1912. A study from a nonpartisan standpoint of movements and tendencies at work in the religious life of today. The author challenges or questions that which had been historically regarded as settled religious doctrine or scientific fact. Much of the work of theologians, scientists and philosophers had been repudiated at the time of this work; materialism was becoming unfashionable and the creeds, dogmas and traditions of the old theology were no longer used in the new school of thought. He includes vast discussion on Christian Science, its founder and hierarchy.