CONTENTS ix 



CHAPTER VII 



ADDRESSES, REVIEWS, AND CORRESPONDENCE 



Nebulae and comets, 246-247; addresses to graduates, 247-251; an ideal university, 

 248; evils of Cram, 249-251; the Rede Lecture, 251-252; lectures to Industrial Classes, 

 252; lecture on Force, 252-253; Maxwell's metrical version, 253-255; lecture on Thunder- 

 storms, 255; Sensation and Science, 256; de Morgan's Budget of Paradoxes, 257-258; 

 Maxwell's Electricity and Magnetism, 258-260; Maxwell's Matter and Motion, 260-261; life 

 and work of Maxwell, 261-264; scientific work of Stokes, 264-265; Stokes' Mathematical and 

 Physical Papers, 265-266; Stokes' Burnett Lectures, 267-269; Clifford's Dynamic, 270-272; 

 Clifford's Common Sense of the Exact Sciences, 272-273; Poincare > 's 2 ' hermodynamique, 273-276; 

 McAulay's Utility of Quaternions, 276-278; Tay Bridge disaster, 278; controversy with 

 Herbert Spencer, 279-288; Balfour Stewart, 289-291; Robertson Smith, 291-292; Religion 

 and Science, 293-295. 



pp. 246-295 



CHAPTER VIII 



POPULAR SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES 



Thunderstorms, 296-320 ; state of the atmosphere which produces the forms of mirage 

 observed by Vince and by Scoresby, 321-328; Long Driving, 329-344; J. J. Thomson's 

 illustration of golf-ball trajectories by streams of electrified particles, 344-345. 



ADDENDA : J. D. Hamilton Dickson's extension of Tail's thermoelectric theory and diagram, 

 345-346 ; The Evening Club, 347-349 ; Recent Advances in Physical Science, 349-350. 



pp. 296-350 



BIBLIOGRAPHY pp. 351-365 



INDEX pp. 367-379 



