22 D. APPLETON <S CO.'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



MEDICAL RECOLLECTIONS OF THE ARMY OF 



THE POTOMAC. By JONATHAN LETTERMAN, M. D., late Surgeon 

 U. S. A., and Medical Director of the Army of the Potomac. 

 i vol., 8vo, 194 pp. Cloth, $i. 



" We venture to assert that but few who open with instruction, will care to do otherwise than 

 this volume of medical annals, pregnant as they are finish them at a sitting." Medical Record. 



RESPONSIBILITY IN MENTAL DISEASES. By 



HENRY MAUDSLEY, M. D., London. 



I vol., I2mo, 313 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 



" This book is a compact presentation of those social relation, in which obligation enters as an 

 facts and principles which require to be taken into element. The work is new in plan, and was writ- 

 account in estimating human responsibility not le- ten to supply a wide-felt want which has not hither- 

 gal responsibility merely, but responsibility for con- to been met." The Popular Science Monthly. 

 duct in the family, the school, and all phases of 



BODY AND MIND: An Inquiry into their Connection and 



Mutual Influence, especially in reference to Mental Disorders; an enlarged 

 and revised edition, to which are added Psychological Essays. By HENRY 

 MAUDSLEY, M. D., London. 



I vol., I2mo, 275 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 



The general plan of this work may be described as being to bring man, both in his physical 

 and mental relations, as much as possible within the scope of scientific inquiry. 



" Dr. Maudsley has had the courage to under- the abundant cases compiled by the medical author- 

 take, and the skill to execute, what is, at least in ities ; but the physician, on the other hand, had no 

 English, an original enterprise. This book is a theoretical clew to his observations beyond a smat- 

 manual of mental science in all its parts, embracing tering of dogmatic psychology learned at college, 

 all that is known in the existing state of physiology. To effect a reconciliation between the Psychology 

 . . . Many and valuable books have been written and the Pathology of the mind, or rather to con- 

 by English physicians on insanity, idiocy, and all struct a basis for both in a common science, is the 

 the forms of mental aberration. But derangement aim of Dr. Maudsley's book." London Saturday 

 had always been treated as a distinct subject, and Review. 



therefore empirically. That the phenomena of A repres entative work, which every one must 



sound and unsound minds are not matters of d,s- gtud who F desires to know what is doin ^ in the 



tmct mvestiga ion, but inseparable parts of one and f ' j and not mere chatter , about men- 



the same inquiry, seems a truism as soon as stated ^ physiology and pathology. "-Lancet. 

 But, strange to say, they had always been pursued 



separately, and been in the hands of two distinct " It distinctly marks a step in the progress of 



classes of investigators. The logicians and meta- scientific psychology." The Practitioner. 

 physicians occasionally borrowed a stray fact from 



HEALTH, AND HOW TO PROMOTE IT. By RICHARD 

 MCSHERRY, M. D., Professor of Practice of Medicine, University of Mary- 

 land ; President of Baltimore Academy of Medicine, etc. 

 I vol., I2mo, 185 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 



" An admirable production which should find its " This is a racy little book of 185 pages, full of 

 way into every family in the country. It comprises good advice and important suggestions, and written 

 a vast amount of the most valuable matter expressed in a free and easy style, which crops out in con- 

 in clear and terse language, and the subjects of tinued humor and crispness by which the advice is 

 which it treats are of the deepest interest to every seasoned, and which render the reading of the book 

 human being." Prof. S. D. GROSS, of Jefferson a pleasant pastime to all, whether professionals or 

 Medical College, Philadelphia. non-professionals." Canadian Journal of Medical 



" On the whole, this little book seems to us very Science. 



well adapted to its purpose, and will, we hope, have " It contains a great deal of useful information, 



a wide circulation, when it can not fail to do much stated in a very simple and attractive way." Balti- 



good." American Journal of Medical Sciences. more Gazette. 



"It is the work of an able physician, and is "This is one of the best popular essays on the 



written in a style which all people can understand, subject we have ever seen. It is short, clear, posi- 



It deals with practical topics, and its ideas are set tive, sensible, bright and entertaining in its style, 



forth so pointedly as to make an impression." and is as full of practical suggestions as a nut is 



The Independent. full of meat." Literary World. 



