The Problem of the Labouring Classes: In the United States

Two essays: one argues theological knowledge can develop like natural science; the other critiques socialism and proposes practical remedies for U.S. laborers—home ownership, savings, co‑ops, charity.

Lyman Hotchkiss Atwater (February 23, 1813 – February 17, 1883) was an American Presbyterian philosopher, theologian, and educator who served as a long-time professor of logic, moral and intellectual philosophy at the College of New Jersey (Princeton) and lectured at Princeton Theological Seminary. Born in Cedar Hill, New Haven, Connecticut, he graduated from Yale, ministered for twenty years in Fairfield, Connecticut, and became a prolific writer and contributor to The Princeton Review. Throughout his life he remained deeply involved in Presbyterian scholarship and church affairs, and was honored with an LL.D. from Yale in 1871.

Confessional Intelligence

Search through theological documents with AI-powered semantic search.

Try:

Cart

Your cart is empty.

Shop