LECTURE VI. 



163 



can you otherwise separate him from the animal kingdom ? 

 If man^ both in his mental qualifications as well as in his cere- 

 bral functions, possesses not merely a something more (what no 

 one denies) J but something else not existing in other animals, 

 which he miist have if he is to be capable of religion, of salvation, 

 and of immortality ; then there should be something in his 

 brain, were it only an organ of faith ! 



Fig. 59. Brain of Macacus silenus, upper surface, after Gratiolet. 



Fig. 60. Side view of the same ; the operculum is reflected to display the 

 subjacent transition convolutions. 



The description in both figures is the same as in the Chimpanzee brain, 

 fig. 58 (compare figures 30 and 36). E, operculum; so, transition convolution 

 covered by the operculum. 



M 2 



