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in MIND.—"A most remarkable achievement. No book, I think, give's so good an account as this does of the brilliant and fascinating school which counts among its members Dr. Caird, Lord Haldane, and Dr. Mackenzie, but of which Dr. Bosanquet is perhaps the central and most typical member."

ATHENÆUM.—"The Gifford Lectures have been the source of much good philosophy, but never more so, we think, than in the volume before us."

SPECTATOR.—"So far as a difficult argument can be simply presented, it is so presented here. It is the most valuable of recent statements of the central position of modern English idealism."

in the HIBBERT JOURNAL.—"The principle of Individuality and Value set forth in Mr. Bosauquet s first course of Gifford Lectures is applied in this second course, and we are given a profoundly interesting account of the finite self from its first appearance to its final destiny."

THE TIMES.—As a full and frank presentation of the Absolutist theory, rich in experience of life, in ethical feeling, and imaginative insight, Dr. Bosauquet's two volumes form a permanent addition to English philosophical literature."