Page:Philosophical Review Volume 21.djvu/206

188 moral experience and they read moral experience more sympathetically. They talk less glibly of "adjustment" and "fitness to survive," but still too glibly of "self," "experimentation," and the like. So far they have achieved little beyond valuable suggestions, but they at least look promising, and ethics can afford to give them a chance. But only after a rigid reform of their own methods and a more persistent and discriminating treatment of special ethical problems can they become efficient reformers.