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The Mind in the Making by James Harvey Robinson With an
Introduction by H. G. WELLS Jonathan Cape Eleven Gower Street,
London First published by Harper f Brothers London and New Tork
1921 New and Revised Edition with an ln induction by H. G. Wells
published by Jonathan Cape 1923 All right reserved Printed in Gnat
Britain lg Butler Tanner Ltd, Fwme and London Preface THIS Is an
essay not a treatise on the most Important of all matters of human
concern. Although it has cost its author a great deal more thought
and labour than will be apparent it falls, in his estimation fa
below the demands of its implacably urgent theme. Many of its pages
could readily be expanded into a volume. It suggests but the
beginning of the beginning now being made to raise mens thinking on
to a plane which may perhaps enable them to fend off or reduce some
of the dangers which lurk on every hand, JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON
Introduction WHEN I last visited America I watched the Washington
disarmament confer ence 5 met all sorts of interesting and Impor
tant people, and saw a multitude of significant things. But when I
come to reckon up if ever I do reckon up 3 the values of this
American visit 3 I think I may well reckon that, from my own
persona 3 Individual point of view the encounter that has been of
most importance and that Is likely to have the greatest lasting
effect upon me is meeting and talking to Professor James Harvey
Robinson, and reading his fascinating book The Mind in the Making.
For me I think James Harvey Robinson Is going to be almost as
important as was Huxley in my adolescence and William James In
later years. He takes much that was latent and crude In my mind and
gives it texture and form andconfidence and the spirit of the
school he has organized liberates something of my private dreams
into the world of reality. I find after reading The Mind in the
Making just the same sort of imaginative 7 Introduction release
Into collateral fields that I got long ago from Huxley and from
James, I have long been curious and puzzled by the sculp tures,
wrlting 3 and such-like remains of the Neolithic mind found In
America the anti quarian material from Mexico, Peru, and Central
America There Is not a word about this stuff in The Mind in the
Making and yet after reading it I find much that was monstrous and
obdurate in these old riddles dissolving at last into a quite
acceptable and comprehensible explanation. The book has had the
effect of Illuminating me not only at Its point of application, but
all along the line of my curiosities, These autobiographical
confidences would be Inexcusable If they concerned me alone, but I
feel that what has happened to me the sense of having created a
bridge and come Into a new land of understanding must be hap pening
to quite a number of other readers of this great teacher. It Is
possible that we were all ripe for this book, that most of the
clamber-Ing to the ridge has been done In our studies of
psycho-analysis and of educational and other politico-social
problems during the last quarter 8 Introduction century But If that
deprives Mr, Robinson of isolation, it robs him not at all of his
pre eminent leadership, I do not know who it was who first said
that the human mind being a product of the struggle for existence 3
was essentially a food seeking system and no more necessarily a
truth-finding apparatus than the snout of a pig, I believe it must
havebeen Lord Balfour twenty-five or thirty years ago It is upon
the lines of this suggestion, it is upon a pro found scepticism of
the truth-testing instru ment, that the new school of thought is
going Our minds, the most fundamental of our presuppositions are as
much a response to immediate necessities and as much the out come
of a process of trial, error...
This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To
mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania
Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's
distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print.
Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers
peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.
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