450 ANTHROPOLOGY. 



occupations, crafts, and arts of man, without regard to race. Looking 

 over the whole race as a propagating garden for the arts of life, we study 

 each industry or aesthetic action in its historic development and in its 

 correlation with other arts and industries. Mr. Spencer's Sociology, 

 Mr. Tylor's Primitive Culture, and works of that class, have done a great 

 deal toward explaining the orderly manner in which even those things 

 which seem fortuitous are brought about. 



Very closely allied with the foregoing class is that which relates to 

 sociology proper, or the evolution and regulation of the family, the tribe, 

 the society, and the state. With this division of the subject are con- 

 nected some of the gravest problems that we have to settle. 



The ninth and last class, for want of a better term, we call religion. 

 It includes not only the philosophic inquiry into the cause of all phe- 

 nomena, but beliefs with regard to morality and the future state, and 

 all those acts and paraphernalia which are associated with worship, to- 

 gether with the organization of society growing out of the same. 



In conclusion, a science so comprehensive and so popular must have 

 its corporate agencies, its organs, and its schools. A knowledge of the 

 locality and scope of these is highly important, especially to beginners. 

 A list of the principal papers of the year, in the order indicated, will 

 serve not only as a bibliographical list, but also to indicate the scope of 

 investigation in each class of inquiries : 

 Class I. Anthropogeny. 



II. Prehistoric Anthropology. 

 III. Biological Anthropology. 

 IY. Psychological Anthropology. 

 V. Ethnology. 



VI. Linguistic Anthropology. 

 VII. Industrial Anthropology. 

 VIII. Sociology Proper. 

 IX. The Science of Eeligion. 



I. — ANTHROrOGENY. 



Allen, Grant. A "hairless" problem in human evolution. (Fort- 

 nightly.) The Century, May 24. See, also, Pop. Sc. Mouth. June. 



B., J. P. Spiritual evolution. Trubner. 



BEGOTTEN, *-. La creation evolutive. 8°. Toulouse. 



BUTLER, . Old and new evolution. Scribner & Welford." 



Cook, Joseph. Heredity, with preludes on current events. Hough- 

 ton, Osgood & Co., Boston. 272 pp. 12°. 



Delanei . Martin R. The origin of race and color. Harper & Bros. 



De Quatrefages, A. The human species. Translated from the 

 French, and forming No. 27 of "The International Scientific Se- 

 ries." L\ Appleton & Co. 



Dumont, A. Haeckel and the theory of evolution in Germany. Paris, 

 Germer-Bailliere. 



