D. APPLE TON 6- CO. 'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



2 3 



THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE MIND. Being the First 



Part of a third edition, revised, enlarged, and in a great part rewritten, of 

 " The Physiology and Pathology of the Mind." By HENRY MAUDSLEY, 



M. D., London. 



I vol., I2mo, 547 pp. Cloth, $2. 



CONTENTS. Chapter I. On the Method of the Study of the Mind ; II. The Mind and the 

 Nervous System; III. The Spinal Cord, or Tertiary Nervous Centers'; or, Nervous Centers of 

 Reflex Action; IV. Secondary Nervous Centers, or Sensory Ganglia; Sensorium Commune ; V. 

 Hemispherical Ganglia ; Cortical Cells of the Cerebral Hemispheres ; Ideational Nervous Cen- 

 ters ; Primary Nervous Centers ; Intellectorium Commune ; VI. The Emotions ; VII. Volition ; 

 VIII. Motor Nervous Centers, or Motorium Commune and Actuation or Effection ; IX. Memory 

 and Imagination. 



instructive display of notes and quotations from 

 authoritative writers upon physiology and psychol- 

 ogy ; and by illustrative cases, which add materi- 

 ally to the interest of the book." Popular Science 



"The ' Physiology of the Mind,' by Dr. Mauds- 

 ley, is a very engaging volume to read, as it is a fresh 

 and vigorous statement of the doctrines of a grow- 

 ing scientific school on a subject of transcendent 

 moment, and, besides many new facts and impor- 

 tant views brought out in the text, is enriched by an 



Monthly. 



PHYSICAL EDUCATION ; OR, THE HEALTH LAWS 



OF NATURE. By FELIX L. OSWALD, M. D. 



I2mo, cloth. $i. 



" Dr. Oswald is a medical man of thorough 

 preparation and large professional experience, and 

 an extensively traveled student of nature and of 

 men. While in charge of a military hospital at 

 Vera Cruz, his own health broke down from long 

 exposure in a malarial region, and he then struck 

 for the Mexican mountains, where he became direct- 

 or of another medical establishment. He has also 

 journeyed extensively in Europe, South America, 

 and the United States, and always as an open-eyed, 

 absorbed observer of nature and of men. The 

 ' Physical Education ' is one of the most whole- 

 some and valuable books that have emanated from 

 the American press in many a day. Not only can 

 everybody understand it, and, what is more,y^/ it, 

 but everybody that gets it will be certain to read and 

 re-read it. We have known of the positive and 

 most salutary influence of the papers as they ap- 

 peared in the '"Monthly, 1 and the extensive demand 

 for their publication in a separate form shows how 

 they have been appreciated. Let those who are able 

 and wish to do good buy it wholesale and give it to 

 those less able to obtain it." The Popular Science 

 Monthly. 



" Here we have an intelligent and sensible treat- 

 ment of a subject of great importance, viz. , physi- 

 cal education. We give the headings of some of 

 the chapters, viz. : Diet ; In-door Life ; Out-door 

 Life ; Gymnastics ; Clothing ; Sleep ; Recreation ; 

 Remedial Education ; Hygienic Precautions ; Pop- 

 ular Fallacies. These topics are discussed in a plain, 

 common-sense style suited to the popular mind. 



Books of this character can not be too widely read." 

 Albany (N. Y.) Argus. 



" Dr. Oswald is as epigrammatic as Emerson, 

 as spicy as Montaigne, and as caustic as Heine. 

 And yet he is a pronounced vegetarian. His first 

 chapter is devoted to a consideration of the diet 

 suitable for human beings and infants. In the next 

 two he contrasts life in and out of doors. He then 

 gives his ideas on the subjects of gymnastics, cloth- 

 ing, sleep, and recreation. He suggests a system of 

 remedial education and hygienic precautions, and 

 he closes with a diatribe against popular fallacies." 

 Philadelphia Press. 



" It is a good sign that books on physical train- 

 ing multiply in this age of mental straining. Dr. 

 Felix L. Oswald, author of the above book, may be 

 somewhat sweeping in his statements and beliefs, 

 but every writer who, like him, clamors for sim- 

 plicity, naturalness, and frugality in diet, for fresh 

 air and copious exercise, is a benefactor. Let the 

 dyspeptic and those who are always troubling them- 

 selves and their friends about their manifold ail- 

 ments take Dr. Oswald's advice and look more to 

 their aliments and their exercise." New York 

 Herald. 



" One of the best books that can be put in the 

 hands of young men and women. It is' very inter- 

 esting, full of facts and wise suggestions. It points 

 out needed reforms, and the way we can become a 

 strong and healthy people. It deserves a wide cir- 

 culation." Boston Commonwealth. 



GALVANO -THERAPEUTICS. The Physiological and 



Therapeutical Action of the Galvanic Current upon the Acoustic, Optic, 

 Sympathetic, and Pneumogastric Nerves. By WILLIAM B. NEFTEL. 

 Fourth edition. I vol.. I2mo, 161 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 



This book has been republished at the request of several aural surgeons and other professional 

 gentlemen, and is a valuable treatise on the subjects of which it treats. Its author, formerly visit- 

 ing physician to the largest hospital of St. Petersburg, has had the very best facilities for investi- 

 gation. 



" This little work shows, as far as it goes, full " Those who use electricity should get this work, 



knowledge of what has been done on the subjects and those who do not should peruse it to learn that 



treated of, and the author's practical acquaintance there is one more therapeutical agent that they could 



with them." New York Medical Journal. and should possess." The Medical Investigator. 



