Physiology. 757 
a morphological journal. The same holds true in anatomy and 
histology ; for example, in the case of the sense-organs. The phys- 
iological explanation of these organs is what we are all striving 
for, whether we call ourselves morphologists or physiologists. 
“So long as morphologists do most of the work, they will com- 
mand the field, and their discussions and experimental observations 
will not be out of place by the side of their morphological studies. 
The time may come when animal physiology can be separated from 
animal morphology to the same extent that human physiology is 
now separable from human anatomy, but we are yet a long way 
from such conditions. For the present we must recognize the 
fact, that the relations and bearings of a subject often outweigh 
the logic of conventional distinctions, and sanction what might 
construed, as a violation of the letter, though not the spirit, of our 
terminology,” 
The fact is that cellular physiology and what might be called 
microscopic physiology has been given up of late to a great extent 
by the strict physiologists, who have turned their attention too exclu- 
—Some experiments lately made by Mr. C. F. Hodge,' under 
the direction of Dr. H. H. Donaldson, at the Johns Hopkins Uni- 
1 Am. Journ. of Psychology, Balt., May, 1888. 
