DISCOVERY 



55 



Books Received 



'(Mention in this column does not preclude a review.) 



ANTHROPOLOGY 

 The Evolution of Man. Sigma Eleven I>ectures dslivered 

 at Yale University 1921-22. Lull, Ferris, Parker, 

 Angell, Keller, Conldin. Edited by G. A. Baitsell. 

 (Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press, 

 15s. net.) 

 The Bronze Age and the Celtic World. By H.\rold 

 Pe.\ke, F.S.A. (Benn Brothers, Ltd., 42s.) 



MISCELLANEOUS 



A Descriptive Catalogue of Land Charters and Other Docu- 

 ments, forming the Brooke Taylor Collection, relating 

 to the outlying districts of Sheffield. Compiled by 

 T. \V.\LTER Hall, M.A., etc. (Sheffield : J. W. 

 Northend, Ltd.) 



Anglo-Sa.xon Monumental Sculpture in the Cambridge 

 District. By Cyril Fox. (From the Cambridge 

 Antiquarian Society's Communications, vol. xxiii.) 



Travels of a Consular Officer in Eastern Tibet, together 

 with a History of the Relations between China, Tibet, 

 and India. By Eric Teichman. (Cambridge Uni- 

 versity Press, 25s. net.) 



A Hind in Richmond Park. By W. H. Hudson. (J. M. 

 Dent & Sons, 165.) 



Calculus and Probability for Actuarial Students. By 

 Alfred Henry, F.I. A. (Charles & Edwin Layton. 

 for the Institute of Actuaries.) 



Life Contingencies. By E. F. Spurgeon, F.I. A. (Charles 

 & Edwin Layton, for the Institute of Actuaries.) 



Greek Art and Architecture : their Legacy to Us. By Percy 

 Gardner, F.B.A., and Sir Reginald Blomfield, 

 F.S.A. , R.A. (Oxford University Pr<;ss, 2s. bd.) 



Orographical, Regional, Economic Atlas: Part IV, Africa. 

 Editor, Thomas Franklin. (\V. & A.K.Johnston, 

 Ltd., Edinburgh, is. bd.) 



PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY 



Croup Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego. By Sigm. 

 Freud, M.D., LL.D. Authorised trans, by James 

 Strachey. (International Psycho-Analytical Press 

 and George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., 75. bd.) 



The Principles of Logic. 2nd Edition, revised, with com- 

 mentary and terminal essays. 2 vols. By F. H. 

 Bradley, Fellow of Merton College, O.xford. (Oxford 

 University Press, 36s. net.) 



The Psychology of Self-Consciousness. By Julia Turner, 

 B.A. (Kegan Paul, Trench, Triibner & Co., Ltd., 

 6s. bd.) 



The Omnipotent Self. By Paul Bousfield, M.R.C.S., 

 L.R.C.P. (Kegan Paul, Trench, Triibner & Co., 

 Ltd., 5s.) 



SCIENCE 



Le Volvox : Deuxihne Memoire. Par Charles Janet. 



(Les Presses Universitaires de France.) 

 Man as a Geological Agent. An Account of his Action on 



Inanimate Nature. By R. L. Sherlock, D.Sc, 



A.R.C.Sc, F.G.S., with an introduction by A. 



Smith Woodward, LL.D., F.R.S. (H. F. & G. 



Witherby. 20s.) 

 Discoveries and Inventions of the Ticentieth Century. 



2nd Edition. By Edward Cressy. (G. Routledge 



& Sons, I2S. 6d.) 

 Symbiosis v. Cancer. By H. Reinheimi:r, with a preface 



by Sir William Veno. (Headley Brothers, 5s.) 

 Mathematics and Physical Science in Classical Antiquity. 



Translated from ths German of J. L. Heiberg by 



D. C. Macgregor. (Chapters in the History of 



Science, Oxford University Press, 2s. bd.) 

 .4 Guide to the Elephants (Recent and Fossil) exhibited in 



the Department of Geology and Palaontologv in the 



British Museum {Natural History). 2nd Edition. 



(Sold at the British Museum (Nat. Hist.), and by 



B. Quaritch, Ltd., Dulan & Co., Ltd., and the Oxford 



University Press, is.) 

 Tlie Racing Eight. Notes on its Design and Propulsion. 



By W. B. Coventry. (Heffer & Sons, Ltd., 3s. bd.) 

 A book of about forty pages chiefly in praise of a noted 

 Tyneside boat-builder and expert oarsman, Mat Taylor. 

 Its object is to suggest that one way of increasing the 

 spaed of the racing eight is to take cognisance of this 

 man's work. 



Cements and Artificial Stone. By J. Watson, M.A., 

 F.G.S. (Heffer & Sons, Ltd., 6s.) 



A descriptive catalogue of the specimens in the Sedg- 

 wick Museum, Cambridge, with notes relating to the 

 history, geology, and chemistry of the materials they 

 represent written for students of Economic Geology. 

 Machine Construction and Drawing. By Frank Castle, 

 M.I.M.E. (Macmillan & Co., Ltd.,' 7s. bd.) 



A textbook on the subject first published in 1905, 

 reprinted several times subsequently, and now with 

 additions. 



The Andover District. An Account of Sheet 283 of the 

 one-inch Ordnance Map. By O. G. S. Crawford, 

 B..\. (Oxford University Press, 7s. bd.) 



This volume of Oxford Geographical Studies is a detailed 

 description, both from the physical and economic stand- 

 point, of a part of the counties of Hampshire, Wiltshire, 

 and Bertehire, in which Andover is the largest town. 

 The author is well known for his contributions to what 

 might be called the arch.iological and anthropological 

 iides of geography, and this account of one of the parts 

 of England best known to him is in his best manner. 

 There is a good deal of original work in the book, especially 

 in the appendices, which form half of it. Those on pre- 

 historic sites and discoveries, on the grouping of parishes, 

 on Anglo-Saxon bounds, and on the evolution of place- 

 names wiil especially appeal to those who take an interest 

 in these subjects. There are some interesting photo- 

 graphs and useful maps. 



The Radio Amateur's Handbook. By A. Frederick 

 Collins. (G. G. Harrap & Co., Ltd., 7s. bd.) 



The Evolution of Climate. By C. E. P. Brooks, M.Sc, 

 F.R.Met.Soc. (Benn Brothers, Ltd., 8s. bd.) 



