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754 Bibliographies Cooper, Thomas, (i 759-1 840.) View of Arguments in Favor of Materialism. 1831. Draper, J. W. (181 1-82). Intellectual Development of Europe. 1861. Conflict of Religion and Science. 1874. See, also, Bibliography to Book III, Chap. xv. Rush, James (1786-1869). Analysis of the Human Mind. 1866. Wright, Chauncey (1830-75). Philosophical Discussions. 1876. (Introduction by Norton, C. E.) William T. Harris and the Hegelian School Everett, C. C. (1829-1900). The Science of Thought. 1869. Fichte's Science of Knowledge. 1884. Poetry, Comedy and Duty. 1888. Essays Theo- logical and Literary, 1901. Psychological Elements of Religious Faith. 1902. Immortality and Other Essays. 1902. Theism and Christian Faith. 1909. See articles by Royce and others in The New World, Dec, 1900. Harris,W. T. (1835-1909). Introduction to the Study of Philosophy. 1889. The Spiritual Sense of Dante's Divine Commedia. 1889. Hegel's Logic. 1890. The Psychologic Foundations of Education. 1899. The Philosophy of Bronson Alcott and the Transcendentalists. In Memoir of Alcott by Harris and F. B. Sanborn. 1891. Also numerous articles in The Journal of Specula- tive Philosophy. For full bibliography of Harris' writings see Annual Report of Bureau of Education, 1907. Morris, George S. (1840-89). British Thought and Thinkers. 1880. Kant's Kritik of Pure Reason. 1886. Hegel's Philosophy of the State. 1889. Wenley, R. M. George S. Morris: A Biography. 1916. Rauch, F. A. (1806-41). Psychology; A View of the Human Soul. 1840. Snider, Denton J. (1841- ). A Writer of Books. 1910. (Refers to his many books on Hegelian philosophy.) The St. Louis Movement. 1920. Stallo, J. B. (1823-1900). The Philosophy of Nature. 1848. Sterrett, J. McBride. Studies in Hegel's Philosophy of Religion. 1890. Reason and Authority in Religion. 1891. The Freedom of Authority. 1905. Charles S. Peirce (1839-1914) Peirce did not publish a single book, but his pubUshed and unpubHshed writings would fill many volumes. The most important of the former are: Three essays in The Journal of Speculative Philosophy, Vol. II, 1868: (i) Ques- tions Concerning Certain Faculties, pp. 103-14, (2) Some Consequences of Four Incapacities, pp. 140-57, (3) The Ground of Validity of the Laws of Logic, pp. 193-202; review of Fraser's Berkeley in The North American Review, Vol. cm, pp. 449-72 (1871) — explains Peirce's adherence to the real- ism of Duns Scotus; six papers in The Popular Science Monthly, Vols, xii-xiii (1877-78), entitled Illustrations of the Logic of Science, and outlining the doctrine of pragmatism: (i) The Fixation of Belief, xii, 1-15, (2) How to Make Our Ideas Clear, xii, 286-302, (3) The Doctrine of Chances, xii, 604-15, (4) The Probability of Induction, xii, 705-18, (5) The Order of Nature, xiii, 203-17, (6) Deduction, Induction, and Hypothesis, xm, 470-482; six papers in The Monist, Vols, i-iii (1891-93) dealing with the main outlines of his philosophy, "synechistic tychistic agapism": (i) The Architecture of Theories, I, 161-76, (2) The Doctrine of Necessity Examined, 11, 321-37, (3) The Law of Mind, 11, 533-59, (4) Man's Glassy