Excerpt from The Place of Animals, in Human Thought
At the Congress held at Oxford in September, 1908, those who heard Count Goblet d'Alviella's address on the "Method and Scope of the History of Religions" must have felt the thrill which announces the stirring of new ideas, when, in a memorable passage, the speaker asked "whether the psychology of animals has not equally some relation to the science of religions?" At any rate, these words came to me as a confirmation of the belief that the study which has engaged my attention for several years, is rapidly advancing towards recognition as a branch of the inquiry into what man is himself. The following chapters on the different answers given to this question when extended from man to animals, were intended, from the first, to form a whole, not complete, indeed, but perhaps fairly comprehensive. I offer them now to the public with my warmest acknowledgments to the scholars whose published works and, in some cases, private hints have made my task possible.
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