Scientific Publications. 



ANTS, BEES, AND WASPS. A Record of Observations on the Habits of the 

 Social Hymenoptera. By Sir John Lubbock, Bart., M. P., F. B. S., etc., author 

 of "Origin of Civilization, and the Primitive Condition of Man," etc., etc. With 

 Colored Plates. 12mo, cloth, $2.00. 



" This volume contains the record of various experiments made with ants, bees, and 

 wasps during the last ten years, with a view to test their mental condition and powers 

 of sense. The principal point in which Sir John's mode of experiment diners from 

 those of Huber, Forel, McCook, and others, is that he has carefully watched and 

 marked particular insects, and has had their nests under observation for long periods 

 — one of his ants' nests having been under constant inspection ever since 1874. His 

 observations are made principally upon ants because they show more power aDd flexi- 

 bility of mind; and the value of his studies is that they belong to the department of 

 original research." 



" We have no hesitation in saying that the author has presented us with the most 

 valuable series of observations on a special subject that has ever been produced, charm- 

 ingly written, full of logical deductions, and, when we consider his multitudinous en- 

 gagements, a remarkable illustration of economy of time. As a contribution to insect 

 psychology, it will be long before this book finds a parallel." — London Athenaum. 



DISEASES OF MEMORY : An Essay in the Positive Psychology. By Th. 

 Bibot, author of " Heredity," etc. Translated from the French by William 

 Huntington Smith. 12mo, cloth, $1.50. 



" M. Ribot reduces diseases of memory to law, and his treatise is of extraor- 

 dinary interest." — Philadelphia Press. 



"Not merely to scientific, but to all thinking men, this volume will prove 

 intensely interesting." — New York Observer. 



"M. Ribot has bestowed the most painstaking attention upon his theme, 

 and numerous examples of the conditions considered greatly increase the value 

 and interest oi the volume."— Philadelphia North American. 



" To the general reader the work is made entertaining by many illustrations 

 connected with such names as Linnaeus. Newton, Sir Walter Scott, Horace Ver- 

 net, Qustave Dore, and many others." — Harrisburg Telegraph. 



"The whole subject is presented with a Frenchman's vivacity of style."— 

 Providence Journal. 



"It is not too much to say that in no single work have so many curious 

 eases been brought together aud interpreted in a scientific manner."— Boston 

 Evening Traveller. 



MYTH AND SCIENCE. By Tito Vignoli. ,12mo, cloth, price, $1.59. 



" His book is ingenious ; ... his theory of how science gradually differen- 

 tiated from and conquered myth is extremely well wrought out, and is probably in 

 essentials correct."— Saturday Review. 



"The book is a strong one, and far more interesting to the general reader than Its 

 title would indicate. The learning, the aeuteness, the strong reasoning power, and the 

 scientific spirit of the author, command admiration." — New York Christian Advocate. 



" An attempt made, with much ability and no small measure of success, to trace the 

 origin and development of the myth. The author has pursued his inquiry with much 

 patience and ingenuity, and has produced a very readable and luminous treatise."— 

 Philadelphia North American. 



" It is a curious if not startling contribution both to psychology and to the early 

 history of man's development." — New York World. 



For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. 

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



