. The Open court. Faith Or Man as an Animal and Man as a Memberof Society. With a Discussion of AnimalSocieties. By Dr. Paul Topinard, LateGeneral Secretary of the AnthropologicalSociety of Paris. Translated from the Frenchby Thomas J. McCormack. Pages, , gilt top, $ net (6s. 6d. net). A most Interesting volume.—Glasgow Herald. Stimulating and suggestive.—The Scotsman. The book is worth reading, whether we are or are not satisfiedwith its conclusions.—Nature. An unusually interesting volume . . suggestive in the high-est degree .... worth the time of any man to read frombeginning


. The Open court. Faith Or Man as an Animal and Man as a Memberof Society. With a Discussion of AnimalSocieties. By Dr. Paul Topinard, LateGeneral Secretary of the AnthropologicalSociety of Paris. Translated from the Frenchby Thomas J. McCormack. Pages, , gilt top, $ net (6s. 6d. net). A most Interesting volume.—Glasgow Herald. Stimulating and suggestive.—The Scotsman. The book is worth reading, whether we are or are not satisfiedwith its conclusions.—Nature. An unusually interesting volume . . suggestive in the high-est degree .... worth the time of any man to read frombeginning to end.—Times-Herald. On the Origin of Language By Ludwig Noire. Pp., 57. Paper, 15c. (ad.). This essay contains the gist of Noires theory, which is now themost accredited doctrine among philosophers; Noire is the authorof the famous utterance: No Reason without Speech; NoSrjeech without Reason. 3 iir?* j 1 1 HI | ¥ * . • . M ^9 . ? • ?_ Dr. Paul Topinard. THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO., Philosophy, Psychology, and Language—Continued History of Modern Philosophyin France By Lucien Levy-Bruhl, Maitre de Conferencesin the Sorbonne. Professor in the Ecole Libredes Sciences Politiques. With twenty-threephotogravure and half-tone portraits of Frenchphilosophers, from rare and classical a Bibliography of Modern French Phi-losophy. Handsomely bound, printed on an-tique paper with wide margins. Pages, $ net (12s. net). A more attractive book than this it has seldom been our pleasure to read.—The Methodist Review. The portraits are admirably reproduced.—Literature. It is a remarkably handsome volume . . The illustrations are truly masterpieces of art.—Chicago Israelite. Three Introductory Lectures onthe Science of Thought With a correspondence on Thought WithoutWords, between F. Max Mueller and Francis Pierre Bayle. (1647-1706.)From Levy-Bruhls History of Philosophy in France. Galton, the Duke of Argyll, George J. Rom-anes and othe


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade188, booksubjectreligion, bookyear1887