TECHNICAL NOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY 2/9 



184. Smith, H. W. The End of Illusion. Harper and 

 Brothers, New York, 1935. 



185. Smith, H. W. Organism and environment: dy- 

 namic oppositions. In Adaptation. Edited by John 

 Romano. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, 1949. 



186. Smith, H. W. The biology of consciousness. In The 

 Historical Development of Biological Thought. Ed- 

 ited by C. McC. Brooks and P. F. Cranefield, Haf- 

 ner Publishing Company, New York, 1959. 



187. Sperry, R. W. Neurology and the mind-brain 

 problem. American Scientist, 40: 291. 1952. 



188. Stone, C. B., Editor. Comparative Psychology. 

 Prentice Hall, 3rd ed., 1951. 



189. Tyndall, John. Fragments of Science. Volume 2. 

 D. Appleton and Company, New York, 1898. 



An interesting discussion of the inheritance of musical 

 talent and its development early in childhood is pre- 

 sented by Scheinfeld {23}. 



The agility of Miss Shakuntala Divi in mental arith- 

 metic is described in an article entitled 'Numbers Game/ 

 appearing in Time magazine, July 14, 1952, p. 49. 



The matter of intelligence in animals is discussed by 

 Prosser et al. {54} and Koehler {178}. An excellent 

 popular account of animal behavior is that of Mrs. Noble 

 {180}. The viTiter is indebted to Dr. Henry W. Nissen 

 of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology for com- 

 ments on the ability of the chimpanzee to count. A com- 

 prehensive survey of comparative psychology is pre- 

 sented in the volume edited by Stone {188}. 



The discussion of consciousness presented here is an 

 extension, philosophically, of the view presented in ear- 

 lier books and essays by the vmter {82, 184, 185}, and 

 relies heavily on the work of many neurophysiolgists, 

 and particularly that of Lashley {179}. Some of the 

 views expressed here on the significance and evolution 

 of consciousness have been discussed at greater length 



