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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2009
Among the many outstanding features of Professor Stout's Gifford Lectures, Mind and Matter, there are two which possess special interest to readers of Philosophy: the author”s exposition of a more definite Realism than has been presented in his earlier works, and a renewed defence of the much-maligned faculty, Common Sense, here regarded as “a social product maintained and transmitted from generation to generation through the co-operation and conflict of many minds in thinking and willing ” (p. 8).
page 447 note 1 “I perceive the pen... the pen is for me a physical object” (p. 225); cf. p. 240.
page 449 note 1 I may refer to my own treatment, together with a criticism of Dr. Stout”s earlier position, in the opening chapters of A Theory of Direct Realism.
page 450 note 1 Pp. 279, 281, 302; the italics are mine.
page 452 note 1 Scientific Thought, p. 244; Perception, Physics and Reality, p. 234; my italics.
page 452 note 2 Science and the Modern World, p. 126.