Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer was an English philosopher and sociologist who became one of the most influential intellectual figures of the Victorian era. He developed a wide-ranging ‘synthetic philosophy’ that applied evolutionary ideas to biology, psychology, sociology, and ethics, and he is widely known for coining the phrase ‘survival of the fittest.’[1][2][3]
philosophy
sociology
psychology
biology
anthropology
Essays: Scientific, Political, & Speculative
The Study of Sociology
Education: Intellectual, Moral, and Physical
The Principles of Sociology, Volume II
Education: Intellectual, Moral, and Physical
Essays: Scientific, Political, & Speculative
The Philosophy of Style and John Stuart Mill
Penrose Annual: v. 65
Social Statistics; or, Order, Abridged and Revised: Together With Man Versus the State
Principles Of Ethics Parts V And VI, V2: Negative And Positive Beneficence
The Liberated Page: An Anthology of Major Typographic Experiments of This Century as Recorded in "Typographica" Magazine
New Alphabets A to Z