32 
D. APPLETON & CO/S ILLUSTRATED 
LUYS. The Brain and its Functions. By J. Luys, Physician to the 
Hospice de la Salpétriére. 
“No living physiologist is better entitled to 
speak with authority upon the structure and func- 
tions of’ the brain than Dr. Luys. His studies on 
the anatomy of the nervous system are acknowl- 
edged to be the fullest and_most systematic ever 
undertaken.”’—S¢, James's Gazette. 
“It is not too much to say that M. Luys has 
gone further than any other investigator. into this 
With Illustrations. 
12mo. Cloth, $1.50. 
ing and valuable are the chapters dealing with the 
genesis and evolution of memory, the develop- 
ment of automatic activity, and the development 
of the notion of personality.”—Boston Evening 
Traveller. 
“ Dr. Luys, at the head of the great French In- 
sane Asylum, is one of the most eminent and suc- 
cessful investigators of cerebral science now liv- 
ing; and he has given unquestionably the clearest 
ond field of study, and only those who are as 
east dimly aware of the vasu changes going on in 
the realm of psychology can appreciate ths im- 
portance of his revelations. Particularly interest- 
and most interesting brief account yet made of the 
structure and operations of’ the brain.”’—Fopular 
Science Monthly. 
MARKOE. A Treatise on Diseases of the Bones. By Tuomas 
M. Marxoz, M.D., Professor of Surgery in the College of Physicians and 
Surgeons, New York, ete. With numerous Illustrations. 8vo. 416 pages. 
Cloth, $4.50. 
This valuable work is a treatise on Diseases of the Bones, embracing their structural changes as 
affected by disease, their clinical history and treatment, including also an account of the various tumors 
which grow in or upon them. None of the injuries of bone arc included in its scope, and no joint dis- 
eases, excepting where the condition of the bone is a prime factor in the problem of' disease. As the 
work of an eminent surgeon of large and varied experience, it may be regarded as the best on the sub- 
ject, and a valuable contribution to medical literature. 
MAUDSLEY. Body and Mind: An Inquiry into their Connection 
and Mutual Influence, especially in reference to Mental Disorders ; an en- 
larged and revised edition, to which are added Psychological Essays. By 
Henry Maupstey, M.D., London. 
12mo. 275 pages. 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. 
aed and valuable books have been written 
by English physicians on insanity, idiocy, and all 
the forms of mental aberration. But derangement 
had always been treated as a distinct subject, and 
therefore empirically. That the phenomena of 
sound and unsound minds are not matters of dis- 
tinct investigation, but inseparable parts of one 
_and the same inquiry, seems a truism as soon as 
stated, But, strange to say, they had always been 
ursued separately, and been in the hands of two 
Mistinct classes of investigators. .The logicians 
and metaphysicians occasionally borrowed a stray 
fact from the abundant cases compiled by the 
medica] authorities; buv the physician, on the 
other hand, bad no theoretical clew to his obser- 
MAUDSLEY. Responsibility 
Mavupstey, M D., London. 
“This book is a compact presentation of those 
facts and principles which require to be taken 
into account in estimating human responsibility 
—not legal responsibility merely, but responsi- 
bility for conduct in the family, the school, and 
12mo. 
vations beyond a smattering of dogmatic paychol- 
ogy learned at college. To effect a reconciliation 
between the Psychology and the Pathology of the 
mind, or rather to construct a basis for both in a 
common science, is the aim of Dr. Maudsley’s 
book.”’—London Saturday Review. 
“A pepresentatiye work, which every one 
must study who desires to know what is do- 
ing in the way of real progress, and not mere 
cuteseabaut mental physiology and pathology.” 
—Lance. 
“Tt distinctly marks a step in the progress 
of scientific psychology.’”’— Zhe Practitioner. 
in Mental Diseases. By Henry 
313 pages. Cloth, $1.50. | 
all phases of social relation, in which obligation 
enters as an element. The work is new in 
plan, and was written to supply a wide-felt 
want which has not hitherto been met.”’—The 
Popular Science Monthly. 
MAUDSLEY. The Pathology of Mind. Being the third edition of 
the Second Part of the “ Physiology and Pathology of Mind,” recast, en- 
larged, and rewritten. 
580 pages. $2.00. 
CONTENTS.—Chapter I. Sleeping and Dreaming; U. H 
States ; III. The Causation and Prevention of Insanity: (A) 
By Henry Mavupsiey, M.D., London. 
12mo. 
notism, Somnambulism, and Allied 
tiological; TV. The same continued ; 
