| CONTENTS. |
| The Nature of Animal Life. The Process of Life. The Senses of Animals. Mental Processes in Man. Mental Processes in Animals. The Feelings of Animals. Animal Activities: Their Habits and Instincts. Reproduction and Development. Variation and Natural Selection. Heredity and the Origin of Variations. Organic Evolution. |
IN PREPARATION.
EPOCHS OF INDUSTRY.
By M. E. SADLER, M.A.,
Steward of Christ Church, Oxford, and Secretary of the University
Extension Scheme.
LONDON:
EDWARD ARNOLD, 18 Warwick Square, Paternoster Row, E.C.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] See Hinton’s “Life in Nature.”
[2] The form of neurasthenia which most frequently receives this label is cerebrasthenia with emotional symptoms. It often exists without myelasthenia or any kind of bodily exhaustion.
[3] I have known the term “hysteria” applied to cases of well-marked brain disease, to cases of brain exhaustion from internal disease or disorder, to states of bodily weakness without disorder of the brain, to mere habitual eccentricity,—in fact, to anything and everything.
[4] See Tyrrell’s “Tonic Treatment of Epilepsy.”
[5] Motley’s “Rise of the Dutch Republic.”
[6] The more highly developed the organism, the greater its sensitiveness.