16 Mr. Edward Arnold's List of New Books. 



THE BODY AT WORK. 



By ALEX HILL, M.A., M.D., F.R.C.S., 



SOMETIME MASTER OF DOWNING COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE. 

 AUTHOR OF 'AN INTRODUCTION TO SCIENCE,' 'THE PHYSIOLOGIST'S NOTE-BOOK," ETC. 



With Illustrations, xii + 452 pages, Demy 8vo. i6s. net. 



This is a book for the non-professional reader, not a regular 

 text-book for the medical student. It does not assume any technical 

 knowledge of the sciences, such as chemistry, physics and biology, 

 which lead up to a formal study of physiology. Dr. Hill describes 

 the phenomena of life, their interdependence and causes, in language 

 intelligible to people of general education, and his book may be com- 

 pared in this respect with Dr. Hutchison's well-known work on 

 * Food.' There is perhaps a prejudice against the ordinary popularizer 

 of scientific knowledge, but when a master of his subject takes up his 

 pen to write for the public, we cannot but be grateful that he has 

 cast aside the trammels of the text-book, and handled subjects of vital 

 interest to humanity in so broad and philosophic a manner. 



A TEXT-BOOK OF EXPERIMENTAL 

 PSYCHOLOGY. 



By Dr. C. S. MYERS, 



PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY AT KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON UNIVERSITY. 



Crown Svo. 8s. 6d. net. 



The lack of a text-book on Experimental Psychology has been 

 long felt, the literature of the subject having been hitherto so scattered 

 and profuse that the student has to collect a small library of books 

 and periodicals. The present work gives an account of the more im- 

 portant results obtained, and describes methods of experiment, with 

 practical directions for the student. 



APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY. 



21 1&an&boofc tor Students ot /iftebfcine. 

 By ROBERT HUTCHISON, M.D., F.R.C.P., 



PHYSICIAN TO THE LONDON HOSPITAL, AND ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO THE HOSPITAL 



FOR SICK CHILDREN. 

 AUTHOR OF ' FOOD AND THE PRINCIPLES OF DIETETICS,' ETC. 



Crown 8vo. js. 6d. net. 



The author of a standard work on diet is not likely to err by 

 being too theoretical. The principle of Dr. Hutchison's new book 

 is to bring physiology from the laboratory to the bedside. ' Physio- 

 logy,' he writes, ' is studied in the laboratory, and clinical medicine 

 in the wards, and too often one finds that the student is incapable of 

 applying his scientific knowledge to his clinical work.' 



LONDON : EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W. 



