T'AI-SHANG KAN-YING P'IEN, Treatise of the Exalted One on Response and Retribution. Translated from the Chinese by Teitaro Suzuki and Dr. Paul Carus. Containing Chinese Text, Verbatim Translation, Explanatory Notes and Moral Tales. Edited by Dr. Paul Carus. 16 plates. Pages 135. 1906. Boards, 75c. net. YIN CHIH WEN, The Tract of the Quiet Way. With Extracts from the AMITABHA, A Story of Buddhist Theology. Completes a trilogy of Buddhist ESSAY ON THE CREATIVE IMAGINATION, by Prof. Th. Ribot, SPACE AND GEOMETRY IN THE LIGHT OF PHYSIOLOGICAL, THE EGYPTIAN HEAVEN AND HELL, By E. A. Wallis Budge, M.A., THE PRAISE OF HYPOCRISY, An Essay in Casuistry by G. T. Knight, THE VOCATION OF MAN, By Johann Gottlieb Fichte, translated by The Open Court Publishing Company, 1322 Wabash Avenue, Chicago A MONTHLY MAGAZINE Devoted to the Science of Religion, the Religion of Science, and tbe Extension of the Religious Parliament Idea Frontispiece. The Vision of Ezekiel. RAPHAEL. Theophanies. (Illustrated.) EDITOR. ... Hugo de Vries. (Illustrated.) HENRI HUS. The Red Monster. (Illustrated.) F. W. FITZPATRICK. The Test of Love. EDWARD F. BIGELOW... Betrothal and Marriage in China. (Illustrated.) EDITOR. The Message of Buddhism to Christianity. Knowledge (Sonnet). EDWIN EMERSON. A Village School in Ceylon. Book Reviews and Notes. CHICAGO The Open Court Publishing Company LONDON: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd. Per copy, 10 cents (sixpence). Yearly, $1.00 (in the U. P. U., 5s. 6d.). Copyright, 1906, by The Open Court Publishing Co. Entered at the Chicago Post Office as Second Class Matter. I Mathematicians Edited by PROFESSOR DAVID EUGENE SMITH, Ph. D. Columbia University, N. Y. City N response to a wide-spread demand from those interested in mathematics and the history of education, Professor Smith has edited a series of portraits of some of the most eminent of the world's contributors to the mathematical sciences. Accompanying each portrait is a brief biographical sketch, with occasional notes of interest concerning the artists represented. The pictures are of a size that allows for framing, it being the hope that a new interest in mathematics may be aroused through the decoration of class-rooms by the portraits of those who helped to create the science. It is the purpose of the editor and the publishers to follow this Portfolio by others, in case the demand is sufficient to warrant the expense. In this way there can be placed before students of mathematics, for a moderate sum, the results of many years of collecting and of a large expenditure of time and money. The first installment consists of twelve great mathematicians down to 1700 A. D. and includes Thales, Pythagoras, Euclid, Archimedes, Leonardo of Pisa, Cardan, Vieta, Fermat, Descartes, Leibnitz, Newton, Napier. Twelve Portraits on Imperial Japanese Vellum, 11x14, 85.00 "I think that portraits of famous mathematicians when hung in a Common Room or Lecture Room are not only in themselves an ornament, but often excite the interest of students. No doubt, also, the presence of such portraits promotes the introduction in the teaching of the subject of historical notes on its development, which I believe to be a valuable feature in recent teaching. I hope the response of the public will justify you in continuing the series."-W. W. RÕUSE BALL, Cambridge, England. "The issue of this fine collection is equally creditable to the expert knowledge and discriminating taste of the Editor, Professor David Eugene Smith, and to the liberality and artistic resources of The Open Court Publishing Co.”—F.N.COLE, Editor American Mathematical Bulletin, New York. "The selection is well made, the reproduction is handsomely executed, and the brief account which accompanies each portrait is of interest. Prof. Smith has rendered a valuable service to all who have interest in mathematics, by editing this collection. Wherever mathematics is taught, these portraits should adorn the walls.”—WILLIAM F. OSGOOD, Cambridge, Mass. The Open Court Pub. Co., 1322 Wabash Ave., Chicago |