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‚Q‚R(1926)
On Education; Especially in Early Childhood.

‚PDLondon; Allen & Unwin, Feb. 1926. 254 p. 19 cm.
[Contents]
Introduction. Pt.1: Educational ideals. 1.Postulates of modern educational theory. 2.The aims of education. 3.The first year. 4.Fear. 5.Play and fancy. 6.Constructiveness. 7.Selfishness and property. 8.Truthfulness. 9.Punishment. 10.Importance of other children. 11.Affection and sympathy. 12.Sex education. 13.The nursery school. 14.General principles. 15.The school curricurum before fourteen. 16.Last school years. 17.Day schools and boarding schools. 18.The university. 19.Conclusion. Index.
* Cheaper ed. in 1930(=5th ed.)
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‚QDAmerican edition has title: Education and the Good Life.
New York; Boni and Liveright, 1926. vi,319 p. 21 cm.
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‚RDEducation and the Good Life.
New York; Avon Book Division, Heart Corp., 1926. 192 p. (Avon books, S-115)

‚SDLondon; Allen & Unwin, Feb. 1960. 171 p. 19 cm. (Unwin books, 1)
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‚TDEducation of Character.
New York; Philosophical Library. 1961. 160 p. 19 cm.
* Reprint of Education and the Good Life, Pt.II.
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‚UDFirst pub. in Unwin Paperbacks, 1976.
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‚Q‚S(1927)
An Outline of Philosophy.

‚PDLondon; Allen & Unwin, 1927. vi,317 p. 23 cm.
[Contents]
1.Philosophical doubts. Pt.I: Man from without. 2.Man and his environment. 3.The process of learning in animals and infant. 4.Language. 5.Perception objectively regarded. 6.Memory objectively regarded. 7.Inference as a habit. 8.Knowledge behaviouristically considered. Pt.II: The physical world. 9.The structure of atom. 10.Relativity. 11.Causal laws in physics. 12.Physics and perception. 13.Physical and perceptual space. 14.Perception and physical causal laws. 15.The nature of our knowledge of physics. Pt.III: Man from within. 16.Self-observation. 17.Images. 18.Imagination and memory. 19.The introspective analysis of perception. 20.Consciousness. 21.Emotion, desire, and will. 22.Ethics. Pt.IV: The universe. 23.Some great philosophies of the past. 24.Truth and falsehood. 25.The validity of inference. 26.Events, matter, and mind. 27.Man's place in the universe. Index.
* Cheaper ed. in 1930(=5th ed.)
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‚QDPub. in U. S. A. under the title: Philosophy.
New York; Norton, 1927. vi,307 p. 22 cm.
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‚RDCleveland; World, 1961. 317 p. 18 cm. (Meridian books, M97)

‚SDLondon; Allen & Unwin, 1970. 317 p. 19 cm. (Unwin books, 82)
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‚TDFirst pub. in Unwin Paperbacks, 1979.

‚Q‚T(1927)
The Analysis of Matter.

‚PDLondon; Kegan Paul, 1927. viii,408 p. 23 cm.
[Contents]
Preface(Jan. 1927) 1.The nature of the problem. Pt.1: The logical analysis of physics. 2.Pre-relativity physics. 3.Electrons and protons. 4.The theory of quanta. 5.The special theory of relativity. 6.The general theory of relativity. 7.The method of tensors. 8.Geodesics. 9.Invariants and their pyhsical interpretation. 10.Weyl's theory. 11.The principles of differential laws. 12.Mesurement. 13.Matter and space. 14.The abstractness of physics. Pt.II: Physics and perception. 15.From primitive perception to common sense. 16.From common sense to physics. 17.What is an empirical science? 18.Our knowledge of particular matters of fact. 19.Data, inferences, hypotheses, and theories. 20.The causal theory of perception. 21.Perception and objectivity. 22.The belief in general laws. 23.Substance. 24.Importance of structure in scientific inference. 25.Perception from the standpoint of physics. 26.Non-mental analogues to perception. Pt.III: The Structure of the physical world. 27.Particulars and events. 28.The construction of points. 29.Space-time order. 30.Causal lines. 31.Extrinsic causal laws. 32.Physical and perceptual space-time. 33.Periodicity and qualitative series. 34.Types of physical occurrences. 35.Causality and interval. 36.The genesis of space-time. 37.Physics and neutral monism. 38.Summary and conclusion. Index.
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‚QDNew York; Harcourt, Brace, 1927. viii,408 p. 23 cm. (International library of phychology, philosophy and scientific method)

‚RDLondon; Allen & Unwin, c1954. x,408 p. 22 cm.
* With a new introd. by Lester E. Dennon.
* An unabridged and unaltered republication of the work originally published in 1927.
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‚SDNew York; Dover, c1954. x,408 p. 22 cm.
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‚TDLondon; Routledge, c1992. x,408 p.
* With a new introd. by John G. Slator.


‚w‚O‚P(1927)
Selected Papers of Bertrand Russell, selected by and with a special introduction by B. Russell.

‚PDNew York; Modern Library, 1927. xix,390 p. 19 cm. (The modern library of the world's best books)
[Contents]
Acknowledgements. Introduction(Mar. 1927) A free man's worship. Mysticism and logic. The state. Education. Science and art under socialism. The world as it could be made. The aims of education. Questions. Chinese and Western civilization constrasted. The chinese character. Causes of the present chaos. Moral standard and social well-being. Deciding forces in politics. Touch and sight: the earth and the heavens. Current tendencies. Words and meaning. Definition of numbers.
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‚QDNew York; Random House, 1927. xix,390 p.
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