5Scepticism and Animal Faith, pp. v and vi.
6Ibid., pp. 11 f.
7Reason in Common Sense, New York, 1911; p. 93.
8Scepticism and Animal Faith, pp. 192, 298, 305, 308.
9R. in C. S., pp. 3, 6 and 17.
10R. in Science, New York, 1906, p. 318; R. in C. S., p. 96.
11He makes Democritus the hero of his latest volume, Dialogues in Limbo.
12S. and A. F., pp. viii and vii.
13Ibid., pp. 237 and 271; R. in C. S., p. 189; Winds of Doctrine, p. 199.
14R. in S., pp. 75, 131, 136.
15R. in C. S., pp. 219, 214, 212; Winds, p. 150; S. and A. F., pp. 287, 257, 218–9.
16R. in C. S., p. 211.
17Winds, p. 107.
18R. in Religion, New York, 1913; p. 4.
19R. in S., p. 297; R. in R., pp. 28, 34.
20S. and A. F., p. 6; R. in C. S., p. 128; R. in R., pp. 27 f.
21R. in R., pp. 103, 125.
22R. in R., pp. 137, 130, 172.
23Margaret Münsterberg in The American Mercury, Jan., 1924, p. 74.
24The Sense of Beauty, New York, 1896, p. 189; R. and A. F., p. 247; Winds, p. 46; R. in R., pp. 98, 97.
25R. in R., p. 240.
26Ibid., p. 273.
27R. in S., p. 239; S. and A. F., p. 54.
28R. in Society, New York, 1915, pp. 22, 6, 195, 41; R. in C. S., p. 57; R. in S., p. 258.
29R. in Society, pp. 45, 77, 79.
30Ibid., pp. 164–167.
31Ibid., p. 171.
32Ibid., p. 81; R. in S., p. 255, referring, no doubt, to the age of the Antonines, and implicitly accepting the judgment of Gibbon and Renan that this was the finest period in the history of government.
33R. in Society, pp. 87, 66, 69.
34Ibid., pp. 125, 124; R. in Science, p. 255.
35R. in Society, p. 52.
36Ibid., p. 217; Sense of Beauty, p. 110.
37Herbert W. Smith in American Review, March, 1923; p. 195.
38R. in R., p. 83; but cf. R. in Science, p. 233.
39R. in Society, p. 123 f.
40R. in C. S., p. 252.
41Ibid., p. 9.
42R. in Science, p. 237.
43Herbert W. Smith in American Review, March, 1923; p. 191.
44R. in C. S., p. 28.
45Ibid., p. 202.
46R. in Science, pp. 89–90.
47Margaret Münsterberg in The American Mercury, Jan., 1924, p. 69.
48Some Problems of Philosophy, p. 25.
49The reader who has leisure for but one book of James’s should go directly to Pragmatism, which he will find a fountain of clarity as compared with most philosophy. If he has more time, he will derive abundant profit from the brilliant pages of the (unabbreviated) Psychology. Henry James has written two volumes of autobiography, in which there is much delightful gossip about William. Flournoy has a good volume of exposition, and Schinz’s Anti-Pragmatism is a vigorous criticism.
50Pragmatism, pp. 222, 75, 53, 45.
51Ibid., p. 54.
52P. 121.
53Principles of Psychology, New York, 1890, vol. ii, p. 312.
54Whitman, Leaves of Grass, Philadelphia, 1900, pp. 61, 172.
55Pragmatism, p. 6.
56Ibid., p. 298.
57Varieties of Religious Experience, New York, 1902, p. 526.
58Pragmatism, p. 312. The answer, of course, is that unity, or one system of laws holding throughout the universe, facilitates explanation, prediction, and control.
59Ibid., p. 78.
60Ibid., p. 299.
61Kallen, William James and Henri Bergson, p. 240.
62Chesterton.
63Quoted by James (Pragmatism, p. 297) from the Greek Anthology.
64The most important of Dewey’s books are: The School and Society (1900); Studies in Logical Theory (1903); Ethics (with Tufts, 1908); How We Think (1909); The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy (1910); Democracy and Education (1913); Schools of Tomorrow (with his daughter Evelyn, 1915); Essays in Experimental Logic (1916); Creative Intelligence (1917); Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920); Human Nature and Conduct (1922). The last two are the easiest approaches to his thought.
65The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy, New York, 1910, p. 8.
66Ibid., p. 17.
67Human Nature and Conduct, New York, 1922, p. 74.
68I. of D. on P., p. 55.
69Ibid., p. 21.
70Creative Intelligence, New York, 1917, p. 36.
71Class lectures on “Psychological Ethics,” Sept. 29, 1924.
72Reconstruction in Philosophy, New York, 1920, p. 140.
73Ibid., p. 92.
74Reconstruction in Philosophy, pp. 177, 176.
75Human Nature and Conduct, p. 303.
76“Psychology and Social Science”; I. of D. on P., p. 71.
77Reconstruction, p. 75.
78Ibid., pp. 203, 205.
79New Republic, Feb. 3, 1917.
80Creative Intelligence, p. 4.
81I. of D. on P., p. 19.