OF GEOGRAPHY An Illustrated Magazine Devoted to the Interests of Teachers of Geography EDITED BY RICHARD ELWOOD DODGE Professor of Geography, Teachers College, New York City THE JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY stands for progress in geography teaching. Teachers, from the Elementary School to the University, find THE JOURNAL almost indispensable, if they would keep in touch with that which is best in geography teaching. Every school library in the country should contain THE JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY, for it is not out of date at the end of the month. It is a reference volume of continued and increasing usefulness, and many of the articles may be used for supplementary work. Many of the subjects treated in THE JOURNAL are not available in any other form. Subscriptions at $1.50 a year (ten numbers) may begin with any number. Send for a sample copy, or remit twenty-five cents for a three-months' trial subscription to THE JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY TEACHERS COLLEGE, NEW YORK CITY THE JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY AND SCIENTIFIC METHODS here is no similar journal in the field of scientific philosophy. It is issued fortnightly and permits the quick publication of short contributions, prompt reviews and timely discussions. The contents of the last four issues are as follows. Volume II. No. 4. February 16, 1905. A Philosophical Confession. HARALD HÖFFding. A Syntactician Among the Psychologists. BASIL L. GILDERSLEEVE. Discussion: Image or Sensation. WILLARD C. GORE. Reviews and Abstracts of Literature. Journals and New Books. Notes and News. Volume II. No. 5. March 2, 1905. The Essence of Humanism. WILLIAM JAMES. The Nature of Consciousness. FREDERICK J. E. WOODBRIDGE. Volume II. No. 6. March 16, 1905. Notes and News. Animal Psychology and Criteria of the Psychic. ROBERT M. YERKES. Volume II. No. 7. March 30, 1905. Radical Empiricism and Wundt's Philosophy. CHARLES H. JUDD. How Two Minds Can Know One Thing. WILLIAM JAMES. Notes and News. Discussion: Phenomenalism and the Problem of Knowledge. H. B. ALEXANDER. THE JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY AND SCIENTIFIC METHODS $3.00 PER ANNUM, 26 NUMBERS 15 CENTS PER COPY Plays all that any other plays and plays it easier The handsomest and smallest 65 note player made "TRY ANY OTHER" THEN CALL AND TRY THE BALDWIN Its ease of operation and control will surprise you D. H. Baldwin & Co., Warerooms: 267 & 269 Wabash Ave. Descartes' Philosophy By Benedictus De Spinoza The Philosopher's earliest work. Translated from the Fages lxxxi+177. Price, cloth 75 cents, mailed 85 cents; paper covered, sewed, 35 cents, mailed 42 cents This work of Spinoza, here translated for the first time into English, is this philosopher's earliest work, and, strange to say, the only one to which he ever subscribed his name. As the title indicates, it is a presentation of Descartes' "Principles of Philosophy," but ample material is also given to reveal the character of Spinoza's early thinking. Little has been done to study Spinoza's system historically, so this book evidently has a place in the literature on this subject. In his Introduction the author has sought to point out the causes that turned Spinoza's thought, even at this early period, irrevocably to Pantheism. The two points upon which he centers most of his attention are the geometrical method, employed by Spinoza only here and in the "Ethics," and the concept of God. These are both shown to be the acme of logical procedure from the standpoint of deduction. Spinoza, better than any of his predecessors, carried this method of thought through to its logical conclusion, with the results found in the "Ethics." This work, therefore, by directing attention to Spinoza's early thought and to the forces that were, even then, carrying him on to his pantheistic conception of God, cannot but add new light to the "Ethics," and help the student to a fuller appreciation of Spinoza's mature philosophy. The Open Court Publishing Company 1322 Wabash Avenue, Chicago To Jerusalem Through the Lands of Islam Among Jews, Christians and Moslems By Madame Hyacinthe Loyson Pages viii, 875, cloth, gilt top, 8vo., profusely illustrated, $2.50 T HIS remarkable book, the work of one of the most remarkable women of our time, the joint work rather of a remarkable woman and a remarkable man,for Père Hyacinthe is joint-author of it from cover to cover though he is not the writer of it,—this remarkable book is beyond the skill of the reviewer. It would be easy to blame it. Men in a hurry for copy, or in a hate at Pere Hyacinthe, will fill their columns with quite plausible matter for blame, and salt it well with superiority. But when the most is said this is what it will come to, that Madame Hyacinthe Loyson remembers the words, "He that is not against us is on our part,' and remembers that they are the words of her dear Lord. He who should say that she exalts the Koran above the Bible, that she sees only the good in Islam, only the evil in Christendom, gives himself into her hands. For she writes down what her own eyes have seen; and though she has many examples of Christian prejudice and many of Muslim charity to record, she never for one moment finds Muhammad standing in her thoughts beside Christ. All that it comes to in the end is this, that Christians are rarely true to Christ, Muslims are often much better than Muhammad.-Expository Times, London. This is one of the handsomest books of oriental travel which we know. The book pays special attention to the religious conditions of the Copts, Jews and Moslems of the East. It presents a tremendous indictment of the liquor traffic in Malta and elsewhere. The white man's vices are the greatest obstruction to the mission work in the non-Christian world.—Methodist Magazine and Review. She has woven in much of general archæological and anthropological information.-Records of the Past. Mme. Loyson, despite her excessive iteration of rather explosive comments, is a woman who cannot help being interesting, so her descriptions of places and account of personal experiences in Egypt and Jerusalem and elsewhere are immensely interesting, and make the reader seem to see it all.-Chicago Evening Post. Her notes of social visits give interesting pictures of Arab manners. The Arabs she pronounces "the best behaved and most forbearing people in the world," and not unlike "the best type of our New Englanders." She evidently moved in the best society, but even among the common people she noted points in which Christians might learn of Mohammedans. Polygamy, however, is noted as the black spot on the brow of Islam. Evidently the tour of the Loysons accomplished good. It were well if all missionaries were animated by their spirit. The volume is handsomely printed and illustrated.-The Outlook. The Open Court Pub. Co., 1322 Wabash Ave., Chicago London: Messrs. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE Devoted to the Science of Religion, the Religion of Science, and the Extension of the Religious Parliament Idea Frontispiece. T'ai Shang Lao Chün (Lao Tze). KEICHYU YAMADA. .... PAGE 257 259 266 (Illustrated). EDITOR. 289 To the Forces of Evil. (A Poem). CYRUS H. EShleman. The Mudaliyar Hewavitarne. The Reflections of a Japanese Suicide. H. L. LATHAM. 306 311 314 314 315 316 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., 58. 6d.). Copyright, 1906, by The Open Court Publishing Co. Entered at the Chicago Post Office as Second Class Matter. |