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Front Matter Source: The Scientific Monthly, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Jul., 1928), pp. i-viii Published by: American Association for the Advancement of Science Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/7958 . Accessed: 03/05/2014 03:25 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . American Association for the Advancement of Science is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Scientific Monthly. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sat, 3 May 2014 03:25:47 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Front Matter

Front MatterSource: The Scientific Monthly, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Jul., 1928), pp. i-viiiPublished by: American Association for the Advancement of ScienceStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/7958 .

Accessed: 03/05/2014 03:25

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

American Association for the Advancement of Science is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve andextend access to The Scientific Monthly.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Front Matter

THE JULY

SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY

EDITED BY J. McKEEN CATTELL

BASAL METABOLISM: THE MODERN MEASURE OF VITAL

ACTIVITY. DR. FRANcIs G. BENEDICT .................................. .......................... 5

THE FUN OF BEING A SCIENTIST. DR. J. 0. PERRINE .............................. 28

THE MOST INTERESTING WILD ANIMAL IN AMERICA. ED-

WARD R. WARREN ............................................................ 33

A VISIT TO THE MUD-VOLCANOES OF TURBACO, COLOMBIA.

ALBERT C. SMITH ......................................................... 42

SIR ISAAO NEWTON ON GRAVITATION. PROFESSOR FLORIAN

CAJORI .............................47................ 47

THE RADIOACTIVE ELEMENTS. DR. L. R. KOLLER ...... ................... ........ 54

SHIPS. PROFESSOR EZRA BOWEN ............ ....... ................. .... . 57

FOOD PREJUDICES. DR. CHARLES W. TOWNSEND ...... ............ ....... .. 65

AGRIOULTURAL MAGIC. GRACE M. ZIEGLER ............................................. .. 69

BIRDS AND OTHER CHECKS UPON INSECTS. W. L. MCATEE .... 77

SPECIALIZATIONS GOVERNING MUSICAL EXPRESSION

AMONG INSECTS. H. A. ALLARD ......................................................... 81

THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE:

Hideyo Noguchi; Edgar Fahs Smith; The Arnold Arworetum of Harvard University .8..............................9. .................... 89

THE SCIENCE PRESS LANCASTER, PA.-GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL, N. Y. CITY-GARRISON, N. Y$

Yearly Subscription $5.00 Single Copies 50 cents

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Page 3: Front Matter

RECENT BOOKS OF SCIENTIFIC INTEREST with comments by the publisher

Apes and Men, 138 pp.; Hunters and Artists, Elementary Bacteriology. JOSEPH E. GRzEAVS 150 pp.; Peasants and Kings, 145 pp.; Priests and ETHELYN 0. GREAVES. 506 pp. $3.50. W. B. and Kings, 202 pp. HAROLD PEAKE and H. J. Saunders Company, Philadelphia. FLEURE. $2.00 each. Yale University Press.

A narrative of early ideas regarding bacteria and The first four volumes in a series of eight pub- the work of the pioneers in the field, followed by a

lished under the general title of " The Corridors of study of the actual organisms and the relation of Time," presenting a survey of human history. bacteria to the life of man.

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The reader is taken through the entire theory of An evaluation of Pettenkofer's theory of the etiol- the flight of an airplane. In the simplest possible ogy of cholera, typhoid fever and other intestinal manner the construction and operation of the air- diseases, together with a biographic sketch and a craft engine are dealt with; there is also a chapter brief consideration of his researches along lines on flying instruction. other than epidemtological. The Geography of the Polar Regions. OTTO Psychological Oare of Infant and Child. JOHN NORDENSKOILD and LuDWIG MCKING. 340 PP. B. WATSON. 187 pp. $2.00. W. W. Norton & $4.00. American Geographical Society, New York.

, . ~Company, New York. The first part discusses in general climate, ice, the

Ice Age, soils and landforms, vegetation and animal This book on child psychology contains chapters life of the polar regions. The second is a descrip- devoted to the care of the infant at day and night, tion of the Arctic and Antarctic, written according to to the growth, control and range of temper tantrums, modern geographical standards.

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search Foundation, Washington. In this volume the insect's structural features are described only so far as seems necessary for the The book presents a soil survey of the entire island understanding of function and behavior, while ques- of Cuba. It defines all the 80 important soil types tions of systematic entomology are discussed in their and shows their distribution. The crop adaptations, fertilizer needs and vegetative features of each soil relation to problems of ecology and evolution, type are individually discussed.

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In this book there is set forth a record of the de- A history of science, scientific societies and institu- velopment and accomplishments of electricity. The

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The Indiana Sand Dunes and Shore Lines of the The Mental Life. CHRISTIAN A. RUCKMICK. Lake Michigan Basin. GEORGE B. CRESSEY. 80 248 pp. $2.00. Longmans, Green & Company, pp. $2.00. University of Chicago Press. Chicago. New York.

The object of this book is to explain the origin of A survey of the fundamental facts of the science of the dunes and is largely a discussion of the princi- psychology, written to meet the demands of the in- ples of eolian activity and the evolution of the Indi- telligent layman and for use in elementary college ana portion of Lake Michigan since the retreat of courses. An extensive bibliography is added for the last ice sheet. those wishing further detailed study.

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New York. The economic approach to the problem of public

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The books noted above may be obtained at the publisher's regular rates from THE SCIENCE PRESS DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, Grand Central Terminal, N. Y. (See page ix.)

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Page 4: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

EASTER INDS IN HEDDIOlKEK Bj JOHN C. HEMMETER, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D.

With an Introduction b_ KARL SUDHOFF, M.D.

Professor of History of Medicine in the University of Leipzig, 1895-1924

I. Methodology in Medical Historiography. II. Sources of Medical History. Subdivisions of Methodology and Historic

Critique. III. Can Medical History be Conceived as Subject to the Laws which Control

and Initiate General History? IV. Ideas as Factors in Medical History. V. The R6le and Function of Great Men in Medical History.

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Anatomists and Physiologists: Their Bearing Upon the Discovery by Harvey.

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of Yellow Fever. XVI. A Pathfinder in the Etiology and Prophylaxis of Yellow Fever; Henry R.

Carter, Surgeon United States Public Health and Marine Hospital Service.

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and Pathology of the Digestive Tract. XIX. History of Tendencies of Modern Physiological Discipline in Medical

Schools. XX. Michael Servetus: Discoverer of the Pulmonary Circulation. His Life and

Work. XXI. Lavoisier, and the History of the Physiology of Respiration and Metabolism.

XXII. Pasteur. XXIII. History of Alcohol as a Substance for Human Consumption. XXIV. Leonardo Da Vinci as a Scientist. XXV. Leonardo Da Vinci: Personality and Psychography.

XXVI. Physiology of Leonardo Da Vinci: Heart and Circulation, Digestion, Respi- ration.

XXVII. Joseph Janvier Woodward: Pioneer in Photomicrography, Pathologic His- tology, and Medical Historian of the Civil War.

XXVIII. William Beaumont and the Beginnings of Modern Physiology of Digestion. XXIX. Goethe as a Naturalist. XXX. Darwin.

XXXI. Psychography of the Investigator. XXXII. Heredity and Genius.

XXXIII. Conclusions. Crown Octavo of 800 pages, with 32 inserts, boxed, $10.00 postpaid

PUBLISHED BY THE MEDIOAL LIFE PRESS 12 Mt. Morris Park West New York, N. Y.

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Page 5: Front Matter

UTHE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

Vol. XXVII, No. 1 Whole No. 154

The Scientific Monthly An Illustrated Magazine Devoted to the Diffusion of Science

Edited by J. McKEEN CATTELL July, 1928

Published by THE SCIENCE PRESS LANCASTER, PA. GARRISON, N. Y.

NEW YORK, N. Y., Grand Central Terminal Single Number, 50 Cents Yearly Subscription, $5.oo

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Page 6: Front Matter

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Page 7: Front Matter

iv THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

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Page 8: Front Matter

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Page 9: Front Matter

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Page 10: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS vu

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Page 11: Front Matter

viii THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

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