42 SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



Maudsley (H.) continued. 



deavours to set forth the reflections which facts seem to warrant. 

 11 It distinctly marks a step in the progress of scientific psychology." 

 The Practitioner. 



THE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF MIND. 

 Second Edition, Revised. Svo. i6j-. 



This work is the result of an endeavour on the aiithor's part to arrvve 

 at some definite conviction with regard to the physical conditions of 

 mental function, and the relation of the phenomena of sound and 

 unsound mind. The author's aim throughout has been twofold : 

 I. To treat of mental phenomena from a physiological rather than 

 from a metaphysical point of view. II. To bring the manifold 

 instructive instances presented by the ^^nsound mind to bear upon 

 the interpretation of the obscure problems of mental science. In the 

 first part, the author pursues his independent inquiry into the 

 science of Mind in the same direction as that followed by Bain, 

 Spencer, Laycock, and Carpenter ; and in the second, he studies 

 the subject in a light which, in this country at least, is almost 

 entirely novel. "Dr. MaudsleyPs work, which has already become 

 standard, we most urgently recommend to the careful study of 

 all those who are interested in the physiology and pathology of the 

 brain."- Anthropological Review. 



Practitioner (The). A Monthly Journal of Therapeutics. 

 Edited by FRANCIS E. ANSTIE, M. D. Svo. Price is. 6d. 

 Vols. I to VII. Svo. cloth, los. 6d. each. 



4 



Radcliffe. DYNAMICS OF NERVE AND MUSCLE. By 

 CHARLES BLAND RADCLIFFE, M.D., F.R.C.P., Physician to the 

 Westminster Hospital, and to the National Hospital for the 

 Paralysed and Epileptic. Crown Svo. Ss. 6d. 



This work contains the result of the author's long investigations into the 

 Dynamics of Nerve and Muscle, as connected with Anijnal Electricity . 

 The author endeavours to show from these researches that the state 

 of action in nerve and muscle, instead of being a manifestation of 

 vitality, must be brought under the domain of physical law in order 

 to be intelligible, and that a different meaning, also based upon pure 

 physics, must be attached to the state of rest. ' ' The practitioner 



