612 SUMMARY OF PROGRESS IN ANTHROPOLOGY. 



Hearing lectures will never make a ])sycliologist ; the fundamental 

 course for all special instruction is the laboratory work. The student 

 must be trained by repeated exercises in making the measurements 

 explained in the lectures, including exercis<'s on touch, temperature, 

 hearing, siglit, in the graphic method, chronometry, dynamometry, 

 audiometry, photometry, colorimetry, etc. This should be followed 

 by work in the construction of apparatus, elements of mechanical 

 drawing, use of tools. 



Journals specially devoted to psychic studies are: 



The American Jonnml of PsychoJofni. Worcester. Mass., Vol. v in 1893. 



The rhUosophical Review. Vol. i, in 1893. 



Revue des Sciences Pnycholodiqnes. Paris. Vol. iv. 



Journal of Morphology. Vol. viii in 1893-'94, 



Revue Philosophique. 18'"^' auiio'e in 1893. 



Zeitschriftfdr rsijcholoyie und Physioloyie der Snincsoryanc. Bd. v in 1893. 



Fieri eJjahrsschrijt fiir wissenschoftliche Philonophie. I>(1. x\'ii m 1893. 



PhiJosophische Mon-Aishefie. Bd. xxviii in 1893. 



Zeiischrift fiir PhiloHophie und PhiJosophische ErUik. 15(1. cii in 1893. 



Philosophische Studien. Vol. ix in 1893. 



Mind. A qnarterly Revie\Y. London, u.s. Vol. ii in 1893. 



Rerne internationale de Socioloyie. Vol. i in 1893. 



Rivista internazionale di Scienze sociale e Discipline ausiliarc. Vol. i in 1893. 



Philosojihisches Jahrhuch. ]5d. V in 1893. 



Rivista Jtaliana di FiJosofia. Anno viii in 1893. 



Brain. Londou. Parts 61 and 62 in 1893. 



Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research. \it\. ix in 1893; also 



Jonrnal. 

 Revue de Metaphysiquc et dr la Morale. Premiere auuee in 1893. 



THE RACES OF MEN. 



In the United States the chief sources of publication on ethnological 

 topics are: The reports and ])apers of the I'eabody Museum, in Cam- 

 bridge; the Journals of the Hemenway Southwestern Expedition; the 

 transactions of the American Philosophical Society ; but, most extended 

 of all, the reports aud bulletins of the Bureau of Ethnology, and the pub- 

 lications of the Smithsonian Institution and of the National Museum. 



xVbroad the study is stimulated in a multitude of ways. The 

 Anthropological Institute of (Ireat Britain and Ireland is specially 

 strong in this line of study through its colonial attachments. Besides 

 this society, the Colonial Museum, tlie British Museum, the I^oyal 

 Asiatic Society, flood the world with good literature, especially con- 

 cerning the Eastern Hemisphere. Branches of these great societies 

 are established in JJombay, Calcutta, Hongkong, Shanghai, Sydney, 

 Wellington, publishing also literature on ethnology. 



Interest in the study of ethnology is kept alive in France partly by 

 bringing to the city of Paris families and groups of colonial natives. 

 In the Palais des Arts liberaux, Champs de Mars, was oj)ened in 1893 

 an exposition of colonial African ethnology. Besides one hundred aud 

 thirty Dahomoans, rei)resentatives of the Ogowe, Whydah, Godome, 



