BUCHANAN’S
JOURNAL OF MAN.
Vol. I.
November, 1887.
No. 10.
CONTENTS.
- [The Slow Triumph of Truth]
- [Old Industrial Education]
- [An Incomparable “Medical Outlaw”]
- [Educational].—[Educational Reform in England]; [Dead Languages Vanishing]; [Higher Education of Women]; [Bad Sunday-School Books]; [Our Barbarous Orthography]
- [Critical].—[European Barbarism]; [Boston Civilization]; [Monopoly]; [Woman’s Drudgery]; [Christian Civilization]; [Walt Whitman]; [Temperance]
- [Scientific].—[Extension of Astronomy]; [A New Basis for Chemistry]; [Chloroform in Hydrophobia]; [The Water Question]; [Progress of Homœopathy]; [Round the World Quickly]
- [Glances Round the World (concluded from August)]
- [Rectification of Cerebral Science (illustrated)]
The Slow Triumph of Truth.
The Journal of Man does not fear to perform its duty and use plain language in reference to the obstructionists who hinder the acceptance of demonstrable sciences and prevent all fair investigation, while they occupy positions of influence and control in all collegiate institutions.
It is not in scorn or bitterness that we should speak of this erring class, a large number of whom are the victims of mis-education—of the hereditary policy of the colleges, which is almost as difficult to change as a national church, or a national despotism. The young men who enter the maelstrom of college life are generally borne along as helpless as rowing boats in a whirlpool. It is impossible for even the strongest minds to be exposed for years, surrounded by the contaminating influence of falsehood, and come forth uninjured. But while we pity the victims of medical colleges and old-fashioned universities, let us seek for our young friends institutions that have imbibed the spirit of the present age.