[3] The Faith and Works of Christian Science. Macmillan and Co. 1909. The book is now in a second edition.

[4] British Medical Journal, June 18, 1910.

[5] Dean Lefroy on Christian Science.

[6]

From the Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford.
Nov. 18th, ’09.
‘Dear Sir,—

‘The question as you say bristles with difficulties, but no doubt in the stirring of the pool healing in some form or another will be the outcome. You are of course at liberty to use any writings of mine.—Sincerely yours,

W. Osler.’

[7] British Medical Journal, June 18, 1910.

[8] British Medical Journal, June 18, 1910.

[9] The biologist who used to expect to discover the source of life by dissection and analysis would be rather astonished at the modern tendency among scientific men to substitute doctrines of ‘energies’ for ‘atoms.’ As Dr. Putman has pointed out, the modern physicist scarcely feels the need of atoms for the world of his conception. We may even go a step further. ‘Energy’ is ‘immaterial,’ ‘consciousness’ is ‘immaterial.’ May they not accordingly have a common denominator?