Publisher's Synopsis
THIS is a "discussion of the Nature and our Cognition of Space and Time grounded on the fundamental postulates of dualistic Realism." "It maintains the reality of space and time in contradiction to the Kantian hypothesis of ideality; space being held to be real as an independent entity, and time as an attribute or property of entities."
The discussion is clear, well-informed, up to date; and it conducts, as it seems to us, to the right conclusion. Indeed, we welcome it heartily as indicative of a tendency to return to the older realism from the Berkeleian and the Kantian idealism, and also from what in strangely called the "new realism." We shall eagerly await the "psychological essay" which the author promises us in his "preface" under the title of "Subject and Object."
-The Princeton Theological Review, Volume 15