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The Philosopher's Shears

THE BREAD OF SODOM

The hunger for food and clothes and riches can never be satisfied. Their possession leaves a deeper hunger. Only God can satisfy our immortality.

THE PLUS-SIGN OF LIFE

Can we get out of life more than we invest in it? Would Livingstone or Lincoln, Paul or Jesus now live in the hearts of men but for the cross they bore?

Liberty is not measured by the number of restraints we do not have, but by the number of spontaneous activities we do have.-M. P. Follett, in The New State.

Nothing could be more absurd than to require the great majority of human beings to think for themselves in any field whatever.-Bowne.

A man's vision is the great fact about him. A philosophy is the expression of a man's intimate character, and all the definitions of the universe are but the deliberately adopted reactions of human character upon it.-William James.

Conservatives often make the mistake of thinking they can go on living on their spiritual capital; progressives are often too prone not to fund their capital.-M. P. Follett.

Not appropriation but contribution is the law of growth.-M. P. Follett.

The ignoring of differences is the most fatal mistake in politics or industry or international life; every difference that is swept up into a bigger conception feeds and enriches society; every difference which is ignored feeds on society.-M. P. Follett.

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By Edward Scribner Ames. $1.25, postpaid $1.35. The author makes a plea for humanized faith. Those who are dissatisfied with the scholastic faith of protestantism will find The New Orthodoxy a most welcome statement of the new point of view in religion.

The Problem of Democracy

Edited by Scott W. Bedford. Paper; $1.50, postpaid $1.65. This volume includes papers on the following subjects: A Working Democracy, Democracy and Our Political System, Organized Labor and Democracy, Democracy and Community Organization, Religion and Democracy, Bolshevism and Democracy, and Democracy and Socialism.

University of Chicago Sermons

By Members of the University Faculties. Edited by Theodore G. Soares. $1.50, postpaid $1.65. Their message is one to reach the heart of the modern Christian without offending his intelligence or shocking his taste, says the Independent in commenting on the sermons of this volume. These eighteen sermons are contributed by as many professors in the University of Chicago. The modern man will find them extremely helpful.

The Relation Between Religion and Science:

A Biological Approach. By Angus Stewart Woodburne. Paper; 75 cents, postpaid 85 cents. The author has shown that religion and science may exist side by side in cordial relationships where the specific functions of each are recognized.

An Introduction to the Peace Treaties

By Arthur Pearson Scott. $2.00, postpaid $2.15. "Scott's is without question the simplest, clearest, and most intelligent book on the Peace Conference published thus far."-Harry Hansen, Literary Editor, Chicago Daily News and author of The Adventures of the Fourteen Points. This book gives valuable information regarding the causes of the war, the aims of the belligerents, the peace proposals, and the framing of the Treaty of Peace.

General Psychology

By Walter S. Hunter. $2.00, postpaid $2.15. A survey of psychology with the emphasis upon the concrete experimental facts. Much attention is given to the description of experimental methods and results. A feature of the book is the carefully selected illustrations which deal as far as possible with typical apparatus used in psychological laboratories. A bird's-eye view of the science.

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Our Contributors' Page

To the readers of Miss JOSEPHINE HAMMOND'S "Amy Lowell and the Pretorian Cohorts" we know there will be much interest in the suggestion that other articles from her pen are expected for future numbers. After an experience as head of the Department of English in the Practical Arts High School of Boston, she became Professor of English and Lecturer in Education at Reed College. Mitchell Kennerley recently published a morality play of which she is the author, Everywoman's Road. In Portland she recently organized and directed The Little Theatre, producing The Pigeon; Magic; The Golden Doom; Antigone (in Greek); and Twelfth Night on perhaps the first stage built according to the Fortune contract and the lately surmised measurements of the Globe; and also her own morality play which has received wide notice.

DR. J. W. SCOTT is Professor of Philosophy in Glasgow University, and widely known in philosophical circles. In addition to being the author of many books he is a frequent contributor to the Hibbert Journal and the other philosophical reviews. As his work is much sought after, we appreciate all the more his interest in THE PERSONALIST.

ROY FREDERICK SWIFT, Ph.D., is professor of philosophy in Illinois College. His work will be of special interest to our readers because he is a new comer to our pages and because he represents the later product of the Bowne school of thought.

To the Gentle Personalist

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HE reception of THE PERSONALIST has been most gratifying. Inquiries concerning the magazine have come to us from England, from Scotland, from Mexico, from Japan and India. The Manila P. I. Bulletin, a daily, recently quoted one of our articles entire.

We have been enthusiastically reviewed by contemporaries in our field.

Letters of appreciation and congratulation have come from the leading colleges and universities in America and abroad. Some very good manuscripts are awaiting publication. There seems to be a demand for the type of service we can render, and it appears worth while to provide an organ of expression for personalists around the world.

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