D. APPLETON & CO/S PUBLICATIONS. 



GEORGE J. ROMANES'S WORKS. 



MENTAL EVOLUTION IN MAN: Origin of Human Faculty. 

 One vol., 8vo. Cloth, $3.00. 



This work, which follows "Mental Evolution in Animals," by the same au- 

 thor, considers the probable mode of genesis of the human mind from the mind 

 of lower animals, and attempts to show that there is no distinction of kind be- 

 tween man and brute, but, on the contrary, that such distinctions as do exist all 

 admit of bein? explained, with respect to their evolution, by adequate psycho- 

 logical analysis. 



"The vast array of facts, and the sober and solid method of argument em- 

 ployed by Mr. Romanes, will prove, we think, a great gilt to knowledge."— 

 Saturday Bevietv. 



JELLY-FISH, STAR-FISH, AND SEA-URCHINS. Being 



a Research on Primitive Nervous Systems. 12rao. Cloth, $1.75. 



" Although I have throughout kept in view the requirements of a general 

 reader, I have also sought to render the book of service to the working physi- 

 ologist, by brinsring together in one consecutive account all the more important 

 observations and results which have been yielded by this research."— ^ic^rac^ 

 from Pre] ace. 



"A profound research into the laws of primitive nervous systems conducted 

 by one of the al)lest En<rlish investigators. Mr. Romanes set up a tent on the 

 beach and examined his beautiful pets for six summers in succession. Such 

 patient and loving work has borne its fruits in a monoirraph which leaves noth- 

 ing to be said about jelly-fish, star-flsh, and sea-urchins. Every one who has 

 studied the lowest forms of life on the sea-shore admires these objects. But few 

 have any idea of the exquisite delicacy of their structure and their nice adapta- 

 tion to their place in nature. Mr. Romanes brings out the subtile beauties of 

 the rudimentary organisms, and shows the resemblances they bear to the higher 

 types of creation. His explanations are made more clear by a large number of 

 illustrations."— Al£z<; York Journal of Commerce. 



ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75. 



"A collection of facts which, though it may merely amuse the unscientific 

 reader, will be a real boon to the student of comparative psychology, for this is 

 the first attempt to present systematically the well-assured results of observa- 

 tion on the mental life oi dinimd.ls.'''' —Saturday Revietv. 



MENTAL EVOLUTION IN ANIMALS. With a Posthumous 



Essay on Instinct, by Charles Darwkv. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00. 



"Mr. Romanes has followed up his careful enumeration of the facts of ' Ani- 

 ■nal Intelligence,' contributed to the 'International Scientific Series,' with a 

 work dealing with the successive staires at which the various mental phenomena 

 appear in the scale of life. The present installment displays the sime evidence 

 of industry in coUectina facts and caution in co-ordinating them bj theory as the 

 former."- 7%e Athenaeum. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street 



