SCIENCE IN ADULT EDUCATION 331 



NuNN : Education : its Data and Firs-t Principles. 



Osborne : Prisons and Common Sense. 



Paterson : Across the Bridges. 



Smith : The Psychology of the Criminal. 



Stanford Read : The Struggles of Male Adolescence. 



Sullivan : Crime and Insanity. 



Tansley : The New Psychology and its Relation to Life. 



Tawney : Education. 



Secondary Education for All. 



Thouless : Social Psychology. 



Wheeler: Youth: the Psychology of Adolescence. 



Section II. 



Bartlett : Psychology and Primitive Culture. 



Carpenter : Comparative Religion. 



Driberg : The Lango : a Nilotic Tribe of Uganda. 



Flower : An Approach to the Psychology of Religion. 



Fox : The Threshold of the Pacific. 



Frazer : The Golden Bough. 



Freud : The Future of an Illusion. 



Totem and Taboo. 



Civilisation and its Discontents. 



Harrison : Ancient Art and Ritual. 



Hocart : Kingship. 



Jevons : An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Religion. 



Joad : The Present and Future of Religion. 



Jones : Essays in Applied Psycho-analysis. 



Leuba : The Psychology of Religious Mysticism. 



Levy-Bruhl : Primitive Mentality. 



Malinowski : Crime and Custom in Savage Society. 



Marett : Psychology and Folklore. 



The Threshold of Religion. 



Perry : The Origin of Magic and Religion. 



Pym : Psychology of the Christian Life. 



Rashdall : The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology. 



Rivers : Medicine, Magic and Religion. 



SooTHiLL : The Three Religions of China. 



Smith : The Evolution of the Dragon. 



Starbuck : The Psychology of Religion. 



SxRATTON : Psychology of the Religious Life. 



Spencer and Gillen : The Native Tribes of Central Australia. 



Native Tribes of the Northern Territory of Australia. 



Thouless : Introduction to the Psychology of Religion. 



Dr. Susan Isaacs. 



(London.) 



PsycJiology. 



First and Second Year. 



(The paragraphs are not arranged in the order of presentation 



of the subject.) 



Definitions of psychology — its scope — the relations of ' scientific ' and 

 ' literary ' psychology. The frontiers of psychology. Its relation to 

 physics and physiology. Methods. Introspection, its nature and functions. 

 Experiment. Mental tests and the use of statistics. 



The Mental life of the adult. The modes of experience. 



Perception. Its functions. Its analysis into sensations. Sense organs 

 and the nervous system. The Gestalt theory. Social factors in perceiving. 



