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Aiming to fully present the terminology and concepts of philosophy, psychology and science, this two-volume book is a composite of dictionary and encyclopedia, made up of vocabularies, definitions of terms, essays and articles. The author engaged such scholars as: Bernard Bosanquet; John Dewey; William James; C.S. Pierce; and Henry Sidgwick. The Dictionary has a wide scope, including entries on topics as diverse as anthropology, money, anaesthesia, peace, night-blindness, nihilism, and paranoia. It also gives a detailed treatment of topics, including extended treatment of ethics, logic, aesthetics, philosophy of religion, mental pathology, anthropology, biology, neurology, physiology, economics, political and social philosophy, philology, physical science (and mathematics), and education. French, German and Italian equivalents are often suggested for entries to help towards universal terminology. Cross-references and an index of Greek, Latin, German, French and Italian terms are also included.
Hammond et al. (Fri,) studied this question.