. of LONGINUS' On the Sublime [ut C^^Sl Treatises and Aids. Generally. Smith + Grundy, "fej.w"" - Aiistotelianisra [Chief Ancient Philosophies] 2/6 f 8' S. P. C. IC 86 The Ethics by SMITH and the Logical Tyeaiises, Metaphys,, Psychol, and Politics by GRUNDY. Ethics, Nicomachean, Stewart, J. A. Notes on the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle, 2 vols. 8" $8 «?MaciiIiuan! .a^. y.' 92 The text adopted Is that of BYWATER \ut K § 194]. A learned, lucid and practical commentary, brinjlngr together all the pi'ittcipal eriticism since Sir Alex. GRANT'S wk. ["i'ffi.JS, C § 9I wh. was the last complete Engl, coram. 133 Philosophy] STOICS AND STOICISM. ECLECTICS. [Ancient C §§11-14 Poetics. Butcher, Prf. S. H. Aristotle's Conception of Fine Art and Poetry— /» his Aspects of the Gk. Genius, ut K % 187. The substance of lects, (at Edin. Univ.) wh. accompanied a detailed reading: of tlie Poetics. Prickard, A. O. Aristotle on the Art of Poetry [a lect. deliv. at Glasgow] 3/6 ($i)gl.8° Macmillan 91 A clear and agreeably- written account of the Poetics ; popular and shorL Politics. *Newman, W. L. —the Intro, to his edn. of this bk., ut K § 194. Cents, a complete ace. of Aristotle's theory of the Commonwealth, iUustr. w, immense knowledge from anc. and mod. history. 11. STOICS AND STOICISM. Generally. Treatise. Brown, Rev. J. Baldwin Stoics and Saints : lectures on the later heathen moralists 7/6 8° MacLehose, Glasgow 93 Fosthum. pub. lects. on EPICTETUS. MARCUS AUREHUS, The Stoic and Society, Monastic System, St, BERNARD, BECKET, FRANCIS OF A5SISI, St. LOUIS OF FRANCE, WICLIF. Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius [A.r>. 1 21-180]. Texts —z;. K § 194. Translations. Thoughts : Long, Geo. [tr.] Thoughts of Marcus Aurel. Antoninus : transl. pott 8° }i.„ Macmiiian, n. r. [^9] 90 With btOKraph. sketch, Introd. and notes. A new edn. of bk. in 3B,3B. C § ". Uniform w. WHEWELL'S Plato [utC% 8], and LONG'S Epictettis lut in/.\ CleantheS — &. infra, sub nam. Zeno (Pearson, Wachsmuth). Epictetus. Texts —V. K § 194. Translations. Discourses, Encheiridion, Fragments. Long, Geo. [tr.] Discourses of Epict.; w. the Encheir. and Fragras., tr. ; w. intro. and notes pott 8° ^..^ Mtcmiuan. n. y. ^^9\ 9° The only Engl. tr. of real value, and the only complete one. Uniform w. WHEWELL'S Ptato [itt C § 8] and LONG'S Marc. Auret. [itt sup.']. There is a superior edn. ,in 2 vols, pott S* on handmade paper 10/6 (fix) '91, of wh. there is a L.P. issue (igo only), 2 vols, post 8° 21/- ?tt. ( JS) '91. Selection. Teaching of Epictetus, The : [Lubbock's Best lOO Books] i/6 c 8° Routledge 91 Tra. of the Encheiriiion, w. selns, fr. Dissert, and Fragments. Seneca [a.d. 5-65]. Treatise. CtJNLlFFE, Dr. Jno. W. Influence of Seneca on Elizabethan Tragedy— tit K § 22, Zeno [of Citlum ; b. B.C. 340] and ClOantheS [of Assos], who, w. Chrysippus of Soli [B.C. 282-209], were the founders of the Stoic philos. as a completed system. Texts [Fragments only remain] — v. K § 194. Treatises. Pearson, A. C. Intro, and Notes— /17 his Fragments of Zeno and Cleanthes, «/ K § 194. The Hare Prize Essay for 1890, but unlike most Prize Essays, wh., written as a rule by younff men for the purpo-seof the moment, give promise rather than performance, this little wk.— like BrYCE'S Hoiy Roman Empire and McCOLL'S Greek Sceptics, two other prize essays— has permanent value, not merely for its complete coll. of the fragments, butalso for the skilful arrangement .ind learned comm. wh. set the passages on. The Intro, is full and valuable. Wachsmuth, Curt Commentatio i. et ii. de Zenone Citiensi et Cleanthe Assio ea. xm. 4° GSttingeit 74 14. ECLECTICS. Cicero [b.c. 106-43]. Texts —V. K § 21S. Translations. De Amicitia and De Senectute : Edmonds, Cyrus R. [tr.] On Friendship and on Old Acje by ClceW ! tr. 1/- c 8° Bell [jO] SO Melmoth, Wm. [tr.] Old Age and Friendship by Cicero : tr. fCassell's N.atl. Lib.] 3;/, 18° CasscU [1773-77] So Tusculanae Disputationes. bk. i. Black, Rob. [tr.] Death no Bane; tr,, w. notes [ = bk. i. o/Tusc. Disp.] 5/- c 8° Paul 89 134 Philosophy] BACON. BENTHAM. BERKELEY. [Modern C §§15-19 15. NEO-PYTHAGOREANS, NEO-PLATONISTS, JEWISH-ALEXANDRIANS. ApoUonius of Tyana [c. Aor ^ B.C.-97 a.d.]. Treatise. GiLDERSLBEVE, Basil L. [Am.] ApoUonius of Tyana— /« his Essays and Studies 8° fas° '"■ Murray, Baium. 14/- Putnam V" Jambliehus (of Chalds) [fl. 309-329 a.d.]. Texts —V. K § 194. Treatise. Blass, F. Commentatio de Antiphonte sophista lamblichi auctore im. 8° Toeche, Kiel 89 Longinus [a.d. 205-270]. Texts —V. K § 194. Translations. De Sublimitate : Anon, [tr.] Longlnus On the Sublime : tr. [Cassell's Natl. Lib.] 3(/., f/. 66 Appieton, Af. r. l3 Cents, some minor additions to and seven more Essays than the previous edn. (1S62) t« 9 1 Ryland F. Ethics : an introductory manual for use of University students [cram-bk. ] c 8° ,0^, „,. Macmiiian, A', y. 93 Seth, Prf. Jas. Freedom as an Ethical Postulate i/- 8° Blackwood 91 *SpenceR, Herb. Principles of Ethics, 2 vols.— «^ C § 62. end or not. Vide HUXLEY, infra, s.v. Evolution and Ethics. ZlEGLER, Prf. Theob. Social Ethics : outlines of a doctrine of morals [tr.] 3/- c 8° Williams 92 Roman- Catholic Text-books— v. A § 99. 'Series. Sonnenscheln . ^^ Ethical Library : ed. Jno. H. Muirhead ^-P- '=■ ^ Macmiiian, a^. k. 93 "'■P^S- BOSANQOET, Dr. Bern. Civilhaiion 0/ Christendom : and other si.tdUs I To b= followed by works by Leslie Stephen, Prf. A. SmGwiCK, D.av. DU!,A»«u , y (K< A §8] 4/6 ($1.10) 93 G. Ritchie, J. H. Muirhead, and Others. ERVANT,Dr.Sophiei'Aori!.S'<«rf«JmC,5a?-a<;/M, contg. much of its pith, sometimes verbally the same, sometimes newly stated. Lindner, Dr. G. A. Manual of Empirical Psychology [tr.]— «^ D § 162 : Pedagogical Psychol. Shoup, Prf. Frcs. A. [Am. ] Mechanism and Personality : an outline of philosophy $i-30 12° Ginn, Boston 91 Metaphysical rather than psychol., as it purports to be. Regards psychol. as an introd. to philos., and comprehends ethics. Sully, Prf. Jas. The Human Mind : a text-book of psychology, 2 vols. 8° $^r~^i^~^ 92 taiy, and written w. spec, i , _^ , , - T 00 Sonnenschein ■ ^^^ . *WUNDT, Prf. Wilh.- Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology [tr.] » MSSaiiSrATy; *" P'^e- ' Tr. and ed. by Jas. Edwin CREIGHTON [Am.] and Edw. B. TZTCIIEMER [Am.J Physiological and Experimental Psychology. Carus, Dr. Paul [Am. Eth.] The Soul of Man— »if A § 8, s.v. Ethical Religion. Of some (popular) value here. ,, ,, — z'» ^?.r Fundamental Problems, «< A § 8. oo-nrn- Intemat. Congi-ess of Experim. P.sychology. Official Rept. 2nd Session [London '92] J/- r 8 Williams 93 JASTROW, Prf. Jos. [Am.] Epitome of Experimental Psychology [Epitomes of Three Sciences] ^lc. 12 Open Ct. Pb. Co., Chicago Aspects of modem psychol.; psychol. in Germany; in Franco and Italy ; in Gt. Brit, and U.S.A. 00 5z S cribner, N. V. Ladd, Prf. Geo. T. [Am.] Outlines of Physiological Psychology ° TJ;- Longman , 9^ An abridgmt. of his l-lcmenfs ofPhyM. P^ycUl. [ul ffi.ffi. C i ?.]. intended as a coUeKe text.bk., and omitting details unsuitable for the less advanced student. ♦Ziehen, Prf. Theod. Introduction to Physiological Psychology, tr. C. C. Van Liew+Dr. Otto sonnenschein Beyer; 21 ill. [Intro. Science Textbks.] c 8 jr^^iiiHSiuSHrAn^. 92 ?1yThrc'^ctsL^%^1Sy;;^l°„."orcrreSte^^^^^^^^^^^^ psychol.=psycho.physics). Animal Automatism. Huxley, Prf. Thos. H. Animal Automatism— ?'» Ats Collected Essays, vol. i., u/K% 89. AlXenUOn. ... , ,, ,? lm _ po y y. open Cour t Pb. Co., CAtofo „, RiBOT, Prf. Th. The Psychology of Attention [Am. tr. (fr. French)] cS Jp-CSSiSiS 9^ A closely-reasoned and luminous exposition of a genuine piece of psychol. work ; of equal value to the psychologist and the educator. i»i pp. Brain : Physiology' and Pathology-for purely Medical Bki. z-. h» § 15- Ireland Dr W W. Through the Ivory Gate : studies in psychol. and history ; ports. 10/6 8° Bell & Bradfute, Ediii. 89 Warner, Dr. Frcs. ' Lectures on Mental Faculty-«< D § 162. Double Consciousness. Binet, Alf. On Double Consciousness [Am. tr. (fr. French)] 50^. c 8° Open Ct. Pb. Co., Chicago 91 Experimental studies ; w. an introd. essay on experimental psychology in France. Philosophy] >€STHETICS. [Special Departments 12° Funk, N. V. 9S. C §72 Dreams. SCHOLZ, Dr. Friedr. Sleep and Dreams, tr. H. M. Jewett [Am.] ,, „ v, a T^wK-rrrAml A popular-scientific essay by the Director of the Bremen I„sane Asylum. With an essay on the .4„aloiry ,!/fnsanil> lo SU,p «ni Dreams, by Dr. MlIo A JEWETT [Am.J. Morbid Psychology. ,^ ^^. ^^ RiBOT, Prf. Th. The Diseases of Personality [tr. (fr. Fch.)] [i57 PP-] 75^- 12° Open Ct. Pb.Co..a..^o9I An interesttoff little bk. by one of the best modern students of psychol. Thoroughly judicial m temper. Deaf, Dumb, and Blind, The~v. D § 169 Genius. c, 1 c 3/6 wai ter Sc ott. . _, LOMBROSO, Prf. Cesare Tlie Man of Genius [tr.] ; ill. [Contemp. Science Ser.] c 8 5- ,.-s,ribner, Nrv. ^i Regards genius, and even talent, as adisease, every mind dlvergingfr. the common order being apparently »«/»* insane. Capably written, but his theory ^overdone. N.SBET. J. F. The Insanity of Genius and the General Inequality of Human Faculty phys.oL ^^^^ ^ ^ considered ' ■ , . j The a.thor's standpt. is that genius lite ..insanity, idiocy scrofula "5^ J^^ fout, -rsumpU^^^^^^^^^ ^l^ZJ.^ Heredity Hypnotism Mental Evolution. BiNET, Alf. Jones, T. Mann —V. H § 42 : Biology. — V. H* § IS : Nervous System. The Psychic Life of Micro-Organisms [Am. tr.] [l35 PP-l So^- Open Ct. Pub. Co., Chicago 89 A good tr. of an interesting little bk. on the world of psychic life in a drop of water-astonishingly Uke our own 1 Conscience in Animals = Appendix D to Herb. Spencer's Justice— «if C § 62. An admirable study, w. very Interesting illustrative proofs of a sense of morality in animals, and an obedience to it in varying decrees. Objective Existence. PiKLER, Prf. Julius The Psychology of Belief in Objective Existence, pt. i. 4/6 8° Williams This part deals with Ohjsctiva capable of presentation. A good contribution. Pedagogic Psychology-z/. d §§ 162-163. Pleasure and Pain Pain, Pleasure and y^Isthctics An essay on the psychology of pain and pleasure w. spec, refer, to .Esthetics. —V. also H* § 35, s.v. Colour Blindness. Colour Measurement and Mixture; diagrs. [Romance of Science] 2/6 p 8° S.P.C.K. 91 Marshall, Hy. Rutgers Sight and Colour Abney, Cpt. W. de W. Though in a '. popular "series, it is full of careful and import, observations, arrived at dur. laborious investigations into the properties of the spectrum. Macmillan in prep.\ Adopts the YOUNG- Helmholtz theory of colour-vision. Theory of Colours, tr. [Sir] C. L. Eastlake o.p. \v}. 10/-] 8° Rlurray V. GOTHE, J. W. --- , , . , „ „ o - Tyndall, Prf. Jno. On Goethe's Work on Colour — in his New Fragment, «/ K § 83. Pays high tribute to Goethe's acuteness as an observer, but gives an unsparing exposure of his wcikncss as a scientific theorist. Temperaments —v. H* § 4: Physiology (Stewart). 91 40 72. AESTHETICS. General Treatises. Day Prf. Hy. N. [Am.] Principles of /Esthetics : nature, kinds, laws and uses of beauty $2.25(7/6) \^° Putnam [72] 7^5 First cdn. pub. sub tit. " T/te Science of j^sthetics." 1872. Kant, Imman. Kritik \_sic\ of Judgment, tr. Dr. J. H. Bernard— a/ C § 40. Knight, Prf. Wm. The Philosophy of the Beautiful, 2 pts. [Univ. Extens. Manuals] p 8° ersT^f^eSr^TO-: 5i ; 9j An outline of the chief esthetic ideals of the world. Semi-popular. Tlie best thing in it is on the general theory of beauty audits application to poetry. LoNGlNBS [a.d. 205-270] On the Sublime [tr,], «/ C § 14 : Eclectics. History of .ffisthetics. *Bosanquet, Dr. Bern. A History of /Esthetic [Library of Philosophy] 8° ^, 10 /6 So nnenschcin 75 Macmillan, X. K. 92: very important and learned wk., dealing critically w. theories of beauty from SOCRATES to Wm. MORRIS and the pro;jressIve developmt. ot the workinij idea of beauty in the hist, of Fine Art, showing how ^reat changes in the conditions of life have affected this developmt. It is masterly in systeinatization and highly suggestive, but difficult reading owing to its philosophic tennliiology, wh. has been rendered necessary by the acuteness of the author's refinements and the closeness of ms reasoning. Pp. xxiii. 502, w. index. , 144 Philosophy] POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY. [Special Departments c"§§73-74 Esthetic Culture. Child, Theod. [Am.] The Desire of Beauty [postlmmously pub.] c 8° ^^-^^S^^Z^' 92 Sentimental an:l somewhat threadbare truisms and ancient lieresics of the journalistic stamp ; with some sensible criticism. RUSKIN, Jno. CoUingwood, W. G. The Art Teaching of John Rusldn 7/6 c 8° Percival (Riv. & Perc.) 91 .ffisthetie Element in Morality. Sharp, Dr. Flc. C. [Am.] The .(Esthetic Element in Morality 8° Mayer & Miiller,5«r/. 93 An attempt to reconcile the Utilitarian and Intuitionalist views, recognising the clement of beauty la conduct whilst at the same time contending that it has its origin In utility. Physical Beauty. FiRENZUOLA, Agnolo [1493-f. 1545] Of the Beauty of Women [tr.] ; w. intro. Th. Child [Am.] 7/6 c 8° Osgood 92 A work— a'" Dialogue"— of the early 15th cent, by a Florentine, now first tr. into English fr. the Italian. Walker, Alex. Beauty in Woman analyzed and classified ; ill. Hy. Howard 12/6 8° Morison, ffto^»-. [36] 92 Still of some small value. Musical ^Esthetics —v. i § 123. Philosophy of Art —v. 1 § S3. Philosophy of Poetry— z-. k § 62. Psychology of .ffiSthetiCS— !■. C § 71, s.v. Pleasure and Pain (Marshall). 73. PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY. History of the Philosophy of History. Flint, Prf. Rob. The Philosophy of History in Europe, vol. i. : France 21/- 8° Blackwood 94 To occupy 3 vols. An important work. 74. POLITICAL and SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY. Generally. ♦Mackenzie, Jno. S. An Introduction to Social Philosophy— ?<;; D § 125. Ideal Commonwealths (with Experiments therein and Criticism thereof)- „„ 00 soc. H oughton, Boston rooi -^ Bellamy, Edw. [Am.] Looking Backward, 200&-1887 : a romance c 5 — ,;- w. Reeves Looj yz . ,. .. fc„,^ cv-trh nirlurinB- an ideal commonwealth m the yr. eooo. Excited a great deal of popular Interest on Its appearance, 350,000 copies having, it is '*-'°S bS'?o!dtaSlVic'!ldS™ifsfirst^r^^^^ « Boston to propagate its ■■princfples." It may even V said to have eiven rise to the "Nationalist Movement "tfiere, A i_ T» S* '" ^natto _ _ Hertzka, Dr. Theodor Freeland : a social anticipation, tr. Arthur Kansom co sTTppikonTiYrrr 9' in„„M»„„i;f „™noniisf "ahiB-horiestofthe'ManchesterSchool.'" The bk., which at once reached a considerable circulation abroad, has resulted By a "'^"^^"-"^ Viennesejoht. ^^^^^ dlffefp^s of SetS aUd Austria for the formation of a colony, in wh. the author's views may be pracUcaUy tested. L'ESTRANGE, Miles What we are Coming to 2/6 c 8° Douglas. ^^Z^. 92 A forcast of Engl. te».for. and ».... a generation hence, intended ^^^^t^^-^^/'i^y^i,^^^^" "°""""" ""'°"" °' "" "''■ °' "" ^°°''"' """' MORE, Sir Thos. [1480-1535] Utopia, tr. Ralph Robinson [1551] "■/• l''"- 4^/"] s 4° Kelmscott Press 93 Forms a very handsome edn., In antique type designed by Wm. MORRIS. t, <=,mP ed Maur Adams ■ w. intro. [conts. also .ffrfw. K and Roper's Zz/e] [Camelot Ser.] l/- 16° Walter Scott 90 „ tr. same, ed.^ Maur. Adams , miro l [Cassell's National Library] 3d. ; cl. td. 12° Cassell 91 " " Originally pub. ta Latin in isi6;transl. by Ralph ROBINSON in 1551. -T c -NT^mlio,-,. l/- c 8° Reeves & Turner 91 Morris, Wm. News from Nowhere ' • 1- . 1,™ =T,™= „,< how he would like us to live and what Is hU conception of the mens Sana in corpore sano. Excellently written and Mr. MORRIS, poet and socialist, here slj^Jfy-'^'^^j^J;'' S™cott Press Edn., w. cut by E. BURNE-JONES, -w. 4=/- nt. s 4° '9=. A Dream of John Ball ; and A King's Lesson i/- Reeves & Turner [88] 89 R^^?iR-iug^"^''^ Se"'of tkl'sockUstk Future, tr. Hy. Wright 1/-; ./. 2/6 c 8° Sonnenschein [93] 94 Bya^rominent Radicalmember of the Reichstag giving a^sjnking^m. of J^coj^ and its results In the .brm of the diary of an ardent RoussEAi;, Jean Jacques [.7.2-78]. The Social Contract = - F^dpl- o^oMcd r^ghtsJAm. tr.] ; _ ^ ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^ Shaw Alb [Am.] Icaria : a chapter in hist, of communism $1 12° Putnam, iV. Y. 84 An impartial hist, of communes wh. have attempted to realize^the rational democratic communism of the Utopian philosophers. ^ SUPPL. Philosophy] PHILOSOPHY OF LAW. [Special Departments C §75 75. PHILOSOPHY OF EiaHT and OF LAW. FiCHTE, J. G. The Science of Riglits, tr. A. E. Kroeger [Am.] ; w. ref. Prf. W. T. Harris [Am.] [Eng. and For. Phil. Lib.] 12/- 8° Paul So HOBBES, Thos. [158S-1679] The Elements of Law, Natural and Politic, ed. Dr. F. Tbnnies— a/ C § 36. LiOY, Prf. Diodato The Philosophy of Right, tr. [fr. Italian] Dr. W. Hastie, 2 vols. [Eng. & For. Phil. Lib.] 2 1/- p 8° Paul 91 "With spec, refer, to the principles and devel. of Law. Written fr. the pt. of view of the philosopher rather than of the jurist — in fact, the bic. forms a very good summary of the hist, of pliUos. fr. the earliest period to the pres. time. Watt, W. A. An Outline of Legal Philosophy 5/- c 8° Clark, Edin. 93 146 THE BEST BOOKS A READER'S GUIDE TO THE CHOICE OF THE BEST AVAILABLE BOOKS {ABOUT 50,000) IN EVERY DEPARTAIENT OF SCIENCE ART AND LITERATURE WITH THE DATES OF THE FIRST AND LAST EDITIONS AND THE PRICE SIZE AND PUBLISHER'S NAME OF EACH BOOK % Contiibtttian loiviarbs Sgstematk §ibIi:0J5raplj37 BY WILLIAM SWAN SONNENSCHEIN WITH COMPLETE AUTHORS AND SUBJECTS INDEXES LONDON SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO. NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS BOSTON: THE AMERICAN LIBRARY BUREAU First Edition : September, 1887. Second Edition (Stereotyped): March, 1891 ; Reissued June, 1891 ; Reissued March, 1894; Reissued ' ■ September, 1896. The First Supplement, entitled " A Reader's Guide," bringing the work down to 1893-94, was pubhshed in 1895, uniform with this work. Butler & Tanner, The Selwood Printing Works, Frome, and London. READER'S GUIDE TO CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE Being the FIRST SUPPLEMENT to XTbe Best Boohs A READER'S GUIDE TO THE CHOICE OF THE BEST AVAILABLE BOOKS {ABOUT 50,000) IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE ART AND LITERATURE WITH THE DATES OF THE FIRST AND LAST EDITIONS AND THE PRICE SIZE AND PUBLISHER'S NAME OF EACH BOCK BY WILLIAM SWAN SONNENSCHEIN With complete Authors and Subjects Index Notitia libroium est dimidium studiorum et maxima eruditionis pars exactara libioium habere cognitioneiu SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO,' NEW YORK : G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 1895 "3f tbe sentence of a ju^gc ever await anyone, to coit&emn bim to bac&s sbtps an5 puniebments, let neitber tbe penftentlare wears bfm witb tbe manu= facture of tbe raw material, nor let tbe ores &ug from tbe mines burt bfs bar5 banbs ; just let bim compose a Xesicon. ffor wbg sboul& 5 mention angtbing else? Surelg, tbis single labour batb all tbe forms of torture."— Scaliger. "flocturna versate manu, versate diurna."— Horace. "(30, little booft, ©o& sent) tbee good passage, anC» speciallg let tbis be tbB prager "Wnto tbem all tbat tbee will rea& or bear, "Wabere tbou art wrong, after tbeir belp to call, Ubce to correct in ang part or all,"— chaucbr. Batiev & Tanner, Tlie Selwood Printing Works, Froroe, and London. Some selected representative Press Opinions on tlie Second Edition of "THE BEST BOOKS." VOO pages, 4to, cloth extra, 31a. 6d. nett (%9 nett). Academy: "This new edition will command a still wider popu- larity, for there can be no question of its immense superiority as a careful and extremely well-edited bibliography. The most important feature is its classification. He evinces a talent for bibliographical classification which is extremely rare." Antl- Jacobin: "A book which, in all senses of the word, is one of the weightiest of our generation. . . . That any single man should undertake such a labour is wonderful enough, but much more wonderful is its triumphant accomplishment." Atbeuseum: "The second edition is a distinct advance on its pre- decessor, and of its predecessor frequent use gave us a high opinion. It is a book which even a man of great learning may be glad to consult, and a man beginning to learn will find in- valuable. The volume does Mr. Sonnenschein infinite credit, and proves him to possess a wide and sound knowledge of books." Bookseller : "Deserves nothing but unqualified praise." British Weekly: "It is the reader's guide. Already a reference book in all English-speaking lands, it will in its new and greatly improved form take a place from which it will not be dislodged. " Dally Chronicle: "An exceedingly useful and valuable publica- tion." Dally News : " It has been, and is, of the greatest service to mul- titudes of people engaged in literary, scientific and artistic re- search. An extraordinary performance. Of all the books of reference in the British Museum, Mr. Sonnensohein's Guide appears to be most in request. " Glasgow Herald : "The new edition is a distinct advance on its predecessor — valuable though it was. The volume is one with- out which no library of any pretensions can be said to be properly equipped. " Globe : ' ' Lovers of the library agree in considering [it] one of the very best bibliographies ever framed. A comparison with the first edition shows what a long and arduous labour the author has devoted to its development." Journal of Education: "We gave a hearty welcome to the first edition, which appeared in 1887 ; and the second edition, which, thougli not greatly increased in bulk, has nearly double the number of entries, deserves no less high commendation." Library Review: "That admirable work, TAe Best Books, has turned out the thorough success that its great merit so well deserves." Literary World: "We are not surprised at the success of the venture, which has been very great. Speaking for ourselves, we cannot be too grateful for the assistance we have obtained from the first edition, and we have to express warm acknow- ledgment for a work tliat, taken as a whole, is the most perfect of its kind in existence, and one simply of inestimable value to book-buyers of all classes. " Literary World, Boston : "It was recognised on its first appear- ance as the most widely useful bibliography in our language. He has now brought out a second edition, much enlarged, of which it would be difficult to speak too highly as regards its accuracy, comprehensiveness, and fairness. The brief notes explaining the special nature of the most important books arc numerous and judicious." Manchester Examiner : •■ A work of such tremendous industry, such admirable arrangement, and such incalculable useful- ne.ss." Nature: "The idea is excellent, und has been excellently carried out. Mr. Sonnenschein may be congratulated on the manner in wliich his task has been accomplished. Two separate in- dexes add greatly to its value. " Newsagent: "The classification is most complete, although a marvel of simplicity. It is unquestionably one of the most important books of the year." Notes and Queries: "To the excellence of Mr. Sonnenschein's system and to the value of his work we have before testified. The amount of information is only less exemplary than its accuracy. No bibliographical library can be without the new edition, and there are few students and workers whose labours will not be lightened by a reference to its pages." Pall Mall Gazette : "The result of Mr. Sonnenschein's herculean labouis is a guide from which the student or general reader may at any moment discover the ' best books ' concerning the subject in which he is for the time being interested. . . . There can be no doubt that he has produced a work of the greatest usefulness to students, literary men, and journalists — to all, in fact, who know how to use and appreciate a good book. Indeed, taken altogether, Mr. Sonnenschein's ' Guide ' is as perfect as any merely human and ' one man ' book can be ; and no student or booklover who can afford a guinea and a half should be without it." Publishers' Circular: "This new edition of his admirable work almost amounts to a new book. It is a wonderful and monu- mental testimony to Mr. Sonnenschein's energy and enter- prise, and no one with any knowledge of bibliography can fail to be struck by the immense labour involved in its production and the mass of information which it provides. ... A book of reference conceived on such admirable lines and carried out with such conscientiousness and thoroughness." Review of Reviews : " Undoubtedly the most useful book of the year, compiled with a care and accuracy it would be impossible to surpass. Every branch of knowledge seems to be repre- sented, and the arrangement as a whole leaves nothing to be desired. The most complete, most trustworthy, aftd most indispensable guide to good literature that has ever been made : a monument of wide and varied knowledge and of patient and unremitting indiistry." Scotsman: " Useful as the work proved in its original form, it is likely to , prove more than doubly so in this greatly improved issue . . . invaluable to anyone who is hunting for books on a special subject ... it will soon be in every-day con- sultation among bibliographers." Speaker : "The arrangement deserves unqualified praise, for it is both admirable and ingenious." Spectator: "It is at once one of the most useful and needed books. ... A work which not only displays great industry an(J unusual thoroughness, but which is calculated to be of much value to every reader and student who wishes to know what recently published books are to be found in any department. . . . The excellent index of subjects — to which, as well as to the index of authors, we can give unqualified praise." Times : " Evinces a monumental industry." Westminster Review: "One of the most complete and useful books of reference for literary people that we have ever seen. Its usefulness cannot be overstated ; it is invaluable, A marvel of patient industry and skilful classification." LONDON : SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO. NEW YORK ! G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS. Butler & Tanner. The Selwood Printins Works, Fron"!, and London. A SUPPLEMENT TO "ZliC l&CBt BOOftS." Uniform in size and external appearance with that book, A IReaber's (5ui&e to dontempotar? Xiterature, BEING A SUPPLEMENT TO "THE BEST BOOKS." Continuing the Literature to the year 1895. BY WILLIAM SWAN SONNENSCHEIN. With Complete Authors and Subjects Index (in, One Alphabet), Synopsis of Contents, Addresses of Publishers and Learned Societies, etc. Pages 1-16, Index and Synopsis pp. i.-lxxiv., Body pp. 1-775- 255. net. (?7-So)*. EXTRACTS FROM SOME PRESS OPINIONS. Academy.— " il/?-. ^onnenscluins'^'h^Vi^^x. Books still remains the only successful atj mpt at a classified bibliography of modern English literature in.a U its departments. He has now produced a Supplement, as large as the original work, in which he not only continues his bibliography through later years, but fills up some gaps that he had before left. Growing bolder as he proceeds^ he \s now no longer content to select the books that are best on their several subjects, but he has included books that are moderate or even bad, leaving out those only which may be called ephemeral. Some of his notes are merely explanatory of the contents ; others assign praise where praise is due ; a few contain sharp but de- served censure. Enough has been said to show what an immense field Mr. Sonnenschein covers and how paimtaliing and accurate he has been in his work'* Atlienseum.— " Mr. Sonnenschein hasgreatly enhanced the value of his excellent work of reference The Best Books by issuing A Reader's Guide to Contemporary Literature. . . . The additions are both numerous and important. . . . The^ brief notes as a rule maintain the compiler's reputation as a Judicious and well-in- formed adviser. . . . Too great praise can hardly be bestowed on Mr. Sonnenschein for the care, industry, and knowledge he has brought to bear on this excellent compilation^ which is in its way quite indispensable." Bookseller. — " We can only repeat our verdict on the earlier volume, that the work is unquestionably t?ie best key to current literature which has ever been placed at the &\sposal of the reader. A word of special praise is due to the comphkness and accuracy of the index, while the information now given as to American publishers and prices is a new feature of distinct value''' Daily Chronicle.— " TIfv. Sonnenschein^ s original volume has established for itself a place as one of the vtost useful books of reference in the world. This supplement will prove equally valu- able . . . It seerHs to us remarkably complete and extremely easy of reference, . . . The work is simply indispensable to anybody engaged in any kind of literary investigation." Daily News. — '^Contemporary literature is here classified and indexed in such a way as to form a most valuable guide to any good modern library, , , . One can see here at a glance what notable works have been published, either here or in A merica, in recent year's. Such a work, extending to Soo closely-printed quarto pages, must have involved an immense amount of labour, which, like all labour of the kind, can never be really remunerative, and the debt of gratitude which Mr. Sonnenschein has earned from all who are in any way concerned with modem English literature is considerable." Glasgow Herald. — " The volume cannot fail to receive a very cordial zvelcome from all students and literary men— indeed, from all who have to do with the reading, or even the buying, of books. It is a remarkable monument of industry and^ it may be added, of skilful arrangement." Guardian.— " yi^-we hook-lovers will enjoy it as much as « ramble through a proper library ^'^ Journal of Education.—" The second edition of Best Books appeared in iSgi, and we are well within the mark in saying that uot a week has parsed since then without our having had occasion to take it down from our shelves. Every literary man who possesses The Best Books is bound, if he wishes to keep his know- ledge up to date, to procure for hitnself the Suppletnent." Literary World. — " We accord it a hearty welcome, and rank it head and shoulders above the many other so-called ""guides ' to liter- ature. . , . It will be an admirable adjunct to its predecessor, which is a necessary companion to the litterateur, the bookseller and the librarian." Notes and Queries.— "Z-z'^e its predecessor^ it is a work of im- mense labour and corresponding utility,. . . , It gives an account of the works—English and American— published during the years under consideration, with the date, forin, price atui name of publisher, . . . A complete list of authors and subjects renders the task of reference as simple as it can be. . . . How useful a work such as this, is at once apparent. Supposing the Supplements to be continued, one has an available Index to Literature with something approaching almost to a digest of contents. We con- gratulate Mr. Sonnefischein heartily upon his task, and do not doubt having to own frequent obligation to his labours." Times.—" A work of monumental labour . . . sufficiently re- commended as an invaluable work of reference by this description of its character and purpose^ and by the care with which it has been compiled." Westminster Gazette.—" It is will-nigh as large as the initial volume, and represents an amount of labour which 7nust have been appalling. . . . There are also a/ter these particulars ' characteri- zations,' mainly descriptive, of nearly every work, giving the subject-matter and scope of the book, the point of view of the author, and if of a controz'ersial character the writer or scJiool which the author chiefiy opposes. In many cases an independent critical estitnate of the value of the book has been added. . , , An idea of the extent of the field covered will be gathered from the fad that the Authors Index contains about ii,ooo entries, and thai devoted to Subjects over 3,000. [/^] is a work which ought to be in every library, ptiblic or private, worthy of the name, and should be handyof reference for all who have occasion in any way to consult books," Westminster Review.— "C?»5 of the most complete and useful %ooks of reference for literary people that we have ever seen. Its usefulness cannot be overstated — it is invaluable : a marvel of patient industry and skilful classification." ,^' %u