The work of the Open Court Publishing Co : an illustrated catalogue of its publications covering a period of twenty-one years (1887-1907) consisting of a complete book list with brief characterizatiion of authors and contents, including also a selection of noteworthy articles from the Monist and the Open court . (1) The Simplicity of Language; (2) The Identity of Lan-guage and Thought; and (3) The Simplicity of Prof. F. Max Muller. Pages, 128. Cloth, 75 cents. The ripe expression of a life-long labor in the studj of the science of lan-guage.—Scotsman, Edinburgh. The work is attracti
The work of the Open Court Publishing Co : an illustrated catalogue of its publications covering a period of twenty-one years (1887-1907) consisting of a complete book list with brief characterizatiion of authors and contents, including also a selection of noteworthy articles from the Monist and the Open court . (1) The Simplicity of Language; (2) The Identity of Lan-guage and Thought; and (3) The Simplicity of Prof. F. Max Muller. Pages, 128. Cloth, 75 cents. The ripe expression of a life-long labor in the studj of the science of lan-guage.—Scotsman, Edinburgh. The work is attractively got np, and simply invaluable, not only to thestudent of language and thought in relationship to language, but to the gen-eral reader, for the lectures are as luminous as they are learned, as captivat-ing as they are suggestive, and as striking as they are scholarly. No youngmen ought to be without tlfem. They are a cornucopia of thought, research,definition, argument and mental stimulus.—The Gentlemans Journal. Three Lectures on the Science of Language. The Oxford University Extension Lectures, with a Supple-ment, My Predecessors, an essay on the genesis of TheScience of Thought. By Prof. F. Max Mlller. Pages, , 75 cents net. (3s. 6d. net.) 135 THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING F. MAX to TJie Open Court, December, 1900. 136 THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO., CHICAGO. MULLER (Con.) Prof. F. Max Miilk-r ])()ints out that the (hffcrcncc betweenman and animal is (hie In huij^^uajT^c, yet there is no mysteryin hmouage. lliou£;ht is thieker than blood, and the bondsof tlie same language and the same ideas are stronger thanfamih- or raee. Max T^iiillcrs supremely simple theory is hotly disputed. 1)nt it is easilyvindicated, provided one is not a dualist on principle. —Ilic JiCiicoii, suhject is admirably handled with that vigor and clearness which char-acterize all the utterances of Max Midler. The little volume will be a delight
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