D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



BRAIN EXHAUSTIOTT, with some Preliminary Considerations on 



Cerebral Dynamics. By J. Leonard Corning, M. D., formerly Kesi- 



dent Physician to the Hudson Kirer State Hospital for the Insane. 



Crown 8to, cloth, $2.00. 



*' The autbor begins by layiDS a broad fonndation for his dedactions In con- 

 sidering the law of the convertibility of forceB tu the dynamics of ttie brain. This 

 parallelism between inanimate physics and cerebral action is closely toUowed by 

 onr author, and with excellent results. Dr. Coming proceeds to classify his facts, 

 which appear to be drawn from wide experience and etudy, and to marshal them 

 with the skill uf a trained scientist. He first considers the various existing causes 

 which conduce to brain exhaustion in the physical sense, such as alcuhul-drink- 

 ing, tobacco, excessive sexualism, irregnlar hours, etc. ; in the mental sense, 

 overwork, whether in study and business, fret and worry, false educational meth- 

 ods, etc. He concludes with a summary of the principles of brain hygienics, and 

 indicates very clearly how brain exhaustion may be remedied before the final and 

 inevituble result comes. In these latter chapters the author discnsses the relation 

 of blood to muscle and brain, the relation of food to mental phenomena, rest, 

 special medication, etc. The book is admirably written. The style is simple, 

 Qirect, lucid, with as much aToidance as possible of technical terms and purely 

 professional logic. It is a timely woiis, which every thinking man can read with 

 Interest without being a physician. Brain-workers everywhere can study this 

 able digest with both profit and pleasure."— .ScJectsc MagaUna. 



OUTIilNES OF PSYCHOLOGY, with Special Reference to the 

 Theory of Education. A TextBook for Colleges. By James Sully, 

 A. M., Examiner for the Moral Sciences Tripos In the University of 

 Cambridge, etc., etc. Crown 8to, cloth, $3.00. 



" A book that has been long wanted by all who are engaged in the business of 

 teaclilng and desire to muster its principles. In the first place, it is an elaborate 

 treatise on the human mind, of independent merit as representing the latest and 

 bet work of all schools of psychological inquiry. But of equal importance, and 

 what will he prized as a new and most desirable feature of a work on mental 

 science, is the educational applications that are made throughout in separate text 

 and type, so that, with the explication of mental phenomena, there comes at once 

 the application to the art of education." 



BODY AND Wllili : being an Essay concerning Will in its Meta- 



physical, Physiological, and Patholo^cal Aspects. By Henri 



Maudslet, M. D. 8vo, cloth, $2.60. 



" Br Mandslev's powers of logic have never been more keenly exercised thati 

 in ' Body and Will,' his latest volume. He takes the nltramaterialistic view of 

 the human mind, and rerards will as the result of definite material causes, so 

 that, were syntbeticnl science a little further advanced, it would be Ppssibic, 

 bavin"- given physical conditions, to declare the inevitable result. The skill ana 

 emdition displayed In 'Body nnd Will' are only equaled by the keenness of its 

 criticisms upon what, from the writer's point of view, are empincal dogmas. 

 No fairer or more able exposition on the latest scientific teaching upon the sub- 

 ject of man as a fTee agent is to be found than in this volume."— Boston Courier. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 6 Bond Street. 



