20 Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements. 



MALINGERING. r 



By Sir JOHN COLLIE, M.D., J.P., 



MEDICAL EXAMINER TO THE LONDON COUNTY COUNCIL, CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER UNDER THE 

 METROPOLITAN WATER BOARD,IETC. 



One Volume. Demy Svo. About qs. 6d. net. 



The importance of this work will easily be recognized by all who 

 have responsibilities under the National Health Insurance Act and 

 the Workmen's Compensation Act, or who may have to deal with 

 the subject as employers of labour, insurance companies, solicitors, 

 medical men, etc. The subject is dealt with from every point of 

 view, beginning with the prevention of malingering, proceeding to 

 methods of medical examination in relation to different organs of the 

 body and numerous specific diseases, and concluding with a discus- 

 sion of the position under various Acts of Parliament. It is believed 

 that the book will occupy a unique place and cover ground hitherto 

 unoccupied, while the experience and knowledge of the author give 

 him an unquestioned claim to fill the gap. 



QUESTIONS OF THE DAY IN 

 PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY. 



By HERBERT LESLIE STEWART, M.A., D.Ph. 



LATE JOHN LOCKE SCHOLAR IN MENTAL PHILOSOPHY AT OXFORD, AND JUNIOR FELLOW IN 



MENTAL AND MORAL SCIENCE, ROYAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND; LECTURER 



IN PHILOSOPHY IN THE QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY OF BELFAST. 



One Volume. Demy Svo. About ios. 6d. net. 



This volume will be welcomed as a remarkably clear exposition 

 of matters which, though of great interest and importance, are seldom 

 lucidly expounded. It is now admitted that Psychology occupies 

 a position to-day very different from that which it held a generation 

 ago. The change is generally ascribed to a profound and far- 

 reaching transformation of method, and a discussion and criticism of 

 the reform occupies the first part of the book. The remainder 

 illustrates the argument of the opening chapter by showing how 

 new light is being cast by Psychologists on some very old and 

 previously intractable problems in the theory of knowledge and in 

 the social sciences. 



