Volume 8 comprises all Dewey's pub-lished writings for the year 1915-and only for 1915, a year of typically ele-vated productivity, which saw publica-tion of fifteen articles and miscellaneous pieces and three books, two of which are reprinted here: German Philosophy and Politics and Schools of Tomorrow. Professor Hook says that the publica-tions in this volume reveal John Dewey at the height of his philosophical pow-ers. Even though his greatest works were still to come-Democracy and Education, Experience and Nature, The Quest for Certainty, and Logic: The Theory of Inquiry-"e;the themes elaborated there-in were already sounded and developed with incisive brevity in the articles and books of this banner year."e;