His major works were on Christian apologetics, Hegel, and the British Empiricists.
[1] He served as the second President of the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology in 1909.
[2] He taught at Columbian College (which changed its name to George Washington University in 1904) from 1892 to 1909.
[3] In 1909, he was dismissed by the university, thus being banned from joining its pension plan.
[3] However, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching gave him a pension, and stopped their donations to the university in retaliation.