... hedefines as the science of the True and of the Good, the science of the Absolute, and understands in anon-formal sense.Professor Stammler speaks readily of a monism of the social life, and accepts ... which are fruitful in the interpretation of life and of history. Such are the assertions of the dependence of all parts of life upon each other, and of their origin in the economic subsoil, so ... existence, he admits the influence of race, of temperament and of the promptings of nature. And, finally, he does not overlook the influence of the individual, i.e. of the work of those who are called...