No. 46. The Diseases of Memory. By Th. 



Ribot. Translated from the French by 

 J. Fitzgerald, M.A. 



No. 47. The Childhood of Religion. By 



Edward Clodd, F.R.A.S. 



No. 48. Life in Nature. (Illustrated.) By James 

 Hinton. 



No. 49. The Sun; its Constitution, its Phenom- 

 ena, its Condition. By Judge Nathan T. 

 Carr, Columbus, Ind. 



No. 50. Money and the Mechanism of Ex- 

 change. Part I. By Prof. W. Stanley 

 Jevons, F.R.S. 



No. 51. Money and the Mechanism of Ex- 

 change. Part II. 



No. 52. The Diseases of the Will. By Th. 



Ribot. Translated from the French by 

 J. Fiizgerald. 



No. 53. Animal Automatism, and other Essays, 

 Jiy Prof. T. H. Huxley, F.R.S. 



No. 54. The Birth and Growth of Myth. By 



Edward Clodd, F.R.A.S. 



No. 55. The Scientific Basis of Morals, and 



other Essays. By William Kinfigdom Clif- 

 ford, F.R.S. 



No. 56. Illusions. Part I. By James Sully. 



No. 57. Illusions. Part II. 



No. 53. The Origin of Species. (Double num- 

 ber). Part I. By Charles Darwin. 



No. 59. The Origin of Species. Double num- 

 ber. Part II. 



No. 60. The Childhood of the World. By 



Edward Clodd. 



N<?. Oi. Miscellaneous Essays. By Richard A. 

 Procter. 



No. <ij The Religions of the Ancient World. 



By Prof. Geo. Rawlinson, Univ. of Oxford, 

 (Double Number). 



No. 63. Progressive Morality. By Thomas 

 Fowler, LL.D., President of Corpus 

 Christi Coil., Oxford. 



No. 64. The Distribution of Animals and 

 Plants. By A. Russell Wallace and W. 

 T. Thistleton Dyer. 



No. 65. Conditions of Mental Development: 



and other essays. By William Kingdon 

 Clifford. 



JTo 66. Technical Education: and other essays. 



By Thomas H. Huxley, F.R.S. 



No. 67. The Black Death. An account of the 

 Great Pestilence of the 14th Century. 

 By J. 1'. C. Hecker, M. D. 



No. 68. Three Essays. By Herbert Spencer. 

 Special Number. 



No. 63. Fetichism: A Contribution to Anthropo- 

 logy and the History of Religion. Ey 

 Fritz Schultzc, Ph.D. Double number. 



No. 70. Essays Speculative and Practical. 

 By Herbert Spencer. 



No. 71. Anthropology. By Daniel Wilson, Ph. 

 D. With Appendix on Archaeology. By 

 E.B. Tylor,F.B.S. 



Ho. 72, The Dancing Mania of the Middle 

 Ages. By J. F. 0. Hecker, M.D. 



Wo. T3. involution in ITistorv, ^anguago and 



Science. A our Auuresses delivered at 

 the London Crystal 1'alace School of Art, 

 Science and Literature. 



No. 74. } The Descent of Man, and Selection in 

 No. 75. ! Relation to Sex. (Numerous Illuttrationt] 

 No. 76. f By Charles Darwin, fios. 74, 75. 76 are. 

 No. 77. J tingle Nos. ; No. 77. t* a double No. 



No. 78. Historical Sketch of the Distribu- 

 tion of Land in England. By Wil- 

 liam Lloyd Birkbeck, M.A. 



No. 79. Scientific Aspect of some Familiar 

 Things. By W. M. Williams. 



No. 80. Charles Darwin. His Life and Work" 

 By Grant Allen. (Double number). 



No. 81. The Mystery of Matter, and the 

 Philosophy of Ignorance. Two Es- 

 says by J. Allanson Picton. 



No. 82. Illusions of the Senses: and other Es- 

 says. By Richard A. Proctor. 



No. 83. Profit-Sharing Between Capital and 

 Labor. Six Essays. By Sedley Taylor. 

 M.A. 



No. 84. Studies of Animated Nature. Four 

 Essays on Natural History. By W. 8. 

 Dallas, F.L.S. 



No. 85. The Essential Nature of Religion. 



By J. Allanson Picton. 



No. 86. The Unseen Universe, and the PhiloBO- 

 phy of the Pure Sciences. By Prof. Wm. 

 Kingdon Clifford, F.R.8. 



No. 87. The Morphine Habit. By Dr. B. B1L 

 of the Paris Faculty of Medicine. 



No. 88. Science and Crime and other Essays. 

 By Andrew Wilson. F.R.S.E. 



No. 89. The Genesis of Science. By Herbert 

 Spencer. 



No. 90. Notes on Earthquakes: with Fourteen 

 Miscellaneous Essays. By Richard A. 

 Proctor. 



No. 91. The Rise of Universities. By S. S- 

 Laurie, LL.D. (Double number). ( 



No. 92. The Formation of Vegetable Mould 

 through the Action of Earth 

 Worms. By Charles Darwin, LL.D. 

 F.R.S. (Double number). 



No. 93. Scientific Methods of Capital Pun- 

 ishment. By J. Mount Bleyer, M.D. 

 (Special number). 



No. 94. The Factors of Organic Evolution. 



By Herbert Spencer. 



No. 95. The Diseases of Personality. By Th. 



Ribot. Translated from the French by 

 J. Fitzgerald, M.A. 



No. 96. A Half-Century of Science. By Prof. 

 Thomas H. Huxley, and Grant Allen. 



No. 97. The Pleasures of Life. By Sir Jo] 

 Lubbock, Bart. 



No. 98. Cosmic Emotion: Also the Teach 

 ings of Science. By William Kingdon 

 Clifford. (Special number). 



No. 93. Nature Studies. By Prof. F. R. Eaton 

 Lowe ; Dr. Robert Brown, F.L.S. ; Geo 

 G. Chisholm, F.R.G.S., and James Dal- 

 las, F.L.S. 



