Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2022
It is my pleasant task to open a series of discussions on the sciences which will continue here in Cooper Union for the rest of the season. A few words are necessary, therefore, to indicate the design of the pattern of the lecture series as a whole, as well as the specific place and quality of my own lecture.
A condensation of a popular lecture delivered at Cooper Union, New York, on Jan. 7, 1940.
2 See W. M. Malisoff, “Virtue and the Scientist,” Philosophy of Science, 6, (1939).
3 See W. M. Malisoff, “What is an Atom?” Philosophy of Science 6, 261-5 (1939); What is a Gene? Philosophy of Science 6, 385-9 (1939); What is a Monad? Philosophy of Science 7, 1-6 (1940); What is Insight? Philosophy of Science 7, 135-9 (1940); What is Freedom? Philosophy of Science 7, 265-72 (1940); Emergence Without Mystery, Philosophy of Science 6, 17-24 (1939).