• The Wheat and the Chaff gathered into Bundles: a Statistical Contribution towards the History of the Recent Disruption of the Scottish Ecclesiastical Establishment (Perth, 1843) • Does the Established Church acknowledge Christ as its Head ? (Brechin, 1846) • A Tribute to the Memory of Dr Chalmers, by a Former Pupil (Brechin, 1847) • The Method of the Divine Government, Physical and Moral (Edinburgh, 1850, last ed., New York, 1874) • The Ulster Revival and its Physiological Accidents (Belfast) [1859] • The Intuitions of the Mind Inductively Investigated (London, 1860, 1865; New York, 1872) • The Supernatural in relation to the Natural (Cambridge, Belfast, and New York, 1862) • Supplement to Dugald Stewart's "Outlines of Moral Philosophy" (1865) • An Examination of Mr J. S. Mill's Philosophy, being a Defence of Fundamental Truth (London, 1866 and 1886; New York, 1875 and 1880) • Philosophical Papers — I., Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Logic; II., Reply to Mr Mill's Third Edition; III., Present State of Moral Philosophy in Britain (London, 1868; New York, 1869) • The Laws of Discursive Thought (London and New York, 1870–90) • Christianity and Positivism : a Series of Lectures on Natural Theology and Apologetics (London and New York, 1871-5) • The Scottish Philosophy: Biographical, Expository, Critical, from Hutcheson to Hamilton (London, 1874; New York, 1880) • Ideas in Nature overlooked by Dr Tyndall (New York, 1875) • The Development Hypothesis : is it sufficient? (New York, 1876) • The Emotions (London and New York, 1880) • The Conflicts of the Age (New York, 1881) • Psychology: the Motive Powers — Emotions, Conscience, Will (London and New York, 1887) • Realistic Philosophy Defended in a Philosophic Series (London and New York, 1887) • The Religious Aspect of Evolution, the Bedell Lectures for 1887 (New York, 1888–90) • First and Fundamental Truths (London and New York, 1889) • Psychology : the Cognitive Powers (London and New York, 1889–91) • The Tests of Various Kinds of Truths (Merrick Lectures) (New York and Cincinnati, 1889–91) • The Prevailing Types of Philosophy : can they reach Reality logically? (New York, 1890) • Our Moral Nature (New York, 1892) • [jointly with Dr George Dickie] Typical Forms and Special Ends in Creation (Edinburgh, 1855 ; London, 1862 ; New York, 1880) • and a very large number of contributions to periodical literature. • For a complete list of his writings see
Joseph Heatly Dulles,
McCosh Bibliography (Princeton, 1895).
Main works •
The Method of Divine Government, Physical and Moral (Edinburgh, 1850, 5th ed., 1856, and frequently republished in New York) •
The Typical Forms and Special Ends in Creation (Edinburgh, 1855; New York, 1856) •
Intuitions of the Mind Inductively Investigated (London and New York, 1860; 3rd rev. ed., 1872) • ''An Examination of
Mr J. S. Mill's Philosophy'' (London and New York, 1866; enlarged 1871, several editions) • ''Dr. McCosh's Logic: Laws of Discursive Thought, Being a Text-Book of Formal Logic'' (Robert Carter & Brothers, 1885) • Philosophical Papers containing (1)"Examination of Sir W. Hamilton's Logic", (2)"Reply to Mr Mill's third edition", and (3) "Present State of Moral Philosophy in Britain". •
First and Fundamental Truths: Being a Treatise on Metaphysics (New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1889) •
The Religious Aspect of Evolution (New York, 1888, 2nd ed., 1890). ==Family==