CONTENTS 



i. THE GENIUS OF SCIENCE 



2. SIR OLIVER LODGE'S ADDRESS .... 



I. The Logic of Science. F. C. S. Schiller, D.Sc 

 II. The Philosophy of Science. H. S. Shelton, B.Sc 



3. SOME VIEWS ON LORD KELVIN'S WORK . 



George Green, D.Sc, University of Glasgow. 



4. THE DISPLACEMENT OF SPECTRAL LINES BY PRES- 



SURE 



H. Spencer Jones, B.A., B.Sc, Chief Assistant, Royal 

 Observatory, Greenwich. 



5. A SUGGESTION CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF 



RADIOACTIVE MATTER 



H. S. Shelton, B.Sc. 



6. THE INFLUENCE OF NUTRITION AND THE IN- 



FLUENCE OF EDUCATION IN MENTAL DEVELOP- 

 MENT. III. (continued from "Science Progress," 



October 1913) 



F. W. Mott, M.D., F.R.S., Pathologist to the London 

 County Asylums. 

 {Illustrated) 



7. ENZYMES AS SYNTHETIC AGENTS (continued from 



"Science Progress," July 1913) 



II. In Protein Metabolism. Prof. Priestley, B.Sc, 

 University, Leeds. 



S. THE PHYSICAL ASPECT OF THE OPSONIC EXPERI- 

 MENT 



Major A. G. McKendrick, M.B., Ch.B., I.M.S. 

 9. THE HISTORY OF THE VIEWS OF NERVOUS ACTIVITY 

 Prof. D. Fraser Harris, M.D., D.Sc, Dalhousie 

 University, Nova Scotia. 



jo. DIFFERENCES IN ANIMAL AND PLANT LIFE . 

 F. Carrel. 



11. THE RELATIONS OF SPEECH TO HUMAN PROGRESS 



Louis Robinson, M.D. 



12. RECENT ADVANCES IN OUR KNOWLEDGE OF 



SYPHILIS 



Edward Halford Ross, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. 



(Coloured Illustrations) 



iii 



PAGE 



391 



39S 



419 



433 



45^ 



460 



482 



497 

 S°5 



519 



535 



