Gustav Spiller

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Gustav Spiller (1864 - February 1940) was a Hungarian-born ethical and sociological writer who was active in

Ethical Societies in the United Kingdom. He helped to organize the First Universal Races Congress
in 1911.

Life

Born in

compositor. Influenced by Stanton Coit, until 1901 he worked as a printer work for the Bank of England for six months every year, using the rest of his time for self-education. In 1901 he became a lecturer for the Ethical movement, and in 1904 the salaried secretary of the International Union of Ethical Societies.[1]

Spiller and

By 1920 Spiller had joined the Labour Office of the League of Nations in Geneva.[3]

Works

  • Songs of Love and Duty for the Young, 1894
  • The mind of man; a text-book of psychology, London, S. Sonnenschein & Co., 1902
  • Hymns of Love and Duty for the Young, 1903
  • Faith in Man: the religion of the twentieth century, 1908
  • Report on moral instruction (general & denominational) and on moral training in the schools of Austria, Belgium, the British Empire, China, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, & the United States, 1909
  • (ed.), Papers on inter-racial problems, communicated to the first Universal Races Congress, held at the University of London, July 26–29, 1911, London: P. S. King, 1911.
  • The training of the child; a parent's manual, London: Jack; New York: Dodge Pub. Co., 1912
  • The meaning of marriage: a manual for parents, teachers, young people (over 18), and husbands and wives; also for spinsters and bachelors, widows and widowers, 1914
  • A new system of scientific procedure; being an attempt to ascertain, develop, and systematise the general methods employed in modern enquiries at their best, London: Watts & Co., 1921
  • The ethical movement in Great Britain: a documentary history, 1934
  • The origin and nature of man; an enquiry into fundamentals, reconciling man's proud achievements with man's humble descent, London: Williams & Norgate Ltd., 1935

References

  1. . Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  2. . Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  3. ^ The Humanist: An Organ of the Ethical Movement, 1920, p.71