Important
new
RELIGION FROM TOLSTOY TO CAMUS
Basic Writings Selected and Introduced by WALTER KAUFMANN. The dramatic de–
velopment of religion during the past 100 years-told directly in the words of the men
who molded modern religious thought and morality: Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, W. James,
Royce, Tillich, Wilde, Freud, Niemoller, Barth, Schweitzer, Maritain, Buber, Camus,
and many others.
$6.95
THE HIDDEN REMNANT
By GERALD SYKES. A keen analysis of our half-educated, mass-educated, complex
and decaying society which the author helieves
is
doomed unless a saving remnant–
a few brave souls-will pay the price of freedom and full maturity. " The great message
of the book is not one of resignation
to
living on a volcano, but that we can
really
live,
creatively and almost abundantly, on our volcano."-MIRCEA ELIADE.
$4.00
NOTEBOOKS, 1914-16
By LUDWIG WITTGEN&TEIN. "These Notebooks, superb in their concentration,
show the beginnings of modern philosophy. . . This is an instantly recognizable clas.sic
which will be of inexhaustible interest to philosophers now and at
all
times."-New
Statesman.
$7.00
NIHILISM Its Origin and Nature
By HELMUT THIELICKE. "Not in several years have I read a book of such power
and penetration. Thielicke treats nihilism in all
its
phases-personal, political, economic,
and cultural. And he presents basic issues between religion and irreligion in such drastic
and dramatic terms that the reader is compelled to re-examine scrupulously and painfully
his own faith or lack of faith."-ROBERT E. FITCH. A volume in
Religious
Perspectiues.
$5.00
PERSONS IN RELATION
By JOHN MACMURRAY.
" It
is
the purpose of this book to show how the personal
relation of persons
is
constitutive of
penonal
existence; that there can
be
no mao until
there are at least two
meD
in communication," says Professor MacmWTay. "To be com–
mended in the strongest possible terms . . . a century hence they will still be arguing
its
propositions."-Times
(London)
Literary Supplement.
$5.00
THE THEOLOGY OF ROMANTIC LOVE
A Study of the Writings of Charles Williams
By MARY McDERMOTT SHIDELER. A brilliant introduction to the work of the
great English writer who made traditional Christian beliefs blaze with new meaning
"a man who was always able
to
live
in
the material and spiritual world
at
once,
a
m~
to whom the two worlds were equally real because they are one world."-T.S. ELIOT.
"An extremely able exposition of Charles Williams' thought."-NORMAN NICHOLSON.
$5.00
Harper hooks
At your bookseller / HARPER
&
BROTHERS, N. Y.
16