orld (concluded from August)
Rectification of Cerebral Science (illustrated)
11. DECEMBER.--The World's Neglected or Forgotten Leaders and Pioneers
Social Conditions--Expenses at Harvard; European Wages; India as a
Wheat Producer; Increase of Insanity; Temperance; Flamboyant
Animalism
Transcendental Hash
Just Criticism
Progress of discovery and Improvement--Autotelegraphy; Edison's
Phonograph; Type-setting Eclipsed; Printing in Colors; Steam
Wagon; Fruit Preserving; Napoleon's Manuscript; Peace; Capital
Punishment; Antarctic Explorations; The Desert shall Blossom as
the Rose
Life and Death--Marvellous Examples
Outlines of Anthropology (continued) Chapter X.--The Law of
Location in Organology
12. JANUARY.--The Pursuit of Truth
Occultism defined
Psychic Phenomena
The Ancient Iberians
The Star Dust of the Universe
MISCELLANEOUS--Bright Literature; The Two Worlds; Foote's Health
Monthly; Psychic Theories; Twentieth Century Science, Dawning at
the end of the Nineteenth; Comparative Speed of Light and
Electricity; Wonderful Photography; Wooden Cloth; The
Phylloxera; Falling Rents; Boston Civilization; Psychic
Blundering; Beecher's Mediumship; A Scientific Cataract;
Obstreperous and Pragmatic Vulgarity; Hygiene; Quinine; Life and
Death; Dorothea L. Dix; The Drift of Catholicism, Juggernaut
The Principal Methods of Studying the Brain
Responses of Readers--Medical Orthodoxy
BUCHANAN'S
JOURNAL OF MAN.
VOL. I. FEBRUARY, 1887. NO. 1.
SALUTATORY.
Kind reader! Let me presume that you are in search of truth, and that
you have an intuition sufficient to tell you that this unending search
is the inspiring energy of the JOURNAL OF MAN Let us realize the
vastness of truth, the vastness of those realms of knowledge
heretofore unexplored by man, in which the JOURNAL is to perform its
work, and in realizing that, it will be very obvious that no single
number of the JOURNAL can be an adequate specimen to give a just
conception of what it is to be, how many hundred themes it will have
to consider, how many errors to analyze, how many new suggestions to
introduce, how many criticisms of the old, how many expositions of the
new. The pres
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