Reprinted from The Common Cause, 21 March 1913.
The Sociological Review, contents page and pp. 108-119. Vol. XIX. No. 2. April 1927.
Geddes, Sir Patrick, 1854-1932, Knight, biologist, sociologist, educationist and town plannerVolumes and numbers unknown.
Abstract of two papers presented by Patrick Geddes to the Sociological Society, 24 June and 25 June [ ]. pp. 334-344.
Geddes, Sir Patrick, 1854-1932, Knight, biologist, sociologist, educationist and town plannerOne copy with several items marked.
Showing relationships between: town/region, industries, institutions, polity, culture, city/art, school, economics, social sciences, ideals, ideas, imagery/cloister.
Showing the life phases of childhood, adolescence, maturity and senescence.
36 squares showing relationships between place/work/folk, achievements/synergy/ etho-polity, imagination/ideation/co-emotion, and sense/experience/feeling.
Also shows [man symbol] and [woman symbol] in relation to folk, etho-polity, feeling and co-emotion.
On reverse, several small diagrams, one endorsed IX-9.
Relating to relationships between biology and psychology, biopsychosis and psychobiosis, biotics, evolution, place/work/folk.
Mention of [August] Weismann, [Charles] Darwin and [Jean Baptiste] Lamarck.
Manuscript
Geddes, Sir Patrick, 1854-1932, Knight, biologist, sociologist, educationist and town planner‘Contemporary Inversion of Apollo’s Hill’. Showing seven Olympic Gods as contemporary inverted social types: Eros or the Urchin; Hermes or Gamin; Dionysos or Hooligan; Apollo or Prig; Ares or Jingo; Hephestos or Drudge; Zeus or Dotard.
Label: 'William Hume, 1 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’
Both slides show Olympus.
Both slides show Olympus.
Showing [Olympus] as a tower and domed temple on top of a hill overlooking the ocean, with a winding road leading down to a seaside building.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Birds- eye view of Olympus, as an open temple on top of a table-top mountain.
Label ‘William Hume, 1 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Showing various traditional occupations and their contemporary masculine equivalents: peer, parson, capitalist, publican and sailor.