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D. APPLETON /?: CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



£IV FRAGMENTS. By John Tyndall, F. R. S., 



author of " Fragments of Science," " Heat as a Mode of Motion," 

 etc. i2mo. 500 pages. Cloth, $2.00. 



Among: the subjects treated in this volume are "The Sabbath," " Life in 

 the Alps," "The Rainbow and its Congeners," "Common Water," and 

 "Atoms, Molecules, and Ether- Waves." In addition to the popular treat- 

 ment of scientific themes, the author devotes several chapters to biographical 

 sketches of the utmost interest, including studies of Count Rumford and 

 Thomas Young, and chapters on " Louis Pasteur, his Life and Labors," and 

 " Personal Recollections of Thomas Carlyle." 



"Tyndall is the happiest combination of the lover of nature and the lover of science, 

 and these fragments are admirable examples of his delightful style, and pioofs of his 

 comprehensive intellect " — 1 kiladclphia Evening Bulletm. 



"The name of this illustrious scientist and lUleraieur\% known wherever the Eng- 

 lish language is the mother tongue, or is even freely spoken. Whatever he does or 

 says comes with a stamp of authority as from one who speaks with power, knowing 

 whereof he affirms. He is able and effective, both as a talker and writer, as scientist 

 or teacher. I'o those who know anything of Prof. Tyndall's life and labors, scientific 

 or literary, it is superfluous to say that his utterances bring his hearers or readers face 

 to face with the latest knowledge on the subject he discusses." — New York Commer- 

 cial A dvertiser. 



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ORAL TEACHINGS OF SCIENCE. By Ara- 

 bella B, Buckley, author of "The Fairy-Land of Science," 

 " Life and her Children," etc. i2mo. Cloth, 75 cents. 



" The book is intended for readers who would not take up an elaborate philosophical 

 work — those who, feeling puzzled and adrift in the present chaos of opinion, may 

 welcome even a partial solution, from a scientific point of view, of the difficulties which 

 oppress their minds." — Frotn the Preface. 



''AX MULLER AND THE SCIENCE OF 



-^^^ LANGUAGE. A Criticism. By William Dwight Whitney, 



Professor in Yale University. i2mo. 79 pages. Paper cover, 



50 cents. 



This critique relates to the new edition of Prof. Muller's well-known work 

 on Language. " For many," says Prof. Whitney, in his preface, " the book 

 has been their first introduction to linguistic study ; and doubtless to a large 

 proportion of English-speaking readers, especially, it is still the principal and 

 most authoritative text-book of that study, as regards both methods and re- 

 sults. A work holding such a position calls for careful criticism, that it may 

 not be trusted where it is untrustworthy, and so do harm to the science 

 which it was intended to help." 



"This caustic review of Max IMiiller's latest edition of his 'Science of Language* 

 will command attention for more and higher merits than its brilliant criticism. It up- 

 holds a theory of language and of its development which, though not taught by Max 

 Miiller, is held by the great masters of linguistic science. The reader not versed in the 

 science, nor well read in its controversial literature, will get from this brochure a con- 

 ception of the critical points of the subject which he might miss in the reading of many 

 larger and more systematic treatises."— 7^,^^ Jndependent, New York. 



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



