OPINIONS OF THE PRESS
ON THE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SERIES.
“‘The Principles of State Interference’ is another of Messrs. SwanSonnenschein’s Series of Handbooks on Scientific Social Subjects.It would be fitting to close our remarks on this little work with aword of commendation of the publishers of so many useful volumes byeminent writers on questions of pressing interest to a large numberof the community. We have now received and read a good number ofthe handbooks which Messrs. Swan Sonnenschein have published inthis series, and can speak in the highest terms of them. They arewritten by men of considerable knowledge of the subjects they haveundertaken to discuss; they are concise; they give a fair estimateof the progress which recent discussion has added towards thesolution of the pressing social questions of to-day, are well up todate, and are published at a price within the resources of thepublic to which they are likely to be of the mostuse.”—Westminster Review, July, 1891.
“The excellent ‘Social Science Series,’ which is published at aslow a price as to place it within everybody’s reach.”—Review of Reviews.
“A most useful series.... This impartial series welcomes both justwriters and unjust.”—Manchester Guardian.
“Concise in treatment, lucid in style and moderate in price, thesebooks can hardly fail to do much towards spreading sound views oneconomic and social questions.”—Review of the Churches.
“Convenient, well-printed, and moderately-pricedvolumes.”—Reynold’s Newspaper.
“There is a certain impartiality about the attractive andwell-printed volumes which form the series to which the worksnoticed in this article belong. There is no editor and no commondesign beyond a desire to redress those errors and irregularitiesof society which all the writers, though they may agree in littleelse, concur in acknowledging and deploring. The system adoptedappears to be to select men known to have a claim to speak withmore or less authority upon the shortcomings of civilisation, andto allow each to propound the views which commend themselves moststrongly to his mind, without reference to the possible flatcontradiction which may be forthcoming at the hands of the nextcontributor.”—Literary World.
“‘The Social Science Series’ aims at the illustration of all sidesof social and economic truth and error.”—Scotsman.
SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO., LONDON.
SOCIAL SCIENCE SERIES.
SCARLET CLOTH, EACH 2s. 6d.
1. Work and Wages. Prof. J. E. Thorold Rogers.
“Nothing that Professor Rogers writes can fail to be of interest to thoughtfulpeople.”—Athenæum.
2. Civilisation: its Cause and Cure. Edward Carpenter.
“No passing piece of polemics, but a permanent possession.”—Scottish Review.
3. Quintessence of Socialism. Dr. Schäffle.
“Precisely the manual needed. Brief, lucid, fair and wise.”—British Weekly.
4. Darwinism and Politics. D. G. Ritchie, M.A. (Oxon.).
New Edition, with two additional Essays on Human Evolution.
“One of the most suggestive books we have met with.”—Literary World.
5. Religion of Soci BU KİTABI OKUMAK İÇİN ÜYE OLUN VEYA GİRİŞ YAPIN!
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