Shields, C. W. (1879). Philosophia ultima: Project of the perfected sciences and arts. In C. W. Shields, The final philosophy, as issuing from the harmony of science and religion: An historical and critical introduction (pp. 564-590). New York, NY, : Charles Scribner's Sons.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/14271-010
The mature effort and final task of the human mind maybe anticipated under the name of the Ultimate Philosophy, or that last summative science which is to be the fruit and goal and crown of all the sciences, as well as the means of their highest use and grandeur. The conception, the necessity, the utility, the rise and growth, and the method of this ultimate philosophy are topics which admit of enlarged treatment hereafter. Three great works are included in its project as the tasks of the present and coming generations: 1st. Its construction out of the sciences; 2nd. Its application to the sciences; and 3rd. Its consummation of the sciences. We here simply propound them as themes, condensing into sentences what might be expanded into volumes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)