The Interpretation of Dreams 



By Professor SIGMUND FREUD, M.D., LL.D. 



FORMERLY PROFESSOR OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASES IN THE UNIVERSITY 



OF VIENNA 



Translated by A. A. Brill, Ph.B., M.D., Chief of the Neurological Depart- 

 ment, Bronx Hospital and Dispensary ; Clinical Assistant in Psychiatry 



and Neurology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. 



Preparing 



The genera] advance in the study of abnormal mental processes has called particular 

 attention to the dream, whose riddle has been solved by Professor Freud, the noted 

 neurologist at the University of Vienna, in connection with his study of nervous and 

 mental diseases. 1 '] i if ss • ir Freud assorts that dreams are perfect psychological mecha- 

 nisms and are neither foolish nor useless. He found that dreams, when analyzed by 

 his method, exposed the most intimate recesses of personality, and that, in the stud) 

 of nervous and mental diseases, it is mainly through dreams that the symptoms of the 

 disease can be explained and cured. This epoch-making book furnishes many useful 

 and interesting contributions to the study and treatment of nervous and mental dis- 

 eases and is most valuable to physicians and psychologists. 



The People's Medical Guide 



Points for the Patient, Notes for the Nurse, Matter for the Medical Ad- 

 viser, Succor for the Sufferer, Precepts for the Public. 



By JOHN GRIMSHAW. M.D., 



B.S. (LOND.), D.P.H. KAMI;.), M.R.C.S. (ENG.) , ETC. 



Cloth, 839 pp., index, glossary, ill., 8vo, $3.00 net 



A medical guide fo] \^~ people, thoroughly modern in matter and tone, embracing all 



the remarkable advances of the last decade. Besides constituting a plea tor a reform in 



education, this book is an exposition of the different branches of medical work 



and social reform. 



Biological Aspects of Human Problems 



By CHRISTIAN A. HERTER, M.D., 



LATE p R o il PHARMACOLOGY AND rHERAPEUTICS IN COLUMBIA 



I NIVERSI 1 Y 



Cloth, 344 pp., i2mo, $J.jq net 



This work gives the personal convictions of a foremost authority on the far-reaching 

 effi ■ Dr. Herter first discusses in what respects the annual body m 



inism.nexl he treats of the nature of 1 ervatiye and sex- 

 ,pear to be the mosl fundamental oi all instinctive qualities in liv- 

 protoplasm. Following this 1 instincts of human nature, such as those 

 whirl, relate to imitation, affection, lo\ - "' the powerful and unin- 

 telligible .10 taken up, while finally the tendencies in development 11 tion Litera- 



. considered. 1 here has been no 



I hie. 



