Boston University wrote the outstanding
History of Personalism,
as Edgar S. Brightman of the same university was perhaps its bestknown advocate. The limits of this chapter will admit only the
bare mention of a few other men, most of them younger, who
have done significant writing in the personalistic field. The writing is now so prolific that others quite as important may be unintentionally missed. Foremost would appear the name of W. Gordon Allport of Harvard, pupil of William Stern, the late German-
American Personalist, writing in psychology; Professor Charles
Hartshorne of the University of Chicago; Sterling McMurrin, University of Utah, and Frederick Mayer, University of Redlands. In the field of social ethics, the work of Lewis Mumford is
of high importance; and while he used for the naming of his system the title Personal Realism, the work of the late James Bissett
Pratt of Williams College should not be overlooked. RALPH T. FLEWELLING
SUGGESTED READINGS | BOWNE B. P., Personalism. Houghton Mifflin Co., 1908. |
| BRIGHTMAN E. S., The Problem of God. Abingdon Press, 1930. |
| BUCKHAM J. W., The Inner World. Harper, 1941. |
| FLEWFLLING R. T., The Person. Ward Ritchie Press: Los Angeles, 1952. |
| HARTSHORNE C., and
REESE W. (eds.), Philosophers Speak of God. University of Chicago Press, 1953. |
| HOCKING W. E., The Meaning of God in Human Experience. Yale
University Press, 1922. |
| HOWISON G. H., The Limits of Evolution. Macmillan Co., 1901. |
| KNUDSON A. C., The Philosophy of Personalism. Abingdon Press, 1927. |
| Personalist, The (A Quarterly). University of Southern California. |
| WILSON G. A., The Self and Its World. Macmillan Co., 1926. |
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