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+Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887
+ Volume 1, Number 9
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: J. R. Buchanan
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2009 [EBook #27717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ BUCHANAN'S
+ JOURNAL OF MAN.
+
+ VOL. I. OCTOBER, 1887. NO. 9.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF JOURNAL OF MAN.
+
+
+ The Oriental View of Anthropology
+ MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE--Religion and Science; Good Psychology;
+ The Far-away Battle; How not to do it; Robbery of Public Lands;
+ Land Reform in England; Life in Europe; Education in France;
+ Canada and the Union; Woman in the Moon; Emancipation from
+ Petticoats; Women's Rights on the Streets; A Woman's Triumph in
+ Paris; A Woman's Bible; Work for Women; Mrs. Stanton on the
+ Jubilee; Electricity; Progress of the Telegraph; The Mystery of
+ the Ages; Progress of the Marvellous; A Grand Aerolite; The Boy
+ Pianist; Centenarians; Educated Monkeys; Causes of Idiocy; A
+ Powerful Temperance Argument; Slow Progress; Community Doctors;
+ The Selfish System of Society; Educated Beetles; Rustless Iron;
+ Weighing the Earth; Head and Heart; The Rectification of
+ Cerebral Science
+ Chapter IX.--Rectification of Cerebral Science, Correcting the
+ Organology of Gall and Spurzheim
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIENTAL VIEW OF ANTHROPOLOGY.
+
+
+In the following essay, DR. F. HARTMANN, an enlightened author of the
+Theosophical and Occult school, presents the mystic or Oriental view
+of man, in an interesting manner, deducing therefrom a philosophy of
+the healing art. My readers will no doubt be interested in his
+exposition, and, as the ancient doctrine differs materially from the
+results of experimental investigation, I take the liberty of
+incorporating my comments in publishing the essay.
+
+
+A RATIONAL SYSTEM OF MEDICINE.
+
+All lovers of truth, progress, and freedom of thought must be grateful
+to Dr. J. R. Buchanan for his discovery of the science of SARCOGNOMY.
+His system brings us nearer to a recognition of the true nature of
+man, his origin and his destiny, and of the relations which he bears
+to the Divine Source from which he emanated in the beginning, and to
+which he will ultimately return; for the enlightened ones of all
+nations agree that the _real_ man, who resides temporarily in the
+physical human body, who feels through the instrumentality of the
+heart, and thinks through the instrumentality of the brain of the
+external body, does not originate in the womb of the mother from which
+the physical body is born, but is of a spiritual origin, again and
+again re-incarnating itself in physical masks and forms of flesh and
+blood, living and dying, and being reborn, until, having attained that
+state of perfection, which renders the inner man capable to exist in a
+state of spiritual consciousness without being encumbered by a gross
+earthly organization, which chains him to animal life.
+
+ [It should here be remarked that the great majority of those who
+ are considered enlightened, and to whom the world is indebted
+ for the sciences which it now possesses, do not accept this
+ theory of re-incarnation. As commonly stated, it is liable to
+ many decisive objections, and these objections, which I have
+ clearly stated in the Religio-Philosophical Journal, have not
+ been, and I think will not be, removed by the teachers of
+ re-incarnation.]
+
+It may perhaps not be premature to examine how far the doctrines of
+Dr. Buchanan correspond with the doctrines of occult science; that is
+to say, with that science which is based upon a perception and
+understanding of certain facts, which, to be perceived, require
+spiritual powers of perception, such as are not yet developed in the
+majority of mankind, but which are only in possession of those who
+have mentally risen above the sphere of external phenomena and
+accustomed themselves to look at spiritual things with the eye of the
+spirit. It is not my intention to enter at present into an elaborate
+review of the most prominent writers on occult subjects, and to quote
+passages from such authors to support the views expressed in the
+following pages, but rather to give a short statement of their
+doctrines in regard to the omnipotent power of Will and Life; both
+these powers being fundamentally identical; both being merely
+different modes of actions, or functions, of that universal, eternal,
+and divine Central Power of the universe, which is beyond the
+conception of mortals, and which the latter call _God_.
+
+The ancient religions, as well as reason and logic, tell us that there
+is, and can be, only one supreme God, or First Cause of the universe,
+and that from this one first and fundamental Cause or Power every
+secondary power and everything that exists has come into existence, or
+been evolved within it and through its eternal activity. The whole of
+the universe with everything contained therein, man included, is and
+can be nothing else but a manifestation of this internal fundamental
+power, or, as it has been expressed by the ancient philosophers, the
+universe is the product of the Divine Imagination (thought) of the
+First Great Cause, thrown into objectivity by its eternal Will.
+
+We see, therefore, the great unmanifested _One_ manifesting itself in
+its own _Substance_ (Space) by means of _two_ powers, _Thought_
+(imagination) and _Will_ (the _Word_ or Life); both powers being
+fundamentally identical and merely two different modes of activity or
+functions of the _One_ Eternal, internal Principle, called God.
+According to the _Bible_, God said, "Let there be light," and through
+the power of this outspoken "_Word_," the world came into existence.
+This allegory, expressed in modern language, means that by the
+_active_ Will of the universal First Cause, the images existing in its
+eternal memory were thrown into objectivity and thus produced the
+germs from which the worlds with all things existing therein were
+evolved and grew into the shapes in which we see them now. The
+_Brahmins_ say that when _Brahm_ awoke from his slumber after the
+night of creation (the great Pralaya) was over, he _breathed out_ of
+his own substance, and thus the evolution of worlds began. If he
+_in-breathes_ again, the worlds will be re-absorbed in his substance,
+and the day of creation will be over.
+
+ [God being essentially and self-evidently inconceivable by man,
+ all attempts of Brahmin, Christian, or any other theologians to
+ explain his existence and his methods of creation can be
+ recognized by the scientific mind only as hypotheses
+ unsusceptible of verification, and, therefore, incapable of
+ becoming a proper basis of Philosophy.]
+
+Thus we find, on examining the doctrines of all the greatest religions
+of the world, that they all teach the same truth, although they teach
+it in different words and in different allegories. They all teach that
+there exist two fundamental powers, originating from the absolute
+_One_, namely, _Thought_ and _Will_; and it logically follows that if
+a man were a complete master over his thoughts and his will, he could
+become a creator within the realm to which his thought and imagination
+extend; he could, consequently, by the power of his will and thought,
+control all the functions of his organism, the so-called involuntary
+ones as well as those which are voluntary. He could--if he possessed a
+perfect knowledge of his own constitution--restore abnormal functions
+to their normal state, and restore diseased organs to health.
+
+ [The mode of expression used in this paragraph is rather
+ misleading. One may have a complete mastery of his thoughts and
+ will, while both thought and will are very feeble and
+ ineffective. It requires great POWER in the will and thought to
+ acquire such control over bodily functions, and any expression
+ leading persons of feeble character to suppose they can attain
+ such results would be delusive. Many persons of feeble character
+ have been led by current speculations to aspire far beyond their
+ ability.]
+
+Another fundamental doctrine of Occultism is that man is a Microcosm,
+in which is germinally (potentially) contained everything that exists
+in the Macrocosm of the universe. [An unproved hypothesis.] As the
+will and thought of that universal and divine internal power, which is
+called God, penetrates and pervades the whole of the universe;
+likewise the will and thought of man, if he has once attained perfect
+mastery over himself, extends through all parts of his organization,
+pervades every organ, and may be made to act consciously wherever man
+chooses to employ it. But in the present state of man's condition upon
+this earth, no one but the adepts have acquired this power. In them
+thought and will act as one. In the vast majority of human beings
+thought and will are not yet in entire harmony, and do not act as one.
+In the regenerated one (the adept) heart and head act in perfect
+unison. The adept thinks what he wills, and wills what he thinks. In
+unregenerated humanity will and thought are divided and occupy two
+different centres. In them the will has its seat in the _blood_ (whose
+central organ is the heart), and their thought or imagination has its
+seat in the brain. In them heart and brain are often not only not in
+perfect harmony, but even opposed to each other. But the _will_ and
+_life_ being one, and identical, we see that the central seat of
+_life_ is not, as has been maintained by Dr. Buchanan, the _brain_,
+but the primary source of all life is the _heart_.
+
+We see, therefore, a discrepancy between the doctrines of Dr. Buchanan
+and the occult doctrines in regard to Anthropology; but this
+discrepancy is of no serious consequence; because the _moon_ (the
+_intellect_) is in our solar system as necessary as the _sun_ (the
+_will_), and as the vast majority of people have a considerably
+developed intellect, but only a very little developed will, and live,
+so to say, more in their brains than in their hearts, they may be
+looked upon as receiving their powers and energies from their brains,
+while the brain receives its stimulus from the heart. The ancient
+Rosicrucians compared the heart to the _sun_, the intellect, or
+_brain_, to the moon. The moon receives her light from the sun, the
+centre of life of our solar system. If the sun were to cease to exist,
+the moon would soon lose her borrowed light; likewise if the sun of
+divine love ceases to shine in the human heart, the cold, calculating
+intellect may continue to glitter for a while, but it will finally
+cease to exist. If the brain vampyrizes the heart, that is to say, if
+it absorbs the greater part of the life principle, which ought to go
+to develop love and virtue in the heart, man may become a great
+reasoner, a scientist, arguer, and sophist; but he will not become
+_wise_, and his intellect will perish in this life or in the state
+after death. We often see very intellectual people becoming criminals,
+and even lunatics are often very cunning. That which a man may call
+his own in the end, are not the thoughts which he has stored in his
+perishable memory; but the fire of love and light which he has kindled
+in his heart. If this fire of life burns at his heart it will
+illuminate his mind, and enable the brain to see clear; it will
+develop his spiritual powers of perception, and cause him to perceive
+things which no amount of intellectual brain-labor can grasp. It will
+penetrate even the physical body, and cause the soul therein to assume
+shape and to become immortal.
+
+It is not to be supposed that the above truths will be at once
+accepted by every reader of the JOURNAL, except by such as have given
+deep thought to the true nature of man. Neither are they a subject for
+scientific controversy or disputation. A knowledge of the truth is not
+produced by disputations and quarrels, but only by direct perception,
+experience, and understanding. The conclusions which man arrives at by
+logic are merely productive of certain opinions, and these opinions
+are liable to be changed again as soon as the basis from which his
+logic started, changes. A real knowledge of spiritual truths requires
+a power of spiritual perception, which few men possess. Nevertheless,
+even our logical deductions, taking as a starting point that which we
+know to be true, will help us to arrive at the same conclusions at
+which the Hermetic philosophers arrived by the power of spiritual
+perception.
+
+ [In the foregoing passage, Dr. H. professes to state doctrines
+ derived from intuition or spiritual perception by the ancients,
+ and also recognized to-day by spiritual perception. To me they
+ appear as the results only of that sort of ancient SPECULATION,
+ which recognized earth, air, fire, and water as the four
+ chemical elements of all things. I do not find them sustained by
+ the spiritual perception of those who have the intuitive powers
+ to-day, nor by scientific investigation. The substance of the
+ heart is _not the seat of life_. It is a merely muscular
+ substance, and ceases all action when separated from its
+ controlling ganglia. The vitality of the heart lies in its
+ ganglia--in other words, in the nervous system, _in which alone
+ is life_, and of which the brain is the commanding centre. That
+ life resides exclusively in the nervous system is one of the
+ established principles of physiology, which cannot be disturbed
+ by any theories descending from antiquity, before the dawn of
+ positive science. That the will resides in the blood and the
+ heart, is about as near the truth as Plato's doctrine that the
+ prophetic power belonged to the liver. If the region of Firmness
+ in the brain be large, it will be strongly manifested, even
+ though the heart be feeble, and as easily arrested as Col.
+ Townsend's. But if the upper surface of the brain be diseased,
+ or sensibly softened, the will power is almost destroyed, even
+ if the plethoric, hypertrophied heart is shaking the head with
+ its power. Many an individual of a delicate frame, has
+ overpowered by firmness and courage stout, muscular men of far
+ larger hearts. That the brain is the organ of thought alone, is
+ a very old crudity. It contains every human emotion and passion,
+ which we may stimulate in the impressible, or suspend instantly
+ by a slight pressure on the brain. There is no intense exercise
+ of any of the emotions or passions without a corresponding
+ warmth and tension in the portion of the brain to which they
+ belong, the development and activity of which determine their
+ power. The will and life are not _identical_, as Dr. H.
+ suggests, for if they were, we should not have these two words
+ with different meanings. If will is an attribute of life, that
+ does not constitute _identity_. The speculations of Rosicrucians
+ are of no authority in science. The divine love or influence is
+ in direct relation to the brain, the central organ of the soul,
+ and not to a muscular structure of the body, which is far below
+ the brain in rank. It would be just as reasonable to affirm that
+ courage belongs only to the muscles. That illuminating love
+ which Dr. H. ascribes to the heart, belongs to the upper region
+ of the brain, and is never found when that region lacks
+ development, or is in a cold, torpid condition. I deny entirely
+ that these mystic theories are the product of true, spiritual
+ perception. They arise from the fact that the thoracic region
+ sympathizes with the seat of true love and will in the brain.
+ This secondary effect has been felt and realized by those to
+ whom the functions of the brain were unknown. Spiritual
+ perception, now guided by the spirit of investigation, discovers
+ the whole truth--that all human faculties and impulses belong to
+ the brain, but have a secondary influence on the localities of
+ the body to which SARCOGNOMY shows their relations.]
+
+If we believe in one great spiritual cause of all, and conceive of it
+as the great spiritual Sun of the universe (of which our terrestrial
+sun is merely an image or reflection), we find that spiritual man (the
+image of God) can be nothing else but an individual ray of that
+spiritual sun, shining into matter, becoming polarized and forming a
+centre of life in the developing human foetus, and causing this
+foetus to grow in a living form of human shape, according to the
+conditions presented to it by the maternal organism, and when it is
+born, and becomes conscious, the illusion of self is created within
+that individual form. Besides the gross, visible, external form, more
+ethereal internal forms are evolved, which are of a longer duration
+than the outward physical form, but of which it is not necessary to
+speak at present.
+
+At all events, all that we positively know of man, is that he is an
+invisible internal power, which evolves an outward shape, which we
+call a human being. The material through which the organism is built
+up is the blood, and the centre from which the blood flows into all
+parts of the body and to which it returns from all parts, is the
+heart. The heart is consequently the centre from which that power
+which builds up the organism of man emanates, and as this power can be
+nothing else but Life, the heart is the centre of life. The heart and
+the brain stand in the most intimate relation to each other, and
+neither one can continue to live if the other one ceases to act; but
+according to the doctrines of the ancient and modern occultists the
+heart is of superior importance than the brain. A man may live a long
+time without thinking, but he ceases to live when his heart ceases to
+beat. The heart is the seat of life, the brain the seat of thought,
+but both are equally necessary to enjoy life; there is no intellectual
+activity without life, and a life without intelligence is worthless.
+That the force which constructs the organism of man emanates from the
+heart, appears to me to be self-evident; that the power which guides
+this construction emanates from the brain has been demonstrated by Dr.
+Buchanan.
+
+ [This is quite incorrect. The heart may cease acting, as in
+ apparent death while the processes of thought and feeling are
+ going on, and the individual is conscious that he is going to be
+ buried, but incapable of giving the alarm. On the other hand the
+ action of the brain may be suspended, as in apoplexy, while the
+ heart is beating vigorously. In such cases, though the action of
+ the cerebrum is suspended, the physiological brain or cerebellum
+ sustains physical life. We cannot say that the heart is superior
+ to the brain, because it supplies the brain with blood for its
+ growth, any more than we could say the same of the lungs, which
+ supply oxygen, without which the action of the brain is speedily
+ arrested. We might even extend the remark to the stomach and
+ thoracic duct, which supply the material for making a brain,
+ which certainly does not prove their superiority. The action of
+ the brain is far more important, for the quickest death is
+ produced by crushing the brain, or by cutting it off from the
+ body in the spinal cord of the neck, when heart, lungs, and
+ stomach are promptly arrested by losing the help of the brain.
+ If prior development in growth proved a superiority of rank, the
+ ganglionic system which accompanies the arteries and precedes
+ the evolution of the convoluted cerebrum would hold the highest
+ rank, although it is destitute of consciousness and volition,
+ which belong to the brain alone.]
+
+But what is this power which emanates from the brain, and which guides
+the organizing activity of the soul, but the power of life which is
+transmitted to the brain from the heart, and which is modified in its
+activity by the peculiar organization of the latter? Man in his
+present state does not think with his heart, but with his brain;
+nevertheless, the heart is superior to the brain, for the brain has
+been built up by the power which came from the heart; and it is a
+universal law of nature, that no thing can produce anything superior
+to itself. During its foetal existence the brain of the child is built
+up by the blood of the mother; after man is born his brain receives
+its power of life through the heart, and in spiritually developed man
+the thought-force created in the brain reacts again upon the will in
+the heart, controlling its desires and entering into harmonious union
+with the latter. The ancient alchemists say: "If the Sun (the heart)
+enters in conjunction with the _Moon_ (the brain) then will Gold
+(Wisdom) be produced."
+
+We see, therefore, in man two centres of life, the heart and the
+brain, and it may properly be said that the brain is the seat of life,
+only it may perhaps be added, that it is the secondary seat, while the
+principal seat is, or ought to be, in the heart. [Dr. H. identifies
+will with life, yet every one knows that all acts of volition proceed
+from the brain alone, and never from the heart; hence by his own
+statement the brain is the seat of life.] According to the doctrines
+of the Hermetic philosophers, God is the invisible central fire in the
+universe from which the Light of the Logos (Christ or the celestial
+Adam) emanated in the beginning. Man being a Microcosm, contains in
+his heart the image of that internal and invisible central fire of
+_Love_, which sends the light of thought to the brain and illuminates
+the mind of the seer. We are at present not living in the age of Love,
+but in the age of Thought (not the age of _Reason_, but the age of
+_Reasoning_ and Speculation), and by the law of heredity, life has
+become pre-eminently concentrated in the brain; while in a more
+advanced age, when the principle of universal Love and Benevolence
+will be generally recognized, life will become more strongly
+concentrated at the heart. Men will then not only think, but feel and
+become able to recognize the truth by that power which is known to us
+in its rudimental state as _Intuition_, but which, if developed, will
+be far superior to that uncertain feeling called Intuition, and become
+a Sun within the heart, sending its rays far up into the regions of
+thought. Then, as their Love for the supreme Good increases, will
+their knowledge increase, and as their knowledge expands will their
+Will become powerful and free.
+
+ [The physiology of this passage is all erroneous. In the ages of
+ animalism and barbarism the heart is more powerful, like the
+ rest of the muscular system to which it belongs. In a more
+ humane and refined condition the brain is more predominant. The
+ female heart is not as well developed as the male. The moral
+ superiority of women is due not to the heart but to the superior
+ region of the brain, to which we owe all elevation of
+ individuals and society.]
+
+It has been said above that Will and Life are identical, and there are
+sufficient facts to prove that they are one. A man may prolong his
+life by an effort of will, or he may cease to live if he wills to die.
+A loss of will-power in a limb is identical with paralysis of the
+latter. If the will (conscious or unconscious will) ceases to act, man
+ceases to live. No amount of thought exercised by the brain will raise
+a limb of a person, unless the person has the will to raise it; no
+amount of imagination on the part of the brain will execute an act,
+unless the will guided by the imagination causes the act to be
+executed. In the blood,--the representative of the animal
+life-principle (Kama-rupa) is the seat of the will, its central office
+is the heart. There the will or life-power acts consciously or
+unconsciously, sending its rays to the brain, where they become more
+refined, and from thence they radiate again back through the organism,
+causing the unconscious or conscious processes of imagination and
+thought. The way in which these processes take place, has been well
+described in Dr. Buchanan's "Therapeutic Sarcognomy." Love, Will, and
+Life are ultimately one and the same power; they are like the three
+sides of a pyramid ending in one point, or like a star emitting a
+light of three different hues. Without the fire of divine Love at the
+centre there will be no good and powerful Will, without Will man is a
+useless being, without virtue and without real life, an empty shell or
+form kept alive by the play of the elements, ceasing to exist when the
+form falls to pieces. But he who possesses a strong love for the good,
+the beautiful, and true, grows strong in Will and strong in Life. His
+heart sends a pure current of life to the brain, which enables the
+latter to see and grasp the ideas existing in the Astral light. The
+purer the will the more pure will be the imagination, and the more
+will the latter be able to rise to the highest regions of thought,
+while these exalted thoughts will radiate their light back again to
+the heart and stimulate the heart as the heart stimulated the brain.
+
+A consideration of the above will go to prove that Love (Will or Life)
+and Thought (Imagination or Light) are the forces by which the soul
+forms and regenerates the external body, and that he who obtains
+mastery over these forces within his own organism will be able to
+change and remodel his body and to cure it of all ills. The fountain
+of life is the will, and if the will is good and pure and not poisoned
+by the imagination, a pure blood and a strong and healthy body will be
+the result. If the imagination (thought) is pure, it will purify the
+will and expel from the latter the elements of evil. _The fundamental
+doctrine of the most rational system of medicine is therefore the
+purification of the Will and the Imagination_, and every one carries
+within his own heart the _universal panacea_, which cures all ills, if
+he only knows how to employ it. The purification and strengthening of
+the will by acts of love and human kindness and by leading a pure and
+unselfish life, should be the principal object of all religious and
+scientific education. The Bible says: "If the _salt_ (the will) of the
+earth is worthless, wherewith shall it be salted?" If the fountain
+from which all life springs is poisoned by evil thoughts, how can the
+soul and body be healthy? The best _blood-purifier_ is a pure will,
+rendered pure by pure and holy thoughts.
+
+This fundamental and self-evident truth is continually overlooked in
+our present age. The education of the intellect for the purpose of
+attaining selfish interests is made of paramount interest and the
+heart is neglected and left to starve.[1] The life-energy which ought
+to be employed to educate the heart and to render the will good and
+pure, is wasted in the top story of the temple of man in idle
+speculations about external and worthless things, in scientific
+quarrels and dogmatic disputations, which have usually no other object
+but to tickle personal vanity and to give to ignorance an external
+coat of learning. Many of our modern scientific authorities resemble
+ants, which crawl over a leaf which fell from a tree: they know all
+about the veins and cells of that leaf, but they know nothing whatever
+of the living tree, which produces such leaves, and moreover flowers
+and fruits. Likewise the rational medicine based upon reason and
+understanding, the science springing from a true knowledge of man will
+forever remain an enigma to the legally-authorized guardians of the
+health of humanity, as long as they know nothing of man except his
+external form and refuse to open their eyes and to see the eternal
+internal power, of which the external form is merely an evanescent
+image, a transient manifestation.
+
+ [1] There is no higher gift of Divinity than the gift of
+ intelligence, which, if pervaded by the light of Divine
+ love, constitutes the Christ, and those who are thus gifted
+ are indeed the "favorites of God." But if such a people kill
+ the Christ-principle in their hearts, and use their
+ intellectual powers merely for selfish purposes, they will
+ become _accursed_. A system of medicine or theology which is
+ based upon self-interests of the privileged class of doctors
+ and priests is a curse to humanity.
+
+
+Hoping that with the appearance of the JOURNAL OF MAN a new era of
+truly rational medicine will begin in progressive America,
+
+ I am yours truly and fraternally,
+ FRANZ HARTMANN, M.D.
+
+KEMPTEN, BAVARIA, April 7, 1887.
+
+ [While reaching my conclusions in a different manner by careful
+ and prolonged experimental investigation, and expressing them
+ differently, I agree with Dr. Hartmann in his most important
+ principle,--the importance of love as the best element of life,
+ in sustaining health and intelligence, and the necessity of its
+ culture in education, which has been so long neglected, and
+ which I have endeavored to enforce in the "New Education." The
+ structure and functions of the brain demonstrate that its love
+ region is the chief support of its life, that it supports both
+ will and intelligence, and that it not only sustains the highest
+ health of him in whom it is developed and exercised, but
+ ministers also to the health of all whom he meets, and is the
+ great healing power in those whose presence or touch relieves
+ the sick. The existence of this beneficent power in the human
+ constitution, more restorative and pleasant than all medicines
+ when present in sufficient fulness, is rapidly becoming known
+ throughout our country, and is made intelligible as to its
+ origin, nature and application by Sarcognomy, as I am teaching
+ in the College of Therapeutics. Medical colleges, in their
+ ignorance and jealousy, unwisely exclude and war against this
+ nobler and more ethical method of healing, thus compelling its
+ development and practice as a distinct profession, which is
+ rapidly undermining their influence and diminishing their
+ patronage by showing that, in many cases where drug remedies
+ have totally failed as applied by colleges, the psycho-dynamic
+ faculty of man may accomplish wonders.]
+
+
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE.
+
+
+RELIGION AND SCIENCE are exceedingly harmonious in assisting each
+other, but theologians and scientists are exceedingly discordant. Who
+is in fault? It is the fault of both. Both are bigoted and
+narrow-minded. Neither can see the truths that belong to the other
+party; theologians dislike science, not being able to see that science
+is a grander and more unquestionable revelation than any they have
+derived from tradition, and scientists deride religion and theology,
+not being able in their narrowness to recognize the higher forms of
+science in the great spiritual truths which have been apparent to all
+races from the most ancient limits of history. Of the scientific class
+the majority are averse to the religion of the times, partly from
+their own sceptical nature, and partly because religion has been
+presented in the repulsive forms of an absurd theology.
+
+Prof. E. S. Morse, the president of the American Association, is a
+very sceptical agnostic.
+
+ Proud Huxley's the Prince of Agnostics, you see,
+ And Huxley and I do sweetly agree.
+
+At the late meeting of the Association, August 10, at Columbia
+College, New York, Prof. Morse made an address in which he is reported
+as saying that "Dr. Darwin's theory was accepted by science, although
+ecclesiastical bodies now and then rose up to protest against it. He
+asserted that the missing links for which there was such a clamor were
+being supplied with such rapidity that even the zologist had to work
+to keep up with his science. It was a singular fact that no sooner did
+some one raise an objection to the theories of derivative science,
+than some discovery was made which swept down the barrier. It was safe
+enough for an intelligent man, no matter what he knew of science, to
+accept as true what science put forth, and to set down as false
+whatever the church offered in opposition. Every theory and
+declaration of science had been opposed by the church. The penalty of
+original sin, according to a scientific writer, was the penalty of man
+being raised to an upright position. [Laughter.] Cannot it be proved
+without question that the illiteracy of Spain was the result of
+centuries of religious oppression and of the inquisition?"
+
+One of the scientists told a _World_ reporter (says the _Truth
+Seeker_) that at last year's convention in Buffalo, Prof. Morse made
+an address that was so full of infidelity that the Catholic diocesan
+authorities there forbade the clergy from attending the meetings.
+
+However, the Association has a small orthodox element in it, and on
+Sunday about one-eighth of the members held a prayer-meeting at
+Columbia College, at which allusions were made to the ungodly
+character of the majority of their associates, which the said
+associates on Monday regarded as a very objectionable proceeding.
+
+In the contests between scientists and theologians it has long been
+apparent that the theologians are steadily receding. The time was, two
+or three hundred years ago, when fearless scientists were imprisoned
+or burned by theologians. Now, the scientists who lead the age treat
+theology with contempt and the press sustains them. Meanwhile,
+scientific scepticism is invading the pulpit, and all that
+distinguishes the Bible from any treatise on moral philosophy is
+gradually being surrendered by leading theologians; they are losing
+religion as well as theology.
+
+
+GOOD PSYCHOLOGY.--Prof. Wm. James, of the chair of Philosophy in
+Harvard College, and apparently the most philosophic gentleman in that
+conservative institution, has published in the _Popular Science
+Monthly_ an essay on _Human Instincts_, characterized by a vigorous
+common sense and close observation. When he asserts (contrary to the
+old metaphysics) the existence of such instincts as fear,
+acquisitiveness, constructiveness, play (or, properly, playfulness),
+curiosity, sociability, shyness, secretiveness, cleanliness, modesty,
+shame, love, coyness or personal isolation, jealousy, parental love,
+etc., he shows the spirit of science. But is it not self-evident, Mr.
+James, to a man of your fine intelligence, that all strong impulses
+(or instincts, as you call them) must have a special nervous apparatus
+in the psychic region of the brain; and that loving, blushing,
+stealing, and fighting cannot be functions of the same organs
+concerned in perceiving color, or comprehending music? If I have
+traced these instincts to the special convolutions in which they
+reside, and given innumerable demonstrations of their locality, even
+in Boston, and before critical observers, why have you not interested
+yourself in the question of the cerebral localities and the complete
+demonstration of all the instincts by that method?
+
+I have even found an instinct of the _love of truth_ among the higher
+sentiments, which, to a few rare individuals, is the predominant
+impulse of their lives, though, alas, in college professors, as well
+as in other classes generally, it is "inhibited" by a great variety of
+opposing instincts, interests, and social influences. Nowhere is it
+more completely "inhibited" than in Boston and Cambridge, as I have
+been informed by the most intelligent old citizens.
+
+
+THE FAR-AWAY BATTLE.--In the quiet home the sounds of the far-away
+strife are not heard. The war of the cannon is determining the destiny
+of empires, but it is unheard in the cottage. The myriad sounds of
+commerce in the city do not disturb the quiet of that home. Its quiet
+life attracts no attention. But there is something in that home more
+important than war or commerce or king-craft--something that concerns
+human welfare more profoundly. In that quiet home, a human life is
+developing; a human soul preparing for its life work--a work that will
+change the destiny of coming generations. In many quiet homes such a
+work is in progress, determining a nation's future.
+
+All important movements are quiet and obscure in their origin. As the
+magnificent forest was slowly and obscurely germinated in darkness, in
+the seeds from which it sprung, so are the great discoveries in
+science and philosophy matured in quietness and obscurity. The thinker
+hears afar the sound of strife and the agitation of parties warring
+for power. He knows the follies and errors that agitate mankind, but
+he is withheld from entering the strife, for he has a more important
+work to accomplish--a work for the future. It is to such work that the
+JOURNAL OF MAN is devoted; laying the foundation of that philosophy in
+which future thinkers shall find the principles of social
+reorganization. It does not join in the strife of contending parties,
+nor does it recognize any existing party as entirely free from error.
+It gives its care to new and growing truths, knowing that, as Carlyle
+says, "The weak thing weaker than a child becomes strong one day if it
+be a true thing."
+
+
+HOW NOT TO DO IT.--The Seybert commission having made a splendid
+failure to find interesting and valuable facts where other
+investigators have succeeded, their blundering ignorance is now
+assisted by newspaper mendacity. The _New York Times_, of Aug. 22,
+concludes an extremely stupid article on this subject, by the
+following paragraph, which, if the writer gave any indications of
+intelligence, would be set down as a pure specimen of mendacity, but
+is more probably a specimen of indolent ignorance:
+
+ "If Spiritualists could furnish one clearly-proved case of a
+ spirit from the other world, seen and tested by those now living
+ on the earth, there would be some sense and reason in their
+ claims to be heard; but until they do, the great mass of
+ intelligent people will refuse to listen, and rightly, too."
+
+There must be an immense mass of the same kind of lazy ignorance in
+the community, when such stuff is tolerated in a newspaper. The
+contents of daily newspapers show that they expect more patronage from
+the debased and ignorant classes than from the intelligent and
+honorable.
+
+
+ROBBERY OF PUBLIC LANDS.--The report of Surveyor General Geo. W.
+Julian, of Colorado, shows that of the patented and unpatented lands
+referred to, aggregating 8,694,965 acres, it will be safe to estimate
+that at least one-half have been illegally devoted to private uses
+under invalid grants, or unauthorized surveys.
+
+He thinks it would not be extravagance to say that these land
+claimants, with their enormous interests, have exercised a shaping
+influence upon Congress. Congress has approved 47 out of 49 of these
+claims. In this connection the report calls attention to the action of
+Congress in 1860, and the Interior Department in 1879 in the famous
+Maxwell land grant case, which he characterizes as a wanton and
+shameful surrender to the rapacity of monopolists of 1,662,764 acres
+of the public domain, on which hundreds of poor men had settled in
+good faith and made valuable improvements. It has been as calamitous
+to New Mexico, says the Surveyor General, as it is humiliating to the
+United States. The report says:
+
+ "During the last Congress several members of both Houses,
+ including the delegate from this Territory, reported bills for
+ the confirmation of the Socorro grant, which is one of the most
+ shocking of the many attempts yet made to plunder the public
+ domain. I do not say that the men who introduced these bills
+ intended to make themselves parties to any scheme of robbery,
+ but their action shows that the hidden hand of roguery is still
+ feeling its way in Congress for a friendly go-between."
+
+As a remedy for this condition of affairs, Mr. Julian recommends
+resurveys of all grants about which there is any doubt, and the
+entering of suits to set aside patents obtained by fraud.
+
+
+LAND REFORM IN ENGLAND.--One hundred and twenty-four members of the
+English Parliament are in favor of the following land scheme
+propounded by Charles Bradlaugh:
+
+ "Ownership of land should carry with it the duty of cultivation.
+
+ "Where land capable of cultivation with profit, and not devoted
+ to some purpose of public utility or enjoyment, is held in a
+ waste or uncultivated state, the local authorities ought to have
+ the power to compulsorily acquire such land.
+
+ "The compensation is to be only the 'payment to the owner for a
+ limited term of an annual sum not exceeding the then average net
+ annual produce of the said lands.'
+
+ "The local authorities are to let the lands thus acquired to
+ tenant cultivators.
+
+ "The conditions of tenure are to be such 'as shall afford
+ reasonable encouragement, opportunities, facilities, and
+ security for the due cultivation and development of the said
+ land.'"
+
+
+LIFE IN EUROPE.--Senator Frye, of Maine, having returned from Europe,
+spoke thus to a reporter, at Lewiston:
+
+ "We have taken a tour of the continent and of Great Britain, and
+ although we have seen many places, we have seen no place like
+ home--no place in all respects equal to America. You will find
+ in the Old World much that is admirable, but what impressed me
+ most painfully was the poverty of the masses of the people. Why,
+ the people in Europe live on the poorest food, and mighty little
+ of it. I found that laborers in Glasgow work for 2s. 6d. a
+ day--sixty-two cents. I was charmed with Edinburgh, but when I
+ saw women drunk and fighting in her beautiful streets, the
+ modern Athens lost her charms. I cannot convey to you the
+ picture of the degradation and want throughout Great Britain,
+ caused by drink. I come back a stouter cold-water man than when
+ I went away. The drink evil is a horror. Speaking of wages, I
+ found girls in factories in Venice working with great skill for
+ from five to twelve cents a day, the most experienced getting
+ twelve cents a day, out of which they have to live, but how they
+ live is a wonder. Their chief diet is macaroni. Farm hands all
+ over Europe--women--earn twenty cents a day. Women do most of
+ the field work. I saw no improved machinery on the farms of the
+ continent. I have seen twenty women in one field at work--not a
+ man in sight. The plain people see no meat to eat once a week on
+ the continent. The condition of American wage-earners is
+ incomparably better than that of working people in Europe. It's
+ the difference between comfort and competence, and discomfort
+ and insufficient food and clothing.
+
+ "Perhaps the most contemptible people one meets abroad are the
+ Anglicized Americans--the man who apes, both in manners and
+ language, what he regards as the English aristocracy, affects to
+ believe everything in England perfect, and seems to be ashamed
+ to institute any favorable comparison between his country and
+ that."
+
+
+EDUCATION IN FRANCE.--The Academy of Medicine has passed a resolution
+demanding of the government changes in the hours of study for
+children, larger play grounds, removal of schools to the country, and
+daily teaching of gymnastics. These suggestions are urgently needed in
+France, where children are subjected to a far more rigid and
+enfeebling method than in America. The power of the church over
+education is destroyed in France, and religious instruction is now
+prohibited.
+
+
+CANADA AND THE UNION.--Rev. W. H. Murray reports a strong feeling in
+Canada for annexation. He says:
+
+ "A gentleman of great influence in this city, and of established
+ loyalty to the land of his birth, described the position here
+ very distinctly in the following words: 'I wish I could make
+ money and remain an Englishman, but I can't, and hence I propose
+ to become an American, for I cannot impoverish myself and my
+ family for a sentiment, however honorable.'
+
+ "In the many conversations I have heard on the part of many
+ people of all classes touching commercial union, it has, in
+ every case, been assumed that it was only a prelude to political
+ union also. Many have insisted, as they talked, that the two
+ countries should come together, and at once; that the feeling of
+ the country was fast ripening for it, and that what it lacked in
+ education in this matter would soon be learned. This has
+ surprised me; for it was not so a few years ago."
+
+
+WOMAN IN THE MOON.--The discovery of a woman in the moon is announced
+by W. H. Burr, in a letter to the New York _Sun_, It was made more
+than a year ago by Dr. James H. Thompson, a retired physician of
+Washington. It is a profile occupying the west half of the moon, the
+dark spot above answering to the banged hair. She faces a little
+upward, and has a neck big enough to require a collar of the size that
+Mr. Cleveland wears. And yet she is good-looking. The profile may be
+seen through an opera-glass.--_Truth Seeker_.
+
+
+EMANCIPATION FROM PETTICOATS.--"That distinguished Parisienne, Mme. de
+Valsayre, has been petitioning the French legislature in favor of the
+emancipation of women from petticoats. Her case is that petticoats are
+very dangerous, leading to innumerable fatal accidents, and that
+trousers are just as decent, more healthy and far less expensive. 'All
+this is very true,' says Labouchere, in the _World_, 'though I do not
+suppose that if the French women were as free as our own countrywomen
+are to dress as they like, they would make much use of their liberty.
+Trousers do not afford the same scope for decoration as petticoats.
+They cannot be trimmed to any considerable extent, and the effect of
+an improver or bustle worn under them would be absurd. I have always
+wondered, however, that serious ladies in this country do not set more
+store by this branch of progress. If I were a woman I would much
+rather have a pair of trousers than a vote or even a university
+degree.'"
+
+
+WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE STREETS.--The lawless freedom with which men
+approach or assail women in some American cities, while women on the
+other hand are subjected to the meddlesome and domineering
+interference of policemen, lends some interest to the case of Miss
+Cass in London, one of the victims of police brutality, which has
+excited an inquiry and comment in Parliament, and is likely to result
+in the punishment of the policeman. The New York _Sun_ says:
+
+ "The case of Miss Cass, who was arrested in Regent Street as a
+ disreputable character, has started in the _Pall Mall Gazette_ a
+ discussion of the annoyances to which decent women are subjected
+ in the streets of London. It will be remembered that she was a
+ respectable girl recently arrived in London, where she had
+ obtained employment in a milliner's shop, and that while waiting
+ in Regent Street early in the evening she was arrested by a
+ policeman, who insisted in regarding her as a professional
+ street-walker, as which, also, she was held by a magistrate, who
+ refused, to listen to her denials and explanations.
+
+ "Many women have accordingly written to the _Pall Mall Gazette_
+ to ask why, if a woman is liable to arrest on the mere suspicion
+ of having addressed a man, men are allowed to annoy and insult
+ women in the London streets with perfect impunity. The testimony
+ of them all is that, even in the daytime, a lady with any claims
+ to good looks, and who walks alone, is always liable to such
+ treatment, no matter how modest her apparel and reserved her
+ demeanor. It is not merely of insolent and persistent staring
+ that they complain, for they have grown to expect that as a
+ matter of course; but they are actually spoken to by men who are
+ strangers to them, in the most insinuating and offensively
+ flattering terms. These men are commonly described as
+ 'gentlemen' in appearance; 'a tall, distinguished,
+ military-looking man;' 'a youthful diplomat;' 'a government
+ official, a man holding a lucrative appointment,' and the like.
+ They are not roughs; from them ladies have nothing of the sort
+ to fear; but men who think to have the greater success and to
+ enjoy the complete immunity because they wear the garb of
+ gentlemen.
+
+ "Rev. Mr. Haweis writes that 'you might easily fill the _Pall
+ Mall Gazette_ with nothing else for months, for we have come to
+ such a pass as this, that a young girl cannot stand aside at a
+ railway station while papa takes tickets, nor a girl lead her
+ blind relative through the streets, nor can a married woman go
+ twenty paces in a London thoroughfare without the risk of insult
+ or even assault.'"
+
+These evils are a relic of the old ideas of woman's inferiority, and
+their only sure remedy is the destruction of that inferiority by the
+industrial and professional education, which will make the woman the
+par of her brother, and enable her to maintain her equal rights
+everywhere.
+
+
+A WOMAN'S TRIUMPH IN PARIS.--The public examination of Miss Bradley at
+the Ecole de Medicine in Paris is thus described:
+
+When Miss Bradley stepped into the arena, clad in the traditional
+garb, the general comment of the audience was:
+
+ "How like _Portia_ in the trial scene of the 'Merchant of
+ Venice.'"
+
+It was known to Miss Bradley's college mates and other friends that
+her thesis would be on "Iodism," and that she had taken a year to
+write an elaborate book on the subject, which will soon be republished
+in England from the original French. For an hour and a half she was
+questioned with great shrewdness and ability by four of the leading
+professors of the Ecole de Medicine,--Drs. Fournier, Gautier, Porchet,
+and Robin. Each of these gentlemen had previously received a copy of
+Miss Bradley's bold book, and they had brought their copies to the
+examining room, with multitudinous interrogation marks on the margins,
+showing that the new treatise had not only been very carefully read,
+but had excited much curiosity and attention. Miss Bradley had the
+great advantage of an unhackneyed theme, which she skilfully
+illustrated by a numerous array of unfamiliar facts.
+
+Her triumph was of a very peculiar character. Her four examiners said
+to her, with admiring frankness: "You have been working a new field;
+we cannot agree with many of your conclusions; further investigation
+may lead either yourself or us to different views; but, meanwhile, you
+have presented to the college a thesis which does you uncommon honor,
+and for which we unanimously award you the maximum mark of merit."
+
+After the announcement of the award, Miss Bradley was entertained at
+dinner by Miss Augusta Klumpke, the first female physician who has
+ever been admitted to practice in the hospitals of Paris. Both these
+ladies are Americans--Miss Klumpke from San Francisco, and Miss
+Bradley from New York.
+
+
+A WOMAN'S BIBLE.--We have not reached the end of revision. A woman's
+translation of the Bible is expected next. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton
+is the chairman of the American committee having this matter in
+charge, and a woman's Bible and commentary are to be expected in due
+time.
+
+
+WORK FOR WOMEN.--Miss Katie Young, of Ironton, Mo., writes _The Voice_
+a letter upon the advantages of plating, as a new and pleasant field
+of work for women. A relative made her a plating-machine at a cost of
+$4; she readily obtained orders for work from everybody in the
+neighborhood; the outlay for chemicals, etc., proved slight; and in 22
+days she netted $95.45. Her brother, working 24 days, cleared $90.50.
+Miss Young states that she is making a collection of curiosities, and
+that to any lady sending her a sea-shell, fancy stone, piece of rock,
+ore or crystal, an old coin, or curious specimen of any description,
+she will be glad to mail complete directions for making a machine
+similar to hers, that will do gold, silver and nickel-plating.
+
+F. Henry Greer writes: "Two young gentlewomen are studying electrical
+engineering, which profession has not yet been overcrowded. Great
+fortunes have been made in its pursuit. If any readers of your
+valuable journal are interested, I will freely give them any
+information in my power."
+
+
+MRS. STANTON ON THE JUBILEE.--"If mine has been the one discordant
+note in the grand jubilee chorus to the Queen, it is because behind
+all the busy preparations for the most brilliant pageant the world has
+ever witnessed, of gilded royalty and nobility, my eyes beheld the
+dark shadows on the background of homeless, starving men, women and
+children, into whose desolate lives would never come one touch of
+light or love. There is something to me unspeakably sad in the eager,
+gazing multitudes that crowd the streets on these grand gala days.
+There is ever a sphinx-like questioning look in their upturned faces
+that seems to say, 'Ah! must the many ever suffer that the few may
+shine?' As the sun went down on that 21st of June, what a contrast in
+the close of the day's festivities between the children of luxury and
+want.
+
+"Who that can share in imagination one hour the miseries of England's
+impoverished people, can rejoice in a reign of fifty years that has
+cost the nation 22,000,000 of pounds sterling in extra allowances to
+the Queen and her children, in addition to the legitimate cost of the
+royal household and the hereditary property rights of the throne?"
+Nevertheless the Jubilee was a fine exhibition, and the _London
+Baptist_ says that $4,000 was paid for the use of the windows of one
+house to see the Jubilee.
+
+
+ELECTRICITY seems destined to be the motor power for street cars. In
+Montgomery, Alabama, the mule has already been superseded, and there
+are fifteen miles of street railways operated by the electric motor.
+Some satisfactory experiments have been made on the Cambridge Street
+railway. Edison's latest discoveries in the conversion of heat into
+electricity are expected to produce important results, dispensing with
+the intermediate use of steam, and ultimately getting the power from
+the sun's rays.
+
+
+PROGRESS OF THE TELEGRAPH.--The _London Times_ thus summarizes some of
+the statements made by Mr. Raikes, the postmaster-general, in his
+speech delivered at the telegraph jubilee the other day:
+
+ At first a machine required five wires before it could dispatch
+ a message. Now on one single wire seven or eight messages can be
+ sent simultaneously. At first the rate of sending did not amount
+ to more than four or five words a minute. Now on the latest
+ machine no less than 462 words a minute can be dispatched. The
+ number of messages has increased by steady steps, until now,
+ under the new tariff and with the facilities that have been so
+ widely extended since the telegraphs came into the hands of the
+ government, the number is truly portentous. Those sent during
+ the past year amounted to close upon a million a week--fifty-one
+ and one-half millions in all. Letters have grown from 80,000,000
+ in the year of the Queen's accession to more than 1,400,000,000.
+ According to Mr. Pender, there are some 115,000 miles of cables
+ lying at the bottom of the sea. The progress in this department
+ has been constant. The latest scheme, as the new colonial
+ blue-books show, is for laying a cable under the Pacific Ocean,
+ from Vancouver to New Zealand. Surely there is no task from
+ which modern science will recoil.
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF THE AGES.--A work recently published at London by the
+Countess of Caithness is a work of ability and learning, devoted
+especially to a philosophy which is thus defined:
+
+ "Theosophy is the essence of all doctrines, the inner truth of
+ all religions.... God is Spirit, and Spirit is One, Infinite,
+ and Eternal, whether it speak through the life of Buddha or
+ Jesus, Zoroaster or Mahommed.... The ideal of the Theosophist is
+ the at one-ment of his own spirit with that of the Infinite.
+ This is the essential teaching of all religions, and to obtain
+ this union you must believe in and obey the voice of your own
+ higher conscience; for the true Christ is the Divine Spirit
+ within you, and thus, God manifest in humanity."
+
+
+PROGRESS OF THE MARVELLOUS.--Mrs. Herbert, of St. Joseph's Hospital,
+Joliet, Illinois, as reported Aug. 16, had slept 219 days, sitting in
+an easy chair, in a cataleptic state. She rarely moves a muscle, and
+if her arm is lifted and not replaced it remains as it was left. Her
+hands are cold, and her face very pallid. The food given her daily, it
+is said, would only sustain life in a bird, and the doctors are
+expecting her death.
+
+Mr. C. J. Helleberg, of Cincinnati, says that a lady of his family has
+become developed as a medium, and many messages have been written
+through her. Among others, a message from Charles XII. of Sweden
+declared that "Sweden will be a republic sooner than any other power
+in Europe," and the elections will be easily and honestly managed.
+
+
+A GRAND AEROLITE.--The _Galt Gazette_ (California) describes the fall
+of a meteor in that vicinity, witnessed by Dr. Goodspeed, which fell
+in a slough and so heated the water as to kill the catfish that
+inhabited it. It lies in the pond, and looks as if a hundred feet
+wide. A much more marvellous story has been published of an engraved
+meteoric stone falling in an obscure portion of Georgia near Clayton
+Court-house, which is a hoax, and has been so pronounced by the
+postmaster at Clayton.
+
+Whether the California story is true I have not ascertained, but the
+fall of a great meteor in this region has developed a grand meteoric
+capacity for lying. The despatch first published by the _Boston
+Herald_ described the stone as falling near McAdam Junction, not far
+from Bangor, Maine, making the crockery rattle at the Junction, and
+plunging into the earth all but about ten feet of the stone, which was
+so hot that no one could come within fifty yards of it. It has not
+been found at all, for it dropped into the Bay of Fundy; but it
+illuminated the whole country for a vast distance, and looked as large
+as the moon. It had a long trailing violet light behind it as it fell.
+Our meteoric showers generally occur in August, this was on the 15th
+of September.
+
+
+THE BOY PIANIST.--Joseph Hoffmann is considered in London the greatest
+young pianist since the days of Mozart. He is coming to America. He is
+from Poland.
+
+
+CENTENARIANS.--The _Rabbi Hirsch_, born in Poland, died a few weeks
+ago in Brooklyn, aged 109. He saw Napoleon on his march to Moscow.
+Mrs. Paradis of North Grosvenordale, Conn., died Aug. 26, aged 120.
+The _Boston Globe_ in making a record of old people in Maine, has
+mentioned Miss Betsey Sargent, of Canterbury, aged 100; Mrs. Ellen
+Scott, Portsmouth, 100; Mrs. Mary Mann, Oxford, 101; Mrs. Jane Wilson,
+Edgecomb, 102; John Chandler, Concord, 102; Mrs. Nancy Chase, Edgerly,
+103; Perault Pickard, Colchester, 107; Robert Peters, Berwick, 107;
+George McQueen, Portland, 109; Giles Bronson, Castleton, 115; Mrs.
+Mary Ludkends, Portland, 117.
+
+Samuel Zielinski, a Pole, who came to the United States after he was
+100 years old, is now living a mile from Dubois, Illinois, with his
+descendants, at the age of 120.
+
+
+EDUCATED MONKEYS.--The story comes from Brazil, by way of Panama, that
+on a hemp farm seven large monkeys have been taught to work as
+laborers, and that they work faster and eat less than negroes. If they
+can pull hemp, why not do other work? If this report is confirmed it
+may be of some importance.
+
+A correspondent of the _New York Times_ says that monkeys from Cape
+Town, Africa, have been introduced successfully into the hemp fields
+of Kentucky. One gentleman employs twelve near Shelbyville, Perkins &
+Chirsman have eleven, Smith & Murphy twenty-six, and J. B. Park, near
+Kingston, who introduced monkey labor, employs seventeen. The monkeys
+cost about $60 each, they are docile, easily taught, and cost about
+one fourth of human labor.
+
+
+CAUSES OF IDIOCY.--Dr. T. Langdon Down, inquiring into the causes of
+idiocy, has found that intemperance of parents is one of the most
+considerable factors in producing the affection. His view is confirmed
+by some French and German investigators, one of whom, Dr. Delasiauve,
+has said that in the village of Careme, whose riches were in its
+vineyards, ten years' comparative sobriety, enforced by vine-disease,
+had a sensible effect in diminishing the cases of idiocy. Nervous
+constitution and consumption exercise important influence. Of the
+professions, lawyers furnish the smallest proportion of idiots, while
+they are credited with the procreation of a relatively very large
+number of men of eminence. With the clergy, these proportions are more
+than reversed. The influence of consanguineous marriage, _per se_, is
+insignificant, if it exists.--_Pop. Science Monthly_.
+
+
+A POWERFUL TEMPERANCE ARGUMENT.--A most powerful argument for
+temperance is furnished by the records of the British army in India
+for 1886, showing the comparative amount of crime, disease, and death
+among 12,807 soldiers, of whom 3,278 were temperate, and 8,828 were
+drinking men. The number of cases of crime among the abstainers was
+172, among the drinkers 3,988, a difference of one to twenty-three in
+number, or more than ten to one in percentage. The temperate had but
+4.32 per cent. of crime, the drinkers 45.17 per cent. The percentage
+of sickness and death was more than twice as great among the drinkers.
+Liquor, therefore, _more than doubled_ the proportion of disease and
+mortality, and increased the _criminality more than tenfold_. Of the
+numbers tried by court martial there were 120 times as many
+proportionally among the drinkers as among the temperate. The
+destructive effects of drink are far greater in hot climates, and
+perceptibly greater in hot weather.
+
+The Southern States of the Union are in advance of the Northern on the
+temperance question. The legislature of Georgia has passed a bill by a
+large majority which taxes wine rooms in prohibition counties $10,000.
+At present this covers nearly all the State.
+
+The forty-fifth annual report of the Registrar General of England
+shows that estimating the average mortality of males in England at
+1,000, that of brewers is 1,361, of innkeepers and publicans 1,521.
+Scotch reports show the mortality of males engaged in the liquor
+business to be 68 per cent. above the actuaries table for healthy
+males, and 49 per cent. over the English life table.
+
+
+SLOW PROGRESS.--It was a long time before lobelia was recognized by
+the profession--before anything good was found to belong to it. Now
+one of our leading professors thinks lobelia will become the most
+valuable of our cardiac sedatives--regulator of the heart's action. I
+wrote up the value of lobelia in surgery, obstetrics and practice over
+thirty years ago; also the valuable properties of hydrastis can., both
+of which were almost unnoticed then and since by regular
+practitioners. But now Prof. Bartholow has discovered their great
+merits and written the latter up especially, and what I and Prof.
+Dodd, (V. S.,) wrote a third of a century ago will be credited to
+others. Well, who cares? The tincture of calendule flavas I have tried
+to force upon the profession for forty years as a dressing for wounds,
+but it will require some one higher in the profession to give it a
+hurrah, boys!--_Med. Summary_.
+
+
+COMMUNITY DOCTORS.--It is manifestly the interest of society that the
+doctor should be engaged and paid by the year, so that his interest
+would be to keep the people well instead of sick. Moreover, it would
+be more economical, as a doctor, secure of steady support, would not
+be inclined to make heavy charges, and the patient would not find a
+fit of illness making a dangerous inroad on his finances, so as to
+double his misfortune. The scheme has been advocated in the
+newspapers.
+
+
+THE SELFISH SYSTEM OF SOCIETY.--The system of antagonism and
+competition results in a universal system of plunder by exorbitant
+charges, and each man protects himself by overcharging in return.
+Plunder by overcharging is so much the custom that no one objects to
+it. The _Boston Herald_ says: "There is a baker in New York, who sells
+large loaves of bread of the finest quality for five cents a loaf. The
+same-sized loaf sells for ten cents in Boston." In like manner,
+Americans generally pay ten cents for a loaf about half as large as
+that sold for ten cents, in London; yet the London baker has to buy
+the same flour after its cost is enhanced by an ocean voyage. This is
+the custom of society; the glass of lemonade, costing perhaps two
+cents, is sold at all prices, from five or ten cents up to
+twenty-five.
+
+The correspondent of a Denver paper says that lumber costing
+forty-five cents a hundred feet, is sold at $2.25. These are samples
+of the financial disorder of life in all departments.
+
+
+EDUCATED BEETLES.--Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 24. Miss Emily Nelson, of
+this city, has received a present from Merida, Yucatan, in the shape
+of an educated jewelled bug. It has a harness of gold and is jewelled
+with precious stones.
+
+The custom is said to have originated among the Spanish nobility
+several centuries ago, when the first bug was educated and worn by a
+princess. The bug became greatly attached to the maiden, and partook
+of her moods and dispositions. When she was sad or disheartened the
+bug became sluggish; and when she was joyous and vivacious the bug was
+likewise lively in its movements. At her death, the bug pined away and
+died, too.
+
+Miss Nelson is very happy and justly very proud of her present. The
+insect is about the size of an ordinary black beetle. Around the body
+is firmly fastened a gold band. A gold strap is riveted to this and
+passes down the back around and under the body, and is welded upon the
+under side to the gold belt. Upon the back are tiny jewels set in gold
+and fastened into the shell. The coloring of the shell is a brilliant
+Nile green, edged with black. The movement of the bug gives flashes of
+variegated colors. Upon the under side is fastened a delicate gold
+chain which in turn is attached to a brooch. It is educated to eat
+from the lips. It understands various whistles and calls, and appears
+and disappears at the word of command.--_Globe_.
+
+
+RUSTLESS IRON is being manufactured in New York by a new process
+which, it is claimed, converts the surface of the metal into magnetic
+oxide of iron. This is done by subjecting it successively to the
+action of highly heated air and carbonic acid gas from coal fires. The
+process can be applied with most satisfactory results to water-pipes
+and architectural work.
+
+
+WEIGHING THE EARTH.--Prof. Proctor proposes to repeat in Florida an
+experiment to determine the weight of the earth, and mentions the
+results of the methods heretofore tried. Newton first estimated the
+weight of the earth to be between five and six times as great as that
+of water. Such a weight it would have if it were one half iron and the
+other half limestone, or half copper and half clay. Evidently the
+metallic weight preponderates.
+
+Weighing the earth is accomplished by comparing the effect of its
+attraction with that of much smaller bodies. One method is to compare,
+by balancing the weight of two balls, one above a globe of lead, as
+large as practicable, and the other below it, so as to have the
+attraction of the leaden globe pulling up and counteracting the
+gravitation to the earth. The effect is very slight and requires
+delicate apparatus.
+
+By another, but more inaccurate method, the attraction of the earth
+has been compared with that of a mountain--a very indefinite method
+indeed. A better method was that of Astronomer Airy and Mr. Dunkin,
+who went down into the Harton coal pit 1,260 feet to see how much
+difference that depth would make in the movements of a pendulum. It
+gained 2-1/4 seconds in 24 hours, and the weight of the earth was
+inferred to be over 6-1/2 times as great as that of water; but it is
+manifest that such a method could yield nothing much more accurate
+than the mountain experiment which indicated a weight 4-3/4 times that
+of water. The ball experiment, which is the most reliable, indicated
+5-1/2 times the weight of water, thus coinciding with Newton's
+astronomical opinion, which is probably true.
+
+
+HEAD AND HEART.--The popular use of the terms head and heart to
+represent thought and emotion, which is contrary to physiology, is
+analogous to Dr. Hartmann's statement of the oriental doctrine that
+thought alone belongs to the brain, but life and will to the heart.
+This ancient _speculation_ (not intuition) is easily refuted. If it
+were true, the will power and powers of life would be proportional to
+the development of the heart, regardless of the brain, but the reverse
+is the fact. Great development of heart does not increase either will
+power, or life, but is injurious to both. The enlarged (hypertrophied)
+heart is injurious to vital power and will power, and in proportion to
+its increase, it tends to shorten life by apoplexy or some other form
+of cerebral disorder. It produces no increase of either life, will, or
+love. In fact, the stomach is more nearly associated with love than
+the heart, for men are much more amiable after enjoying a feast, but
+the heart, which is a part of the muscular system, is at its maximum
+of action in combat and war.
+
+
+THE RECTIFICATION OF CEREBRAL SCIENCE, commenced in this number, will
+be continued in the November number, bringing the science up to its
+present condition, and showing how, after the rectification is
+completed, the science attains a grand simplicity, and, instead of
+being puzzled by cerebral organology, a very brief instruction will
+enable us to master the subject. In 1836 I instructed Prof. Cubi at
+New Orleans in the old organology, giving him six lessons in exchange
+for his instructions in Spanish. Three lessons would give an equal
+familiarity with the new system, though it is four times as extensive.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.--RECTIFICATION OF CEREBRAL SCIENCE, CORRECTING THE
+ORGANOLOGY OF GALL AND SPURZHEIM.
+
+ Approximate correctness and incompleteness of Gall and
+ Spurzheim--Grand anatomical discoveries of Gall---Reception of
+ his doctrines--His successors--Omission of Pneumatology and
+ Physiology by Gall and Spurzheim--Organs and faculties
+ overlooked--True locations of the faculties they recognized,
+ Amativeness, Philoprogenitiveness, Adhesiveness, Inhabitiveness,
+ Destructiveness, Combativeness, Secretiveness, Acquisitiveness,
+ Constructiveness, Cautiousness, Approbativeness, Self-Esteem,
+ Firmness, Religion, Benevolence, Hope, Marvellousness, Poetry,
+ Ideality, Imitation, Wit or Mirthfulness, Eventuality,
+ Individuality, Perceptive Organs, Time, Comparative Sagacity,
+ Causality, Tune, Constructiveness, Language--Comments on the
+ Organology of Gall.
+
+
+The first question that occurs to the enlightened enquirer, when he
+learns that the functions of the brain have been positively determined
+by experiment, is whether the cranioscopy of Gall and Spurzheim was
+successful in locating the cerebral functions, and how nearly their
+inferences from development correspond with the revelations of
+experiment.
+
+It is with great pleasure that I am able to say that the system of
+Gall and Spurzheim was a wonderful approximation to the truth. Dr.
+Gall was pre-eminently the scientific pioneer of the nineteenth
+century. No single individual ever did so much to enlarge the sphere
+of human knowledge, and to establish the permanent foundations of
+philosophy. Up to his time, the brain of man was at once the greatest
+mystery of anatomy and the repository of a greater amount of wisdom
+and truth than all other realms of science which had previously been
+explored. But so limited was the knowledge, and so narrow the
+understanding of the learned, that the grandeur of cerebral science
+was not even suspected, and, even at the present time, it is so remote
+from the speculations of the learned that, like a distant star, it has
+few practical relations to their life; nor will its magnitude be
+realized until an ample literature shall have made its scientific
+record.
+
+Into this field of mystery, Dr. Gall advanced with a courage unknown
+to his predecessors, and his success was equal to his courage. The
+entire plan and constitution of the brain were revealed by his
+anatomical genius, and his successors have but carried further and
+perfected his anatomical system. His anatomical exposition of the
+brain, addressed to the French Institute in 1808, is one of the great
+landmarks of the progress of science--the commencement of a new era;
+and his exposition of its functions was the solution of a problem
+which had defied the genius and learning of all his predecessors. His
+discoveries in anatomy were so great that Reil (himself a brain
+anatomist of the highest rank, whose name is permanently associated
+with anatomy by the name "Island of Reil," which belongs to the
+location in which Gall made his first discovery of the faculty and
+organ of language), Reil, I say, declared that Dr. Gall had shown him
+more in his dissections of the brain than he thought it possible for
+any one man to have discovered in his lifetime; and, in fact, some of
+the old anatomists, not having been personally instructed by Gall,
+professed to find it difficult, if not impossible, to unfold the brain
+after his manner.
+
+These discoveries gave Dr. Gall at once a very eminent rank among the
+learned, for anatomy being a physical science, there never has been
+any opposition, jealousy, or scepticism against its cultivation among
+the educated, nor was there anything marvellous in his revelation of
+cerebral functions, for he studied only the common familiar faculties
+of men and animals, and never looked into the mysterious and
+marvellous powers which a more thorough investigation has revealed.
+
+Indeed, his reception at first was quite triumphant, and it was not
+until the death of Gall and Spurzheim, leaving no able and competent
+representative to carry on their labors, that the drift of medical
+scepticism and ignorance arrested the progress of his doctrines. I say
+_ignorance_, for the aversion to the doctrines of Gall was due far
+more to the ignorance of the profession and their entire neglect of
+the craniological method than to any other causes.
+
+Gall had good reason to be satisfied with his first reception, except
+as to the hostility of the Austrian government, which suppressed his
+lectures and compelled him to go abroad, settling finally in Paris,
+where he again encountered governmental hostility in the
+unfriendliness of Bonaparte, whose rejection alike of Gall and of
+Fulton, who wished to introduce steam navigation, demonstrated that
+great military and political ability may co-exist with great
+shallowness of mind in reference to all things new, original, and
+philanthropic. So it has always been, and so it continues.
+
+In his travels in Germany, from 1805 to 1807, accompanied by Dr.
+Spurzheim, "I experienced everywhere (said Gall) the most flattering
+reception. Sovereigns, ministers, philosophers, legislators, artists
+seconded my design on all occasions, augmenting my collection, and
+furnishing me everywhere with new observations. The circumstances were
+too favorable to permit me to resist the invitations which came to me
+from most of the universities." Thirty-four of the leading cities and
+seats of learning enjoyed the visits of Gall and Spurzheim before they
+settled in Paris, where, although French jealousy arose against this
+German invasion, and the influence of Napoleon prevented their cordial
+reception, they nevertheless commanded and retained the respect of
+scientists and had many devoted friends, including Broussais and
+Andral, who then stood at the head of the medical profession, and of
+Corvisart, Napoleon's physician, who could not overcome his master's
+prejudice.
+
+In speaking of the great void left by the decease of Gall and
+Spurzheim, I do not forget that for a few years George Combe, Dr.
+Elliotson, and Dr. Macartney, of England, and Dr. Caldwell, of
+America, survived, but these eminent gentlemen were not so identified
+with the science, or so competent to sustain it as to wear the mantle
+of its founders. My own labors beginning after the death of the
+founders were those of investigation and discovery, and never to any
+great extent those of propagation. Indeed, for twenty years I entirely
+abandoned the scientific rostrum, and almost ended my labors, feeling
+that my duty had been done in the way of development and
+demonstration. But in accordance with the great law of periodicity, I
+resumed my labors in 1877-78.
+
+When we look at the doctrines of Gall and Spurzheim in the light of
+positive science and philosophy, our first observation is that they
+fell very far short of revealing the entire functions of the brain,
+and discovering in it all the important spiritual and physical
+faculties and energies of life. They did not attempt to explore the
+brain as a physiological organ, and determine how or in what special
+organs it controls the physiological functions. These may be regarded
+as one half, though the lower half, of its capacities, out of which
+arises a vast amount of medical philosophy.
+
+As to the psychic half of the cerebral functions, they omitted
+entirely that portion which relates to pneumatology. They thought
+nothing of the soul as an object of science, and made no attempt to
+trace its connection with the brain, and the vast number of phenomena
+which lie along the border line between the physical and spiritual,
+and which are conspicuous in the phenomena of somnambulism, sleep,
+dreaming, hypnotism, spiritualism, clairvoyance, trance, ecstasy, and
+religious marvels.
+
+Overlooking these things, they sought the seats of from twenty-seven
+faculties (as with Gall) to thirty-five (as with Spurzheim), and did
+not appear to realize how many had been entirely omitted. When all
+they attempted to locate are located by positive experiment and
+assigned their proper localities and limits, we find fully one half of
+the cerebral surface vacant for organs of other functions. Indeed, the
+first large publication of Gall and Spurzheim, in four volumes folio,
+with an atlas of 100 plates, begun in 1809 and finished in 1819, did
+not in the cranial map of organs profess to be a complete development
+of the functions of the brain. It located organs, but did not
+determine the functions intermediate between their boundaries. This
+was the map of Gall. In that of Spurzheim the intermediate spaces were
+occupied and the entire exterior surface of the brain devoted to
+organology, yet still the basilar and interior surface of the brain
+remained unknown to Spurzheim, and the exterior regions which he
+supposed entirely occupied by his organs were but half occupied by
+them. Thus when we consider the unexplored basilar and interior
+regions, and that half of its exterior surface which was erroneously
+appropriated to the thirty-five organs, as well as the erroneous
+location of several, we perceive that _more than half_ of the organs
+and functions of the brain remained for investigation.
+
+Turning away from the anatomy to contemplate the psychology, we
+perceive that _more than half of human nature_ had been omitted from
+the German scheme,--that half of the mental functions which belongs to
+the organs of the vacant spaces on the corrected map, and in addition
+to these the higher psychic functions, and the lower physiological
+functions, neither of which Gall and Spurzheim explored, because they
+did not attempt to study the brain as a physiological organ, and they
+did not bring the soul and the higher functions of the mind within the
+scope of their science.
+
+Gall was a bold, original naturalist and anatomist but not a
+psychologist; and the incorrectness of his psychology hindered his
+investigations, and prevented him from carrying out a proper
+subdivision of faculties and organs. He says in the last volume: "Each
+fundamental power, essentially distinct, includes sensation,
+perception, memory and recollection, judgment and
+imagination,"--disregarding the truth that these are distinct
+intellectual powers, belonging to different organs, and therefore
+bearing no proportion to each other. One may have an immense memory
+without imagination, or a brilliant imagination without much memory.
+These, and many other psychological errors, are apparent in the
+writings of Gall, and still more in those of Spurzheim.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+In the drawing herewith presented, the thirty-five organs of Spurzheim
+are assigned their proper locations and dimensions. The first organ,
+AMATIVENESS (made second by Spurzheim), was assumed to occupy the
+entire cerebellum. It really occupies only its median and superior
+portion, and a small section of the anterior surface of the spinal
+cord, adjacent to the encephalon. This error of Gall and Spurzheim did
+a great deal to discredit their system. It manifested on their part a
+fallibility of judgment, and a dogmatic adherence to first impressions
+in the face of evidence to the contrary; for the experiments of
+Rolando and Flourens demonstrated a connection between the cerebellum
+and the general vital force and muscular action. The relation may not
+have been clearly understood, but the facts were decisive, and the
+researches of Majendie, with the more recent ones of Ferrier, have
+made more clear the relations of the cerebellum to the muscular system
+and vital force.
+
+The doctrine of Gall has been abandoned by physiologists because
+refuted by many facts, the most decisive of which is that the
+cerebellum of castrated horses is larger than that of stallions, which
+could not be possible if the cerebellum had only sexual functions.
+Moreover, the doctrine of Gall was essentially unreasonable in itself.
+To suppose that so large a portion of the brain which is continually
+active, being well supplied with blood, could have a function which is
+but occasionally active, and which, through the greater part of human
+life, is unnoticed or inactive, is extremely unreasonable; and to
+suppose that the serious disturbances of animal life and muscular
+motion, caused by ablations of the cerebellum, were due to the
+disturbance of an organ having only sexual functions, was thoroughly
+absurd. The parrot-like repetition of these exploded errors by the
+followers of the phrenological system contributed to its discredit in
+the medical profession.
+
+The 2d organ of Gall (3d of Spurzheim), PHILOPROGENITIVENESS, was
+regarded as one of the best known phrenological organs, but my
+unprejudiced study of heads soon assured me of its inaccuracy. The
+organ was small in Spurzheim, who was remarkably fond of children, and
+I have found it small in ladies who showed no lack of parental love,
+but generally well developed and active in criminal skulls. One which
+I obtained in Arkansas, of a man named Richmond, had this region large
+and active, although he was the one of a group of murderers by whom
+the children, or, rather, boys, were killed. This region is _extremely
+defective_ in the brains of birds, which are certainly very devoted to
+their young. The attachment to children belongs really to an interior
+region of the occiput, where the occipital lobes face the median line.
+Hence it is that a large occipital development very often coincides
+with the love of children; but the true position of the organ renders
+it difficult to determine its development in life.
+
+ADHESIVENESS (3d) is located by Spurzheim farther back and lower than
+it should be; also, too far back in Gall's map. It belongs to the
+vacant space in front of Gall's location.
+
+INHABITIVENESS (5th) is an imaginary definition of the function
+located behind Self-esteem. Equally imaginary is the doctrine of the
+Edinburgh phrenologists, who call it Concentrativeness. The
+observations of Gall led him to regard it as a portion of the organ of
+Pride, and as giving to animals a love of lofty locations. Gall was
+nearer right than Spurzheim or Combe. The only function I find in this
+spot is Self-confidence. The tendencies to a quiet love of home, and
+the ability to tranquillize and concentrate the mind, are located,
+virtually, above the ear on the temporal arch, the ridge which
+separates the lateral from the superior surface of the head.
+
+DESTRUCTIVENESS, the 5th organ of Gall and 1st of Spurzheim, was
+located much too high and too far forward by Gall. I am surprised at
+this, since it differs so widely from the indications of comparative
+anatomy that it is difficult to imagine how Gall was misled. Any one
+comparing the skull of a dog with that of a sheep may discover the
+error. He called it Murder, or the wish to destroy. Spurzheim, who
+does not describe its location, says, "At the beginning Gall placed
+the seat of this organ too far behind the ear, but a great number of
+observations convinced us that its seat is immediately above the ear."
+The truth is that the convolutions which terminate on the temporal
+bone over the ear are only on the border of Destructiveness, and
+produce only an irritable and impulsive temper. The true
+Destructiveness extends fully an inch under the surface of the middle
+lobe, along the petrous ridge of the temporal bone, and is manifested
+externally just behind the ear by the prominence of the mastoid
+process.
+
+COMBATIVENESS (the 6th of Spurzheim, or Courage and Self-defence, the
+4th of Gall) is located with tolerable correctness by each and
+properly described.
+
+SECRETIVENESS, which is but a modification of Cautiousness, occupying
+its middle region, is much too large on the maps, and on that of Gall
+it is quite out of place--too far forward and too high up, occupying a
+region which produces modesty and refinement.
+
+ACQUISITIVENESS (7th of Gall, 8th of Spurzheim) is still farther
+mislocated on the map of Gall, occupying a region of intellectual,
+inventive and literary capacity. This is the most _outre_ and absurd
+of all Gall's locations. Placing this selfish and grasping propensity
+in the front lobe which belongs to intellect, when it really belongs
+to the selfish, adhesive, and combative elements of the occiput, is an
+error of so extravagant a character as to show that Gall had no
+correct psychology in his mind, and no capacity or desire to construct
+a harmonious system. Spurzheim's location, much farther back, is
+somewhat less erroneous, but both are thoroughly false, and a few
+months of my first observations fifty-two years ago satisfied me as to
+this error. That it should have flourished unchallenged by
+Phrenologists for eighty years, seems to show that when a dominant
+idea is once established in the mind, all facts are made to conform to
+it. Is is remarkable, too, that the very great difference between the
+locations given by Gall and by Spurzheim has not attracted notice. But
+in fact the map of Gall has never had any popular currency. Spurzheim
+and Combe have been the accepted authors. The true location of
+acquisitiveness is anterior to combativeness, and lower than
+adhesiveness. Gall was misled by studying the young pickpockets and
+thieves of Vienna. The organ that he found suits a low cunning and
+dextrous character when the head lacks elevation.
+
+CONSTRUCTIVENESS, Spurzheim's 9th (Bausinn, or aptitude for mechanical
+arts, of Gall No. 19), is decidedly mislocated by Spurzheim. Instead
+of being placed in the purely intellectual region adjacent to
+calculation, order, and system, it is carried back and down into the
+region of somnolence and sensitive impressibility. Gall's location is
+a little worse because lower, being carried out of the intellectual
+region into the middle lobe according to his published map. It is very
+easy to detect this error in examining a number of heads, and it was
+quite apparent to me in my first year's observations. In impressible
+persons the touch upon this locality produces nothing but a dreamy
+influence, and a disposition to close the eyes. Carried farther, it
+produces the mesmeric sleep.
+
+CAUTIOUSNESS (the 10th of both Spurzheim and Gall) was too far back in
+Spurzheim's map, occupying space that belongs to adhesiveness. It runs
+downward along the course of the lateral convolutions, and its more
+timid and gloomy functions are developed near the ear, differing
+widely from the functions of its upper portion.
+
+APPROBATIVENESS (the 11th of Spurzheim, and 9th of Gall) is located
+with substantial correctness, covering, however, more functions than
+that term expresses. Gall's location and definition are also
+substantially correct.
+
+SELF-ESTEEM (the 12th of Spurzheim, 8th of Gall) is well located and
+described with approximative correctness.
+
+FIRMNESS, RELIGION (Veneration or Theosophy), and BENEVOLENCE are so
+well located and described by both Gall and Spurzheim as to need but
+little comment at present. The four superior organs on the median
+line, and the organ of CONSCIENTIOUSNESS were more correctly located
+and described than any other large portion of the brain.
+
+HOPE is not adjacent to Conscientiousness, but parallel to Religion.
+
+MARVELLOUSNESS has a preposterously large space assigned it, being
+really a small organ at the summit of Ideality, which exercises a more
+intellectual and less superstitious function than has been given it.
+Marvellousness, Hope, Conscientiousness, Time, Order, Weight, Size,
+and Individuality are the eight organs discovered and added by
+Spurzheim, not having been recognized by Gall. The exterior portion of
+Spurzheim's Marvellousness occupies the space devoted by Gall to
+Poetry.
+
+POETRY, recognized by Gall, is brought lower by Spurzheim and called
+IDEALITY. Both locations are substantially correct. The location of
+Gall is the seat of Marvellousness, Imagination, and Spirituality;
+that of Spurzheim is well expressed by the term Ideality, and the
+description given, but the word Poetry is rather too limited as the
+definition of Gall's organ. It gives brilliance to prose and to
+oratory, or even conversation, as well as to poetry.
+
+IMITATION, adjacent to Benevolence, is somewhat better located by Gall
+than by Spurzheim, who gives it too much breadth anteriorly.
+
+WIT or MIRTHFULNESS is a confused and erroneous statement. The two
+faculties are distinct, Wit being intellectual and occupying a small
+space adjacent to Causality or Reason, while Mirthfulness, or the
+sentiment of the ludicrous, is just above it, and should properly be
+called Humor. The mirthful or playful faculty is in the posterior
+region adjacent to Approbativeness, and may be quite conspicuous when
+there is neither wit nor humor in the mirth. Imitation, Mirth or
+Humor, and Wit follow each other in a line. The so-called organ of Wit
+(Gall) or Mirthfulness (Spurzheim) is the seat of the most profound
+reasoning faculty, while the CAUSALITY of Spurzheim, the METAPHYSICAL
+DEPTH of thought of Gall, though it gives a clear analytical
+intelligence has really less profundity and ability in reasoning than
+the organ which they have misnamed Wit and Mirthfulness, which is
+pre-eminently the organ of profound reasoning.
+
+EVENTUALITY and INDIVIDUALITY are confounded as one organ by Gall,
+calling it Educability, or Memory of Things but rightly separated by
+Spurzheim, as the observation and memory of events are distinct from
+the observation of things. Though I do not use the word Individuality,
+it is not an objectionable expression, as it suggests the fine
+perceptive power of its location. Both Gall and Spurzheim had a
+practically good idea of the region of Eventuality, which Gall first
+called the memory of things. Spurzheim's description is good; but when
+the organ is analyzed, it yields consciousness and observation on the
+median line, memory more exterior, extending to Time.
+
+PERCEPTIVE ORGANS--The most marvellous feature of the old
+phrenological system, is the accuracy with which the smallest organs
+of the brain have been discovered, located, and described. The organs
+of Form, Size, Weight, Color, Order, and Number, or Calculation, were
+so accurately located and described by Spurzheim, that little remains
+to be said about them. Gall discovered only Form, Color, and Number,
+and the latter he located in the position which belongs to Order.
+These organs were but little developed in Gall, whose great success
+was due to his philosophic originality and independence. He was not a
+close observer, and there was a sternness in his nature which
+prevented him from accepting readily the suggestions of Spurzheim, who
+with less boldness of character and greater accuracy of perception,
+was better fitted for minute observation and anatomical analysis. His
+own cranium has been preserved, in which I found these perceptive
+organs distinctly marked by their digital impressions on the
+superorbital plate over the eye. It is a remarkable fact that the
+intellectual faculties have been most easily understood and located,
+while their antagonists in the occipital region have proved the
+greatest puzzle in psychic and cerebral investigations. Gall failed,
+and left a vacant space in the occiput. Spurzheim failed, but covered
+the ground incorrectly, and it was many years after I discovered
+cerebral impressibility before I attained a satisfactory view of the
+psychology of this region. The location and definition of LOCALITY are
+substantially correct.
+
+The organ of TIME, another of Spurzheim's discoveries, was very
+correctly located and defined by him. It lies just above the organ of
+Color.
+
+COMPARATIVE SAGACITY, or Perspicacity, as Gall called it, was a better
+term than Comparison, which was introduced by Spurzheim. Direct
+perception of truth is its leading character. Illustration by
+comparison belongs to the breadth of the forehead, to the Ideal and
+Inventive region, and is the characteristic of poetry. Spurzheim's
+description, however, is substantially correct. It qualifies for clear
+statement, but not for comprehensive or ingenious reasoning. The
+portion on the median line has still more penetration, in consequence
+of which it perceives the nature and tendencies of everything, and is
+enabled to exercise foresight. Still farther in on the median line are
+located the powers which are more intuitive, and transcending ordinary
+foresight are entitled to be called prophecy.
+
+The CAUSALITY of Spurzheim, or Metaphysical Depth of thought of Gall,
+was defined with approximate correctness. The immediate perception of
+causation lies just above the organ of Time, and the special organ of
+Reason extends therefrom upwards. If the reflective organs of one side
+of the forehead are divided into an interior and exterior group by a
+vertical line from the pupil of the eye, the interior group would
+represent a comprehensive understanding possessing sagacity and
+judgment, while the exterior would represent profound ingenious
+thought and originality, a capacity for discovering truth by reason
+and meditation, by analysis and synthesis, while the interior would
+discover it only by direct perception. In the exterior group would be
+included the misnamed organ of Wit or Mirthfulness, which is really a
+source of philosophy and originality.
+
+TUNE and CONSTRUCTIVENESS have really reversed their positions in the
+maps of Spurzheim and Gall. The inventive faculty of musical composers
+was what Gall discovered as Music. The sense of Melody and Tune lies
+behind the brow in connection with the _sense of hearing_, at the
+anterior portion of Sensibility, which forty years after my discovery
+is beginning to be recognized in consequence of the experiments of
+Ferrier on animals. The organ of hearing which he demonstrated in the
+monkey, occupies the same position in the superior temporal
+convolution, behind the eye, which I have given it in man, which
+brings it into close connection with the organs of Language and Tune.
+Its close connection with the region of impressibility called
+Somnolence explains its supreme control over our emotions.
+
+The organ of LANGUAGE, the first discovery of Gall, has been the first
+to receive its demonstration from pathology and vivisection. But the
+pioneer teacher to whom contemporaries are unjust has to wait very
+long for an honorable recognition. The existence of an organ of
+Language at the junction of the front and middle lobes, at the back of
+the eye-sockets, has become established in our physiology from the
+developments of disease and autopsies, without mentioning in
+connection that it was the discovery of Gall. Perhaps the authors of
+the text-books may not even know the location of Gall's discovery in
+the brain, and think only of the external sign, the prominence of the
+eyes, produced by the convolution at the back of their orbits.
+
+Dr. Spurzheim simply located the external sign of the prominence of
+the organ at the eye, while Gall recognized the talent for languages
+as lying further back than that for verbal memory, and consequently
+being manifested lower at the eye. Nevertheless Gall made a correct
+observation, as he noticed that a full development was indicated when
+the temples were broad behind the eye. The true location of the organ
+externally is just behind the outer angle of the eye, a position
+central to Gall's observations, and corresponding in the brain to that
+junction of the front and middle lobes in which the organ has been
+demonstrated by pathology, though not so accurately defined as in my
+experiments.
+
+Perhaps in twenty or thirty years more my demonstrations having been
+brought before the public may attract the attention of the laborious
+vivisectors in Europe, who have done so much to verify them, and who
+will find that their labors do not refute but do confirm what I have
+discovered by methods so much simpler, easier and more pleasant.
+
+In the second volume I propose to show in detail how much the
+pathologists and vivisectors have done to illustrate and corroborate
+the new Anthropology.
+
+[Illustration: ORGANOLOGY OF GALL, 1809.
+
+ 1. Instinct of Generation.
+ 2. Love of Offspring.
+ 3. Friendship, Attachment.
+ 4. Courage, Self-Defence.
+ 5. Murder, Wish to Destroy.
+ 6. Cunning.
+ 7. Sentiment of Property.
+ 8. Pride, Self-Esteem, Haughtiness.
+ 9. Vanity, Ambition.
+ 10. Cautiousness, Foresight, Prudence.
+ 11. Memory of Things, Educability.
+ 12. Local Memory.
+ 13. Memory of Persons.
+ 14. Verbal Memory.
+ 15. Memory for Languages.
+ 16. Colors.
+ 17. Music.
+ 18. Number.
+ 19. Aptitude for Mechanical Arts.
+ 20. Comparative Aptitude for Drawing Comparisons.
+ 21. Metaphysical Depth of Thought, Aptitude for Drawing Conclusions.
+ 22. Wit.
+ 23. Poetry.
+ 24. Good Nature.
+ 25. Mimicry.
+ 26. Theosophy, Religion.
+ 27. Firmness of Character.]
+
+
+
+
+BUSINESS DEPARTMENT.
+
+
+COLLEGE OF THERAPEUTICS.
+
+Next Session Begins November 1, 1887.
+
+This institution is the germ of what will be an immense revolution in
+education hereafter, when the knowledge now given to small classes
+will hold a conspicuous place in every college, and will be presented
+in every high school.
+
+The mountain mass of inertia, which opposes, passively, all
+fundamental changes, cannot now resist scientific demonstration as it
+has in the past. The instruction in the College of Therapeutics, is
+thoroughly demonstrative, leaving no room for doubt, and it gives a
+species of knowledge which ought to be a part of every one's
+education--a knowledge of the constitution of man, not obtainable
+to-day in any medical or literary college, nor in our mammoth
+libraries. It is not merely as a deep philosophy that this interests
+us, but as a guide in the preservation of health, and in the
+regulation of spiritual phenomena, which would, to a very great
+extent, supersede our reliance on the medical profession by giving us
+the control of the vital powers, by which we may protect ourselves,
+and control the development of the young.
+
+Each student was made to feel the effects of local treatment on the
+body, and the power of rapidly changing disease to health, and was
+personally taught to perform the manipulations for this purpose, and
+to investigate disease or portray character by the psychometric
+methods as well as to test the value of medicines.
+
+The various uses and scientific application of electricity were shown,
+and many things entirely unknown and unrecognized in works on
+Electro-Therapeutics. The entire class was placed under a medical
+influence simultaneously by the agency of electricity--an operation so
+marvelous that it would be considered incredible in medical colleges.
+By these and other experiments and numerous illustrations and lucid
+explanations of the brain and nervous system, the instruction was made
+deeply interesting, and students have attended more than one course to
+perfect themselves in the science. The following declaration of
+sentiments shows how the course was regarded by the class:
+
+ "The summer class of 1887 in the College of Therapeutics,
+ feeling it their duty to add their testimony to that of many
+ others in reference to the grand scientific discoveries which
+ they have seen thoroughly demonstrated by Prof. J. R. Buchanan,
+ would say to the public that no one can attend such a course of
+ instruction as we have recently been engaged in, without
+ realizing that Therapeutic Sarcognomy greatly enlarges the
+ practical resources of the healing art for the medical
+ practitioner, magnetizer and electro-therapeutist, while
+ Psychometry, whose positive truths we have tested and proven,
+ like the sun's rays, illumines all the dark problems of medical
+ practice and of psycho-physiological sciences.
+
+ "Therapeutic Sarcognomy explains the very intricate and
+ mysterious relations of the soul, the brain and body, which
+ prior to Prof. Buchanan's discoveries were unknown to all
+ scientific teachers, and are even now only known to his students
+ and the readers of his works,
+
+ "We feel that we have been very fortunate in finding so valuable
+ a source of knowledge, whose future benefits to the human race,
+ in many ways, cannot be briefly stated, and we would assure all
+ who may attend this college, or read the published works of
+ Prof. Buchanan, and his monthly, the _Journal of Man_, that they
+ will, when acquainted with the subject, be ready to unite with
+ us in appreciating and honoring the greatest addition ever made
+ to biological and psychological sciences. Hoping that the time
+ is not for distant when all students in medical colleges may
+ obtain access to this most important knowledge, we give our
+ testimony to the public."
+
+ H. C. ALDRICH, M. D., D. D. S., _Chairman_.
+ DR. JNO. C. SCHLARBAUM, _Secretary_.
+
+
+OBITUARY RECORD.
+
+Visit to our Cemetery.
+
+Sad are the words, "_It might have been_," sad the recollection of
+lives untimely ended, and equally sad the lives that perished unborn.
+We have been looking among the latter, the spirit life that might have
+gone forth to bless society, but perished ere its birth.
+
+The JOURNAL OF MAN has brought forth many a bright, strong thought
+that will have its career among men, but the other bright, strong
+thoughts that could not be forced through its narrow limits must be
+buried and lost to its readers, and they have been interred with
+sorrow. The following is a list of our early dead--perhaps for some of
+them there may be a resurrection when a larger JOURNAL is issued, but
+perhaps the majority are interred forever.
+
+1. Career of Mohammedanism in Africa. 2. The True History of Buddha.
+3. Influence of Christianity in history. 4. Startling Calculations for
+the Future. 6. The Snake Charmers in Tunis. 6. Mesmerism in China
+before the Christian Era. 7. Dr. Montgomery on the Cell Theory. 8. A
+Race of Dwarfs in the Pyrenees. 9. Religious Hallucination in the
+Bahamas. 10. Philosophy of Death. 11. The Delsarte System of Elocution
+and Acting. 12. Why Should the Chinese go? an eloquent argument by a
+learned Mandarin. 13. An Organic Index of Human Longevity--the
+Doctrine of Powell. 15. Anthropological Laws of Longevity. 16.
+Psychometry and Thought Transference in India. 17. Prof. Dana on
+Evolution. 18. Statistics of Heads and Brains. 19. Cures by Prayer.
+20. Indian Witchcraft. 21. Hypnotism among Turkish Dervishes. 22.
+Discussion of Heredity and Temperaments. 23. Theory and Practice of
+the Divining Rod. 24. Mrs. Stanton on Sleep. 25. Cures for Insomnia,
+and Singular Case of Night-sweats. 26. A Modern Samson. 27.
+Transactions in Psychic Research. 28. A Critique of Unreason--a
+Caustic Review of the Psychic Society. 29. Scientific View of the
+Antiquity of Man. 30. Phrenological Quackery. 31. English and German
+Industrial Education. 32. Training of Viennese Girls. 33. Revolutions
+in Medicine. 34. History and Progress of Russian Nihilists. 35. The
+Paradise of Labor--the Familistre at Guise in France. 36. Exhibition
+of the Keeley Motor. 37. A New Element in the Blood. 38. Reform of the
+Lunacy Laws. 39. Marvellous Dreams. 40. Byron's Spiritual Belief. 41.
+How to Deal with Drunkards and Medical Treatment of Intemperance. 42.
+Combination of Electricity and Medicine. 43. Meynert's Psychiatry, a
+Treatise on Diseases of the Fore-brain. 44. A Mesmerized Detective.
+45. Wonderful Spirit Telegraphy. 46. Discovery of Dead Bodies by
+Intuition. 47. How Clouds are formed. 48. Psychometric Reports on
+Simon of Samaria, Henry George, Dr. McGlynn, Lucretia Mott, Dr. Gall,
+Charlemagne and Julius Csar. 49. The Puget Sound Colony. 50. English
+Rule in Ireland. 51. Dr. Eadon on Memory. 52. Harrison on Mysticism.
+53. Progress in Many Parts of the World. 54. Communications from
+various correspondents, etc., etc. This is not _one half_, but it is
+needless to prolong the catalogue of the buried innocents,--the
+interesting narratives, discussions and expositions of rare knowledge
+which the limited area of the JOURNAL has compelled me to exclude.
+
+Let us hope that in our enlarged JOURNAL next year, there may be room
+to review the most important features of social and scientific
+progress as well as to present gradually the elements of that
+world-embracing science which is called Anthropology,--the
+presentation of which will require at least ten years. I am making
+every effort at present to prepare the improved and enlarged edition
+of the Therapeutic Sarcognomy for the coming winter.
+
+
+LIBERAL PUBLICATIONS.
+
+THE GOLDEN GATE at San Francisco is a successful eight-page weekly
+Spiritual newspaper now in its fourth volume, well filled with
+interesting matter. It illustrates spiritual phenomena by engravings,
+is well edited and highly appreciated. Published by J. J. Owen at
+$2.50 per annum.
+
+HALL'S JOURNAL OF HEALTH at New York, a monthly of twenty-four pages,
+one dollar per annum, has been well received for thirty-three years,
+and of late, with a new editor, it has renewed its vigor and
+prosperity. It contains not only valuable hygienic instruction but
+interesting sketches of Spiritual and progressive science and has
+honored the editor of this Journal with a friendly biographical
+sketch. Its circulation is increasing.
+
+THE BETTER WAY, a Spiritual weekly published at Cincinnati at $2 a
+year, is the successor to four Spiritual papers that have ceased, and
+appears to have the elements of success.
+
+THE EASTERN STAR, published at Glenburn, Maine, by C. M. Brown,
+weekly, at $1 per year, is full of the enthusiasm and energy that win
+success. The editor appears to have a clear head and warm heart and
+devotes his journal to Spiritualism.
+
+THE CARRIER DOVE, a large folio weekly illustrated Spiritual journal.
+$2.50 per annum, published at San Francisco, is now in its fourth
+volume, and has obtained a merited success.
+
+THE TRUTH-SEEKER, a weekly journal ($3 a year) established by the late
+D. M. Bennett, still carries on with undiminished ability the honest
+agnostic work for which it has been famous. It is a vigorous
+iconoclast but does little for constructive progress.
+
+THE OPEN COURT, by B. F. Underwood, Chicago, with an able corps of
+correspondents, maintains a high literary character, and discusses
+philosophy and current topics from the agnostic standpoint. Its belief
+in dry metaphysics, and its stubborn materialistic scepticism are its
+greatest peculiarities. Published fortnightly at $3 a year.
+
+
+UNLIKE ANY OTHER PAPER.
+
+The _Spectator_, unlike other home papers, seeks (1) to acquaint every
+family with simple and efficient treatment for the various common
+diseases, to, in a word, educate the people so they can avoid disease
+and cure sickness, thus saving enormous doctors' bills, and many
+precious lives. (2) To elevate and cultivate the moral nature,
+awakening the conscience, and developing the noblest attributes of
+manhood. (3) To give instructive and entertaining food to literary
+taste, thus developing the mind. (4) To give just such hints to
+housekeepers that they need to tell how to prepare delicious dishes,
+to beautify homes, and to make the fireside the most attractive spot
+in the world.--_Am. Spectator_.
+
+
+MAYO'S ANSTHETIC.
+
+The suspension of pain, under dangerous surgical operations, is the
+greatest triumph of Therapeutic Science in the present century. It
+came first by mesmeric hypnotism, which was applicable only to a few,
+and was restricted by the jealous hostility of the old medical
+profession. Then came the nitrous oxide, introduced by Dr. Wells, of
+Hartford, and promptly discountenanced by the enlightened (?) medical
+profession of Boston, and set aside for the next candidate, ether,
+discovered in the United States also, but far interior to the nitrous
+oxide as a safe and pleasant agent. This was largely superseded by
+chloroform, discovered much earlier by Liebig and others, but
+introduced as an ansthetic in 1847, by Prof. Simpson. This proved to
+be the most powerful and dangerous of all. Thus the whole policy of
+the medical profession was to discourage the safe, and encourage the
+more dangerous agents. The magnetic sleep, the most perfect of all
+ansthetic agents, was expelled from the realm of college authority;
+ether was substituted for nitrous oxide, and chloroform preferred to
+ether, until frequent deaths gave warning.
+
+Nitrous oxide, much the safest of the three, has not been the
+favorite, but has held its ground, especially with dentists. But even
+nitrous oxide is not perfect. It is not equal to the magnetic sleep,
+when the latter is practicable, but fortunately it is applicable to
+all. To perfect the nitrous oxide, making it universally safe and
+pleasant, Dr. U. K. Mayo, of Boston, has combined it with certain
+harmless vegetable nervines, which appear to control the fatal
+tendency which belongs to all ansthetics when carried too far. The
+success of Dr. Mayo, in perfecting our best ansthetic, is amply
+attested by those who have used it. Dr. Thorndike, than whom, Boston
+had no better surgeon, pronounced it "the safest the world has yet
+seen." It has been administered to children and to patients in extreme
+debility. Drs. Frizzell and Williams, say they have given it
+"repeatedly in heart disease, severe lung diseases, Bright's disease,
+etc., where the patients were so feeble as to require assistance in
+walking, many of them under medical treatment, and the results have
+been all that we could ask--no irritation, suffocation, nor
+depression. We heartily commend it to all as the ansthetic of the
+age." Dr. Morrill, of Boston, administered Mayo's ansthetic to his
+wife with delightful results when "her lungs were so badly
+disorganized, that the administration of ether or gas would be
+entirely unsafe." The reputation of this ansthetic is now well
+established; in fact, it is not only safe and harmless, but has great
+medical virtue for daily use in many diseases, and is coming into use
+for such purposes. In a paper before the Georgia State Dental Society,
+Dr. E. Parsons testified strongly to its superiority. "The nitrous
+oxide, (says Dr. P.) causes the patient when fully under its influence
+to have very like the appearance of a corpse," but under this new
+ansthetic "the patient appears like one in a natural sleep." The
+language of the press, generally has been highly commendatory, and if
+Dr. Mayo had occupied so conspicuous a rank as Prof. Simpson, of
+Edinburgh, his new ansthetic would have been adopted at once in every
+college of America and Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Mayo's Vegetable Ansthetic.
+
+A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether,
+nitrous oxide gas, and all other ansthetics. Discovered by Dr. U. K.
+Mayo, April, 1883, and since administered by him and others in over
+300,000 cases successfully. The youngest child, the most sensitive
+lady, and those having heart disease, and lung complaint, inhale this
+vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation of the blood and
+builds up the tissues. Indorsed by the highest authority in the
+professions, recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous
+prostration. Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families
+supplied with this vapor, liquefied, in cylinders of various
+capacities. It should be administered the same as Nitrous Oxide, but
+it does not produce headache and nausea as that sometimes does. For
+further information pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to
+
+ DR. U. K. MAYO, Dentist,
+ 378 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE CARRIER DOVE.
+
+ An Illustrated Weekly Magazine, Devoted to
+
+ SPIRITUALISM AND REFORM.
+
+ Edited by MRS. J. SCHLESINGER.
+
+Each number will contain the portraits and Biographical Sketches of
+prominent Mediums and Spiritual workers of the Pacific Coast, and
+elsewhere. Also, Spirit Pictures by our Artist Mediums. Lectures,
+essays, poems, spirit messages, editorials and miscellaneous items.
+
+ DR. L. SCHLESINGER, }
+ MRS. J. SCHLESINGER, } PUBLISHERS.
+
+ Terms:--$2.50 per Year. Single Copies, 10 cts.
+
+ Address, THE CARRIER DOVE,
+ 32 Ellis Street, San Francisco, California.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note: The Table of Contents came from the first
+ issue of the volume.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
+
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+
+Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887
+ Volume 1, Number 9
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: J. R. Buchanan
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2009 [EBook #27717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div id="masthead">
+ <h1 class="issue_title"><a class="pagenum" id="page1" title="1"></a><span class="proprietor">BUCHANAN’S</span><br />
+ JOURNAL OF MAN.</h1>
+ <div id="mastdate">
+ <p id="leftmast"><abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> <abbr title="One">I.</abbr></p>
+ <p id="centermast">October, 1887.</p>
+ <p id="rightmast"><abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 9.</p>
+ </div>
+</div><!--Masthead-->
+
+<div id="contents">
+ <h2 class="title">CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#art1">The Oriental View of Anthropology</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#art2"><span class="emphasis">Miscellaneous Intelligence</span></a>—<a href="#misc1">Religion and Science</a>;
+ <a href="#misc2">Good Psychology</a>;
+ <a href="#misc3">The Far-away Battle</a>;
+ <a href="#misc4">How not to do it</a>;
+ <a href="#misc5">Robbery of Public Lands</a>;
+ <a href="#misc6">Land Reform in England</a>;
+ <a href="#misc7">Life in Europe</a>;
+ <a href="#misc8">Education in France</a>;
+ <a href="#misc9">Canada and the Union</a>;
+ <a href="#misc10">Woman in the Moon</a>;
+ <a href="#misc11">Emancipation from Petticoats</a>;
+ <a href="#misc12">Women’s Rights on the Streets</a>;
+ <a href="#misc13">A Woman’s Triumph in Paris</a>;
+ <a href="#misc14">A Woman’s Bible</a>;
+ <a href="#misc15">Work for Women</a>;
+ <a href="#misc16">Mrs. Stanton on the Jubilee</a>;
+ <a href="#misc17">Electricity</a>;
+ <a href="#misc18">Progress of the Telegraph</a>;
+ <a href="#misc19">The Mystery of the Ages</a>;
+ <a href="#misc20">Progress of the Marvellous</a>;
+ <a href="#misc21">A Grand Aerolite</a>;
+ <a href="#misc22">The Boy Pianist</a>;
+ <a href="#misc23">Centenarians</a>;
+ <a href="#misc24">Educated Monkeys</a>;
+ <a href="#misc25">Causes of Idiocy</a>;
+ <a href="#misc26">A Powerful Temperance Argument</a>;
+ <a href="#misc27">Slow Progress</a>;
+ <a href="#misc28">Community Doctors</a>;
+ <a href="#misc29">The Selfish System of Society</a>;
+ <a href="#misc30">Educated Beetles</a>;
+ <a href="#misc31">Rustless Iron</a>;
+ <a href="#misc32">Weighing the Earth</a>;
+ <a href="#misc33">Head and Heart</a>;
+ <a href="#misc34">The Rectification of Cerebral Science</a>
+ </li>
+ <li><a href="#art3">Chapter IX.—Rectification of Cerebral Science, Correcting the Organology of Gall and Spurzheim</a></li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<div id="art1" class="article">
+ <h2 class="title">The Oriental View of Anthropology.</h2>
+
+ <p>In the following essay, <strong class="name">Dr. F. Hartmann</strong>, an enlightened author
+ of the Theosophical and Occult school, presents the mystic or Oriental
+ view of man, in an interesting manner, deducing therefrom a philosophy
+ of the healing art. My readers will no doubt be interested
+ in his exposition, and, as the ancient doctrine differs materially from
+ the results of experimental investigation, I take the liberty of incorporating
+ my comments in publishing the essay.</p>
+
+ <h3>A RATIONAL SYSTEM OF MEDICINE.</h3>
+
+ <p>All lovers of truth, progress, and freedom of thought must be
+ grateful to Dr. J. R. Buchanan for his discovery of the science of
+ <span class="small_all_caps">SARCOGNOMY</span>. His system brings us nearer to a recognition of the
+ true nature of man, his origin and his destiny, and of the relations
+ which he bears to the Divine Source from which he emanated in the
+ beginning, and to which he will ultimately return; for the enlightened
+ ones of all nations agree that the <em>real</em> man, who resides temporarily
+ in the physical human body, who feels through the instrumentality
+ of the heart, and thinks through the instrumentality of the
+ brain of the external body, does not originate in the womb of the
+ mother from which the physical body is born, but is of a spiritual
+ origin, again and again re-incarnating itself in physical masks and
+ forms of flesh and blood, living and dying, and being reborn, until,
+ having attained that state of perfection, which renders the inner man
+ capable to exist in a state of spiritual consciousness without being
+ encumbered by a gross earthly organization, which chains him to
+ animal life.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[It should here be remarked that the great majority of those who
+ are considered enlightened, and to whom the world is indebted for
+ the sciences which it now possesses, do not accept this theory of re-incarnation.
+ As commonly stated, it is liable to many decisive objections,
+ and these objections, which I have clearly stated in the Religio-Philosophical
+ Journal, have not been, and I think will not be, removed
+ by the teachers of re-incarnation.]</p>
+
+ <p>It may perhaps not be premature to examine how far the doctrines
+ of Dr. Buchanan correspond with the doctrines of occult science;
+ that is to say, with that science which is based upon a perception and
+ understanding of certain facts, which, to be perceived, require spiritual
+ powers of perception, such as are not yet developed in the majority
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page2" title="2"> </a>of mankind, but which are only in possession of those who have
+ mentally risen above the sphere of external phenomena and accustomed
+ themselves to look at spiritual things with the eye of the
+ spirit. It is not my intention to enter at present into an elaborate
+ review of the most prominent writers on occult subjects, and to
+ quote passages from such authors to support the views expressed in
+ the following pages, but rather to give a short statement of their
+ doctrines in regard to the omnipotent power of Will and Life; both
+ these powers being fundamentally identical; both being merely different
+ modes of actions, or functions, of that universal, eternal, and
+ divine Central Power of the universe, which is beyond the conception
+ of mortals, and which the latter call <em>God</em>.</p>
+
+ <p>The ancient religions, as well as reason and logic, tell us that
+ there is, and can be, only one supreme God, or First Cause of the
+ universe, and that from this one first and fundamental Cause or
+ Power every secondary power and everything that exists has come
+ into existence, or been evolved within it and through its eternal activity.
+ The whole of the universe with everything contained therein,
+ man included, is and can be nothing else but a manifestation of
+ this internal fundamental power, or, as it has been expressed by the
+ ancient philosophers, the universe is the product of the Divine Imagination
+ (thought) of the First Great Cause, thrown into objectivity
+ by its eternal Will.</p>
+
+ <p>We see, therefore, the great unmanifested <em>One</em> manifesting itself in
+ its own <em>Substance</em> (Space) by means of <em>two</em> powers, <em>Thought</em> (imagination)
+ and <em>Will</em> (the <em>Word</em> or Life); both powers being fundamentally
+ identical and merely two different modes of activity or functions
+ of the <em>One</em> Eternal, internal Principle, called God. According
+ to the <em>Bible</em>, God said, “Let there be light,” and through the power
+ of this outspoken “<em>Word</em>,” the world came into existence. This allegory,
+ expressed in modern language, means that by the <em>active</em> Will of
+ the universal First Cause, the images existing in its eternal memory
+ were thrown into objectivity and thus produced the germs from
+ which the worlds with all things existing therein were evolved and
+ grew into the shapes in which we see them now. The <em>Brahmins</em> say
+ that when <em>Brahm</em> awoke from his slumber after the night of creation
+ (the great Pralaya) was over, he <em>breathed out</em> of his own substance,
+ and thus the evolution of worlds began. If he <em>in-breathes</em> again,
+ the worlds will be re-absorbed in his substance, and the day of creation
+ will be over.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[God being essentially and self-evidently inconceivable by man, all
+ attempts of Brahmin, Christian, or any other theologians to explain
+ his existence and his methods of creation can be recognized by the
+ scientific mind only as hypotheses unsusceptible of verification, and,
+ therefore, incapable of becoming a proper basis of Philosophy.]</p>
+
+ <p>Thus we find, on examining the doctrines of all the greatest religions
+ of the world, that they all teach the same truth, although they
+ teach it in different words and in different allegories. They all teach
+ that there exist two fundamental powers, originating from the absolute
+ <em>One</em>, namely, <em>Thought</em> and <em>Will</em>; and it logically follows that if
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page3" title="3"> </a>a man were a complete master over his thoughts and his will, he
+ could become a creator within the realm to which his thought and
+ imagination extend; he could, consequently, by the power of his
+ will and thought, control all the functions of his organism, the so-called
+ involuntary ones as well as those which are voluntary. He
+ could—if he possessed a perfect knowledge of his own constitution—restore
+ abnormal functions to their normal state, and restore diseased
+ organs to health.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[The mode of expression used in this paragraph is rather misleading.
+ One may have a complete mastery of his thoughts and will,
+ while both thought and will are very feeble and ineffective. It
+ requires great <span class="small_all_caps">POWER</span> in the will and thought to acquire such control
+ over bodily functions, and any expression leading persons of
+ feeble character to suppose they can attain such results would be
+ delusive. Many persons of feeble character have been led by current
+ speculations to aspire far beyond their ability.]</p>
+
+ <p>Another fundamental doctrine of Occultism is that man is a Microcosm,
+ in which is germinally (potentially) contained everything
+ that exists in the Macrocosm of the universe. <span class="response">[An unproved hypothesis.]</span>
+ As the will and thought of that universal and divine internal
+ power, which is called God, penetrates and pervades the whole of
+ the universe; likewise the will and thought of man, if he has once
+ attained perfect mastery over himself, extends through all parts of
+ his organization, pervades every organ, and may be made to act consciously
+ wherever man chooses to employ it. But in the present
+ state of man’s condition upon this earth, no one but the adepts have
+ acquired this power. In them thought and will act as one. In the
+ vast majority of human beings thought and will are not yet in entire
+ harmony, and do not act as one. In the regenerated one (the adept)
+ heart and head act in perfect unison. The adept thinks what he
+ wills, and wills what he thinks. In unregenerated humanity will and
+ thought are divided and occupy two different centres. In them the
+ will has its seat in the <em>blood</em> (whose central organ is the heart),
+ and their thought or imagination has its seat in the brain. In them
+ heart and brain are often not only not in perfect harmony, but even
+ opposed to each other. But the <em>will</em> and <em>life</em> being one, and identical,
+ we see that the central seat of <em>life</em> is not, as has been maintained
+ by Dr. Buchanan, the <em>brain</em>, but the primary source of all life
+ is the <em>heart</em>.</p>
+
+ <p>We see, therefore, a discrepancy between the doctrines of Dr. Buchanan
+ and the occult doctrines in regard to Anthropology; but this
+ discrepancy is of no serious consequence; because the <em>moon</em> (the
+ <em>intellect</em>) is in our solar system as necessary as the <em>sun</em> (the <em>will</em>),
+ and as the vast majority of people have a considerably developed intellect,
+ but only a very little developed will, and live, so to say, more
+ in their brains than in their hearts, they may be looked upon as
+ receiving their powers and energies from their brains, while the brain
+ receives its stimulus from the heart. The ancient Rosicrucians compared
+ the heart to the <em>sun</em>, the intellect, or <em>brain</em>, to the moon. The
+ moon receives her light from the sun, the centre of life of our solar
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page4" title="4"> </a>system. If the sun were to cease to exist, the moon would soon
+ lose her borrowed light; likewise if the sun of divine love ceases to
+ shine in the human heart, the cold, calculating intellect may continue
+ to glitter for a while, but it will finally cease to exist. If the brain
+ vampyrizes the heart, that is to say, if it absorbs the greater part of
+ the life principle, which ought to go to develop love and virtue in
+ the heart, man may become a great reasoner, a scientist, arguer, and
+ sophist; but he will not become <em>wise</em>, and his intellect will perish in
+ this life or in the state after death. We often see very intellectual
+ people becoming criminals, and even lunatics are often very cunning.
+ That which a man may call his own in the end, are not the thoughts
+ which he has stored in his perishable memory; but the fire of love
+ and light which he has kindled in his heart. If this fire of life
+ burns at his heart it will illuminate his mind, and enable the brain
+ to see clear; it will develop his spiritual powers of perception, and
+ cause him to perceive things which no amount of intellectual brain-labor
+ can grasp. It will penetrate even the physical body, and
+ cause the soul therein to assume shape and to become immortal.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not to be supposed that the above truths will be at once
+ accepted by every reader of the <cite class="name">Journal</cite>, except by such as have
+ given deep thought to the true nature of man. Neither are they
+ a subject for scientific controversy or disputation. A knowledge of
+ the truth is not produced by disputations and quarrels, but only
+ by direct perception, experience, and understanding. The conclusions
+ which man arrives at by logic are merely productive of certain
+ opinions, and these opinions are liable to be changed again as
+ soon as the basis from which his logic started, changes. A real
+ knowledge of spiritual truths requires a power of spiritual perception,
+ which few men possess. Nevertheless, even our logical deductions,
+ taking as a starting point that which we know to be true, will
+ help us to arrive at the same conclusions at which the Hermetic
+ philosophers arrived by the power of spiritual perception.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[In the foregoing passage, Dr. H. professes to state doctrines derived
+ from intuition or spiritual perception by the ancients, and also
+ recognized to-day by spiritual perception. To me they appear
+ as the results only of that sort of ancient <span class="small_all_caps">SPECULATION</span>, which recognized
+ earth, air, fire, and water as the four chemical elements of all
+ things. I do not find them sustained by the spiritual perception of
+ those who have the intuitive powers to-day, nor by scientific investigation.
+ The substance of the heart is <em>not the seat of life</em>. It is a
+ merely muscular substance, and ceases all action when separated
+ from its controlling ganglia. The vitality of the heart lies in its
+ ganglia—in other words, in the nervous system, <em>in which alone is
+ life</em>, and of which the brain is the commanding centre. That life
+ resides exclusively in the nervous system is one of the established
+ principles of physiology, which cannot be disturbed by any theories
+ descending from antiquity, before the dawn of positive science.
+ That the will resides in the blood and the heart, is about as near
+ the truth as Plato’s doctrine that the prophetic power belonged to
+ the liver. If the region of Firmness in the brain be large, it will
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page5" title="5"> </a>be strongly manifested, even though the heart be feeble, and as easily
+ arrested as Col. Townsend’s. But if the upper surface of the brain be
+ diseased, or sensibly softened, the will power is almost destroyed,
+ even if the plethoric, hypertrophied heart is shaking the head with
+ its power. Many an individual of a delicate frame, has overpowered
+ by firmness and courage stout, muscular men of far larger hearts. That
+ the brain is the organ of thought alone, is a very old crudity. It contains
+ every human emotion and passion, which we may stimulate in
+ the impressible, or suspend instantly by a slight pressure on the
+ brain. There is no intense exercise of any of the emotions or passions
+ without a corresponding warmth and tension in the portion of
+ the brain to which they belong, the development and activity of
+ which determine their power. The will and life are not <em>identical</em>, as
+ Dr. H. suggests, for if they were, we should not have these two
+ words with different meanings. If will is an attribute of life, that
+ does not constitute <em>identity</em>. The speculations of Rosicrucians are
+ of no authority in science. The divine love or influence is in direct
+ relation to the brain, the central organ of the soul, and not to a muscular
+ structure of the body, which is far below the brain in rank. It
+ would be just as reasonable to affirm that courage belongs only to the
+ muscles. That illuminating love which Dr. H. ascribes to the heart,
+ belongs to the upper region of the brain, and is never found when
+ that region lacks development, or is in a cold, torpid condition. I
+ deny entirely that these mystic theories are the product of true, spiritual
+ perception. They arise from the fact that the thoracic region
+ sympathizes with the seat of true love and will in the brain. This
+ secondary effect has been felt and realized by those to whom the
+ functions of the brain were unknown. Spiritual perception, now
+ guided by the spirit of investigation, discovers the whole truth—that
+ all human faculties and impulses belong to the brain, but have a
+ secondary influence on the localities of the body to which <span class="small_all_caps">SARCOGNOMY</span>
+ shows their relations.]</p>
+
+ <p>If we believe in one great spiritual cause of all, and conceive of it
+ as the great spiritual Sun of the universe (of which our terrestrial
+ sun is merely an image or reflection), we find that spiritual man (the
+ image of God) can be nothing else but an individual ray of that
+ spiritual sun, shining into matter, becoming polarized and forming
+ a centre of life in the developing human fœtus, and causing this
+ fœtus to grow in a living form of human shape, according to the
+ conditions presented to it by the maternal organism, and when it is
+ born, and becomes conscious, the illusion of self is created within
+ that individual form. Besides the gross, visible, external form, more
+ ethereal internal forms are evolved, which are of a longer duration
+ than the outward physical form, but of which it is not necessary to
+ speak at present.</p>
+
+ <p>At all events, all that we positively know of man, is that he is an
+ invisible internal power, which evolves an outward shape, which we
+ call a human being. The material through which the organism is
+ built up is the blood, and the centre from which the blood flows into
+ all parts of the body and to which it returns from all parts, is the heart.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page6" title="6"> </a>The heart is consequently the centre from which that power which
+ builds up the organism of man emanates, and as this power can be
+ nothing else but Life, the heart is the centre of life. The heart and
+ the brain stand in the most intimate relation to each other, and
+ neither one can continue to live if the other one ceases to act; but
+ according to the doctrines of the ancient and modern occultists the
+ heart is of superior importance than the brain. A man may live a
+ long time without thinking, but he ceases to live when his heart
+ ceases to beat. The heart is the seat of life, the brain the seat of
+ thought, but both are equally necessary to enjoy life; there is no
+ intellectual activity without life, and a life without intelligence is
+ worthless. That the force which constructs the organism of man
+ emanates from the heart, appears to me to be self-evident; that the
+ power which guides this construction emanates from the brain has
+ been demonstrated by Dr. Buchanan.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[This is quite incorrect. The heart may cease acting, as in apparent
+ death while the processes of thought and feeling are going on,
+ and the individual is conscious that he is going to be buried, but
+ incapable of giving the alarm. On the other hand the action of the
+ brain may be suspended, as in apoplexy, while the heart is beating
+ vigorously. In such cases, though the action of the cerebrum is suspended,
+ the physiological brain or cerebellum sustains physical life.
+ We cannot say that the heart is superior to the brain, because it
+ supplies the brain with blood for its growth, any more than we could
+ say the same of the lungs, which supply oxygen, without which the
+ action of the brain is speedily arrested. We might even extend the
+ remark to the stomach and thoracic duct, which supply the material
+ for making a brain, which certainly does not prove their superiority.
+ The action of the brain is far more important, for the quickest death
+ is produced by crushing the brain, or by cutting it off from the body
+ in the spinal cord of the neck, when heart, lungs, and stomach are
+ promptly arrested by losing the help of the brain. If prior development
+ in growth proved a superiority of rank, the ganglionic system
+ which accompanies the arteries and precedes the evolution of the
+ convoluted cerebrum would hold the highest rank, although it is
+ destitute of consciousness and volition, which belong to the brain
+ alone.]</p>
+
+ <p>But what is this power which emanates from the brain, and which
+ guides the organizing activity of the soul, but the power of life
+ which is transmitted to the brain from the heart, and which is modified
+ in its activity by the peculiar organization of the latter? Man
+ in his present state does not think with his heart, but with his brain;
+ nevertheless, the heart is superior to the brain, for the brain has
+ been built up by the power which came from the heart; and it is a
+ universal law of nature, that no thing can produce anything superior
+ to itself. During its fœtal existence the brain of the child is
+ built up by the blood of the mother; after man is born his brain
+ receives its power of life through the heart, and in spiritually developed
+ man the thought-force created in the brain reacts again upon the
+ will in the heart, controlling its desires and entering into harmonious
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page7" title="7"> </a>union with the latter. The ancient alchemists say: “If the Sun
+ (the heart) enters in conjunction with the <em>Moon</em> (the brain) then
+ will Gold (Wisdom) be produced.”</p>
+
+ <p>We see, therefore, in man two centres of life, the heart and the
+ brain, and it may properly be said that the brain is the seat of
+ life, only it may perhaps be added, that it is the secondary seat,
+ while the principal seat is, or ought to be, in the heart. <span class="response">[Dr. H.
+ identifies will with life, yet every one knows that all acts of volition
+ proceed from the brain alone, and never from the heart; hence by his
+ own statement the brain is the seat of life.]</span> According to the doctrines
+ of the Hermetic philosophers, God is the invisible central fire
+ in the universe from which the Light of the Logos (Christ or the
+ celestial Adam) emanated in the beginning. Man being a Microcosm,
+ contains in his heart the image of that internal and invisible
+ central fire of <em>Love</em>, which sends the light of thought to the brain
+ and illuminates the mind of the seer. We are at present not living
+ in the age of Love, but in the age of Thought (not the age of <em>Reason</em>,
+ but the age of <em>Reasoning</em> and Speculation), and by the law of
+ heredity, life has become pre-eminently concentrated in the brain;
+ while in a more advanced age, when the principle of universal Love
+ and Benevolence will be generally recognized, life will become more
+ strongly concentrated at the heart. Men will then not only think, but
+ feel and become able to recognize the truth by that power which is
+ known to us in its rudimental state as <em>Intuition</em>, but which, if
+ developed, will be far superior to that uncertain feeling called Intuition,
+ and become a Sun within the heart, sending its rays far up into
+ the regions of thought. Then, as their Love for the supreme Good
+ increases, will their knowledge increase, and as their knowledge
+ expands will their Will become powerful and free.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[The physiology of this passage is all erroneous. In the ages of
+ animalism and barbarism the heart is more powerful, like the rest of
+ the muscular system to which it belongs. In a more humane and
+ refined condition the brain is more predominant. The female heart
+ is not as well developed as the male. The moral superiority of
+ women is due not to the heart but to the superior region of the
+ brain, to which we owe all elevation of individuals and society.]</p>
+
+ <p>It has been said above that Will and Life are identical, and there
+ are sufficient facts to prove that they are one. A man may prolong
+ his life by an effort of will, or he may cease to live if he wills to die.
+ A loss of will-power in a limb is identical with paralysis of the latter.
+ If the will (conscious or unconscious will) ceases to act, man
+ ceases to live. No amount of thought exercised by the brain will
+ raise a limb of a person, unless the person has the will to raise it;
+ no amount of imagination on the part of the brain will execute an act,
+ unless the will guided by the imagination causes the act to be
+ executed. In the blood,—the representative of the animal life-principle
+ (Kama-rupa) is the seat of the will, its central office is the
+ heart. There the will or life-power acts consciously or unconsciously,
+ sending its rays to the brain, where they become more refined, and
+ from thence they radiate again back through the organism, causing
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page8" title="8"> </a>the unconscious or conscious processes of imagination and thought.
+ The way in which these processes take place, has been well described
+ in Dr. Buchanan’s “Therapeutic Sarcognomy.” Love, Will,
+ and Life are ultimately one and the same power; they are like the
+ three sides of a pyramid ending in one point, or like a star emitting
+ a light of three different hues. Without the fire of divine Love at
+ the centre there will be no good and powerful Will, without Will
+ man is a useless being, without virtue and without real life, an
+ empty shell or form kept alive by the play of the elements, ceasing
+ to exist when the form falls to pieces. But he who possesses a
+ strong love for the good, the beautiful, and true, grows strong in
+ Will and strong in Life. His heart sends a pure current of life to
+ the brain, which enables the latter to see and grasp the ideas existing
+ in the Astral light. The purer the will the more pure will be
+ the imagination, and the more will the latter be able to rise to the
+ highest regions of thought, while these exalted thoughts will radiate
+ their light back again to the heart and stimulate the heart as the
+ heart stimulated the brain.</p>
+
+ <p>A consideration of the above will go to prove that Love (Will or
+ Life) and Thought (Imagination or Light) are the forces by which
+ the soul forms and regenerates the external body, and that he who
+ obtains mastery over these forces within his own organism will be
+ able to change and remodel his body and to cure it of all ills. The
+ fountain of life is the will, and if the will is good and pure and not
+ poisoned by the imagination, a pure blood and a strong and healthy
+ body will be the result. If the imagination (thought) is pure, it
+ will purify the will and expel from the latter the elements of evil.
+ <em>The fundamental doctrine of the most rational system of medicine
+ is therefore the purification of the Will and the Imagination</em>, and
+ every one carries within his own heart the <em>universal panacea</em>, which
+ cures all ills, if he only knows how to employ it. The purification and
+ strengthening of the will by acts of love and human kindness and
+ by leading a pure and unselfish life, should be the principal object
+ of all religious and scientific education. The Bible says: “If the
+ <em>salt</em> (the will) of the earth is worthless, wherewith shall it be
+ salted?” If the fountain from which all life springs is poisoned by
+ evil thoughts, how can the soul and body be healthy? The best
+ <em>blood-purifier</em> is a pure will, rendered pure by pure and holy
+ thoughts.</p>
+
+ <p>This fundamental and self-evident truth is continually overlooked
+ in our present age. The education of the intellect for the purpose
+ of attaining selfish interests is made of paramount interest and the
+ heart is neglected and left to starve.<a href="#footnote_1" id="fnm1" title="There is no higher gift..." class="fnmarker">1</a> The life-energy which ought
+ to be employed to educate the heart and to render the will good and
+ pure, is wasted in the top story of the temple of man in idle speculations
+ about external and worthless things, in scientific quarrels and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page9" title="9"> </a>dogmatic disputations, which have usually no other object but to
+ tickle personal vanity and to give to ignorance an external coat of
+ learning. Many of our modern scientific authorities resemble ants,
+ which crawl over a leaf which fell from a tree: they know all about
+ the veins and cells of that leaf, but they know nothing whatever of
+ the living tree, which produces such leaves, and moreover flowers
+ and fruits. Likewise the rational medicine based upon reason and
+ understanding, the science springing from a true knowledge of man
+ will forever remain an enigma to the legally-authorized guardians of
+ the health of humanity, as long as they know nothing of man except
+ his external form and refuse to open their eyes and to see the eternal
+ internal power, of which the external form is merely an evanescent
+ image, a transient manifestation.</p>
+
+ <p>Hoping that with the appearance of the <cite class="name">Journal of Man</cite> a
+ new era of truly rational medicine will begin in progressive America,</p>
+
+ <p class="dateline">I am yours truly and fraternally,<br />
+ <strong class="name">Franz Hartmann</strong>, M.D.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="name">Kempten, Bavaria</strong>, April 7, 1887.</p>
+
+ <p class="response">[While reaching my conclusions in a different manner by careful
+ and prolonged experimental investigation, and expressing them
+ differently, I agree with Dr. Hartmann in his most important principle,—the
+ importance of love as the best element of life, in sustaining
+ health and intelligence, and the necessity of its culture in education,
+ which has been so long neglected, and which I have endeavored to
+ enforce in the “New Education.” The structure and functions of
+ the brain demonstrate that its love region is the chief support of
+ its life, that it supports both will and intelligence, and that it not
+ only sustains the highest health of him in whom it is developed and
+ exercised, but ministers also to the health of all whom he meets, and
+ is the great healing power in those whose presence or touch relieves
+ the sick. The existence of this beneficent power in the human
+ constitution, more restorative and pleasant than all medicines when
+ present in sufficient fulness, is rapidly becoming known throughout
+ our country, and is made intelligible as to its origin, nature and
+ application by Sarcognomy, as I am teaching in the College of
+ Therapeutics. Medical colleges, in their ignorance and jealousy,
+ unwisely exclude and war against this nobler and more ethical
+ method of healing, thus compelling its development and practice as
+ a distinct profession, which is rapidly undermining their influence
+ and diminishing their patronage by showing that, in many cases
+ where drug remedies have totally failed as applied by colleges, the
+ psycho-dynamic faculty of man may accomplish wonders.]</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<div id="art2" class="article">
+ <h2 class="title"><a class="pagenum" id="page10" title="10"> </a>Miscellaneous Intelligence.</h2>
+ <div id="misc1" class="miscellany_item">
+
+ <p><strong class="headline">Religion and Science</strong> are exceedingly harmonious in assisting
+ each other, but theologians and scientists are exceedingly discordant.
+ Who is in fault? It is the fault of both. Both are bigoted and
+ narrow-minded. Neither can see the truths that belong to the other
+ party; theologians dislike science, not being able to see that science
+ is a grander and more unquestionable revelation than any they have
+ derived from tradition, and scientists deride religion and theology,
+ not being able in their narrowness to recognize the higher forms of
+ science in the great spiritual truths which have been apparent to
+ all races from the most ancient limits of history. Of the scientific
+ class the majority are averse to the religion of the times, partly
+ from their own sceptical nature, and partly because religion has
+ been presented in the repulsive forms of an absurd theology.</p>
+
+ <p>Prof. E. S. Morse, the president of the American Association, is a
+ very sceptical agnostic.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Proud Huxley’s the Prince of Agnostics, you see,</p>
+ <p>And Huxley and I do sweetly agree.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>At the late meeting of the Association, August 10, at Columbia
+ College, New York, Prof. Morse made an address in which he is reported
+ as saying that “Dr. Darwin’s theory was accepted by
+ science, although ecclesiastical bodies now and then rose up to
+ protest against it. He asserted that the missing links for which
+ there was such a clamor were being supplied with such rapidity that
+ even the zoölogist had to work to keep up with his science. It was
+ a singular fact that no sooner did some one raise an objection to the
+ theories of derivative science, than some discovery was made which
+ swept down the barrier. It was safe enough for an intelligent man,
+ no matter what he knew of science, to accept as true what science
+ put forth, and to set down as false whatever the church offered in
+ opposition. Every theory and declaration of science had been opposed
+ by the church. The penalty of original sin, according to a
+ scientific writer, was the penalty of man being raised to an upright
+ position. Laughter.] Cannot it be proved without question that
+ the illiteracy of Spain was the result of centuries of religious oppression
+ and of the inquisition?”</p>
+
+ <p>One of the scientists told a <cite>World</cite> reporter (says the <cite>Truth Seeker</cite>)
+ that at last year’s convention in Buffalo, Prof. Morse made an address
+ that was so full of infidelity that the Catholic diocesan authorities
+ there forbade the clergy from attending the meetings.</p>
+
+ <p>However, the Association has a small orthodox element in it, and
+ on Sunday about one-eighth of the members held a prayer-meeting
+ at Columbia College, at which allusions were made to the ungodly
+ character of the majority of their associates, which the said associates
+ on Monday regarded as a very objectionable proceeding.</p>
+
+ <p>In the contests between scientists and theologians it has long been
+ apparent that the theologians are steadily receding. The time was,
+ two or three hundred years ago, when fearless scientists were imprisoned
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page11" title="11"> </a>or burned by theologians. Now, the scientists who lead the
+ age treat theology with contempt and the press sustains them.
+ Meanwhile, scientific scepticism is invading the pulpit, and all that
+ distinguishes the Bible from any treatise on moral philosophy is
+ gradually being surrendered by leading theologians; they are losing
+ religion as well as theology.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc2" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Good Psychology.</strong>—Prof. Wm. James, of the chair of Philosophy
+ in Harvard College, and apparently the most philosophic gentleman
+ in that conservative institution, has published in the <em>Popular
+ Science Monthly</em> an essay on <cite>Human Instincts</cite>, characterized by a
+ vigorous common sense and close observation. When he asserts
+ (contrary to the old metaphysics) the existence of such instincts as
+ fear, acquisitiveness, constructiveness, play (or, properly, playfulness),
+ curiosity, sociability, shyness, secretiveness, cleanliness, modesty,
+ shame, love, coyness or personal isolation, jealousy, parental love,
+ etc., he shows the spirit of science. But is it not self-evident, Mr.
+ James, to a man of your fine intelligence, that all strong impulses
+ (or instincts, as you call them) must have a special nervous apparatus
+ in the psychic region of the brain; and that loving, blushing,
+ stealing, and fighting cannot be functions of the same organs concerned
+ in perceiving color, or comprehending music? If I have
+ traced these instincts to the special convolutions in which they
+ reside, and given innumerable demonstrations of their locality, even
+ in Boston, and before critical observers, why have you not interested
+ yourself in the question of the cerebral localities and the complete
+ demonstration of all the instincts by that method?</p>
+
+ <p>I have even found an instinct of the <em>love of truth</em> among the higher
+ sentiments, which, to a few rare individuals, is the predominant
+ impulse of their lives, though, alas, in college professors, as well as in
+ other classes generally, it is “inhibited” by a great variety of opposing
+ instincts, interests, and social influences. Nowhere is it more
+ completely “inhibited” than in Boston and Cambridge, as I have
+ been informed by the most intelligent old citizens.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc3" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">The Far-away Battle.</strong>—In the quiet home the sounds of the
+ far-away strife are not heard. The war of the cannon is determining
+ the destiny of empires, but it is unheard in the cottage. The
+ myriad sounds of commerce in the city do not disturb the quiet of
+ that home. Its quiet life attracts no attention. But there is something
+ in that home more important than war or commerce or king-craft—something
+ that concerns human welfare more profoundly.
+ In that quiet home, a human life is developing; a human soul
+ preparing for its life work—a work that will change the destiny of
+ coming generations. In many quiet homes such a work is in progress,
+ determining a nation’s future.</p>
+
+ <p>All important movements are quiet and obscure in their origin.
+ As the magnificent forest was slowly and obscurely germinated in
+ darkness, in the seeds from which it sprung, so are the great discoveries
+ in science and philosophy matured in quietness and obscurity.
+ The thinker hears afar the sound of strife and the agitation of parties
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page12" title="12"> </a>warring for power. He knows the follies and errors that agitate
+ mankind, but he is withheld from entering the strife, for he has a
+ more important work to accomplish—a work for the future. It is
+ to such work that the <cite class="name">Journal of Man</cite> is devoted; laying the
+ foundation of that philosophy in which future thinkers shall find the
+ principles of social reorganization. It does not join in the strife of
+ contending parties, nor does it recognize any existing party as entirely
+ free from error. It gives its care to new and growing truths,
+ knowing that, as Carlyle says, “The weak thing weaker than a child
+ becomes strong one day if it be a true thing.”</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc4" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">How not to do it.</strong>—The Seybert commission having made a
+ splendid failure to find interesting and valuable facts where other
+ investigators have succeeded, their blundering ignorance is now assisted
+ by newspaper mendacity. The <cite>New York Times</cite>, of Aug. 22,
+ concludes an extremely stupid article on this subject, by the following
+ paragraph, which, if the writer gave any indications of intelligence,
+ would be set down as a pure specimen of mendacity, but is
+ more probably a specimen of indolent ignorance:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“If Spiritualists could furnish one clearly-proved case of a spirit
+ from the other world, seen and tested by those now living on the
+ earth, there would be some sense and reason in their claims to be
+ heard; but until they do, the great mass of intelligent people will
+ refuse to listen, and rightly, too.”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>There must be an immense mass of the same kind of lazy ignorance
+ in the community, when such stuff is tolerated in a newspaper.
+ The contents of daily newspapers show that they expect more patronage
+ from the debased and ignorant classes than from the intelligent
+ and honorable.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc5" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Robbery of Public Lands.</strong>—The report of Surveyor General
+ Geo. W. Julian, of Colorado, shows that of the patented and
+ unpatented lands referred to, aggregating 8,694,965 acres, it will be
+ safe to estimate that at least one-half have been illegally devoted to
+ private uses under invalid grants, or unauthorized surveys.</p>
+
+ <p>He thinks it would not be extravagance to say that these land
+ claimants, with their enormous interests, have exercised a shaping
+ influence upon Congress. Congress has approved 47 out of 49 of
+ these claims. In this connection the report calls attention to the
+ action of Congress in 1860, and the Interior Department in 1879 in
+ the famous Maxwell land grant case, which he characterizes as a
+ wanton and shameful surrender to the rapacity of monopolists of
+ 1,662,764 acres of the public domain, on which hundreds of poor
+ men had settled in good faith and made valuable improvements. It
+ has been as calamitous to New Mexico, says the Surveyor General,
+ as it is humiliating to the United States. The report says:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“During the last Congress several members of both Houses, including
+ the delegate from this Territory, reported bills for the confirmation
+ of the Socorro grant, which is one of the most shocking of the
+ many attempts yet made to plunder the public domain. I do not
+ say that the men who introduced these bills intended to make themselves
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page13" title="13"> </a>parties to any scheme of robbery, but their action shows that
+ the hidden hand of roguery is still feeling its way in Congress for a
+ friendly go-between.”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>As a remedy for this condition of affairs, Mr. Julian recommends
+ resurveys of all grants about which there is any doubt, and the
+ entering of suits to set aside patents obtained by fraud.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc6" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Land Reform in England.</strong>—One hundred and twenty-four
+ members of the English Parliament are in favor of the following
+ land scheme propounded by Charles Bradlaugh:</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“Ownership of land should carry with it the duty of cultivation.</p>
+
+ <p>“Where land capable of cultivation with profit, and not devoted
+ to some purpose of public utility or enjoyment, is held in a waste or
+ uncultivated state, the local authorities ought to have the power to
+ compulsorily acquire such land.</p>
+
+ <p>“The compensation is to be only the ‘payment to the owner for a
+ limited term of an annual sum not exceeding the then average net
+ annual produce of the said lands.’</p>
+
+ <p>“The local authorities are to let the lands thus acquired to tenant
+ cultivators.</p>
+
+ <p>“The conditions of tenure are to be such ‘as shall afford reasonable
+ encouragement, opportunities, facilities, and security for the
+ due cultivation and development of the said land.’”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc7" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Life in Europe.</strong>—Senator Frye, of Maine, having returned
+ from Europe, spoke thus to a reporter, at Lewiston:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“We have taken a tour of the continent and of Great Britain, and
+ although we have seen many places, we have seen no place like
+ home—no place in all respects equal to America. You will find in
+ the Old World much that is admirable, but what impressed me most
+ painfully was the poverty of the masses of the people. Why, the
+ people in Europe live on the poorest food, and mighty little of it. I
+ found that laborers in Glasgow work for 2s. 6d. a day—sixty-two
+ cents. I was charmed with Edinburgh, but when I saw women
+ drunk and fighting in her beautiful streets, the modern Athens lost
+ her charms. I cannot convey to you the picture of the degradation
+ and want throughout Great Britain, caused by drink. I come back
+ a stouter cold-water man than when I went away. The drink evil is
+ a horror. Speaking of wages, I found girls in factories in Venice
+ working with great skill for from five to twelve cents a day, the most
+ experienced getting twelve cents a day, out of which they have to
+ live, but how they live is a wonder. Their chief diet is macaroni.
+ Farm hands all over Europe—women—earn twenty cents a day.
+ Women do most of the field work. I saw no improved machinery
+ on the farms of the continent. I have seen twenty women in one
+ field at work—not a man in sight. The plain people see no meat to
+ eat once a week on the continent. The condition of American
+ wage-earners is incomparably better than that of working people in
+ Europe. It’s the difference between comfort and competence, and
+ discomfort and insufficient food and clothing.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page14" title="14"> </a>“Perhaps the most contemptible people one meets abroad are the
+ Anglicized Americans—the man who apes, both in manners and language,
+ what he regards as the English aristocracy, affects to believe
+ everything in England perfect, and seems to be ashamed to institute
+ any favorable comparison between his country and that.”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc8" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Education in France.</strong>—The Academy of Medicine has passed
+ a resolution demanding of the government changes in the hours of
+ study for children, larger play grounds, removal of schools to the
+ country, and daily teaching of gymnastics. These suggestions are
+ urgently needed in France, where children are subjected to a far
+ more rigid and enfeebling method than in America. The power of
+ the church over education is destroyed in France, and religious instruction
+ is now prohibited.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc9" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Canada and the Union.</strong>—Rev. W. H. Murray reports a strong
+ feeling in Canada for annexation. He says:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“A gentleman of great influence in this city, and of established
+ loyalty to the land of his birth, described the position here very distinctly
+ in the following words: ‘I wish I could make money and remain
+ an Englishman, but I can’t, and hence I propose to become an
+ American, for I cannot impoverish myself and my family for a sentiment,
+ however honorable.’</p>
+
+ <p>“In the many conversations I have heard on the part of many people
+ of all classes touching commercial union, it has, in every case,
+ been assumed that it was only a prelude to political union also.
+ Many have insisted, as they talked, that the two countries should
+ come together, and at once; that the feeling of the country was fast
+ ripening for it, and that what it lacked in education in this matter
+ would soon be learned. This has surprised me; for it was not so a
+ few years ago.”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc10" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Woman in the Moon.</strong>—The discovery of a woman in the
+ moon is announced by W. H. Burr, in a letter to the New York <cite>Sun</cite>,
+ It was made more than a year ago by Dr. James H. Thompson, a
+ retired physician of Washington. It is a profile occupying the west
+ half of the moon, the dark spot above answering to the banged hair.
+ She faces a little upward, and has a neck big enough to require a
+ collar of the size that Mr. Cleveland wears. And yet she is good-looking.
+ The profile may be seen through an opera-glass.—<cite>Truth
+ Seeker</cite>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc11" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Emancipation from Petticoats.</strong>—“That distinguished
+ Parisienne, Mme. de Valsayre, has been petitioning the French
+ legislature in favor of the emancipation of women from petticoats.
+ Her case is that petticoats are very dangerous, leading to innumerable
+ fatal accidents, and that trousers are just as decent, more healthy
+ and far less expensive. ‘All this is very true,’ says Labouchere,
+ in the <cite>World</cite>, ‘though I do not suppose that if the French women
+ were as free as our own countrywomen are to dress as they like,
+ they would make much use of their liberty. Trousers do not afford
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page15" title="15"> </a>the same scope for decoration as petticoats. They cannot be
+ trimmed to any considerable extent, and the effect of an improver or
+ bustle worn under them would be absurd. I have always wondered,
+ however, that serious ladies in this country do not set more store by
+ this branch of progress. If I were a woman I would much rather
+ have a pair of trousers than a vote or even a university degree.’”</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc12" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Women’s Rights in the Streets.</strong>—The lawless freedom with
+ which men approach or assail women in some American cities, while
+ women on the other hand are subjected to the meddlesome
+ and domineering interference of policemen, lends some interest to
+ the case of Miss Cass in London, one of the victims of police brutality,
+ which has excited an inquiry and comment in Parliament, and
+ is likely to result in the punishment of the policeman. The New
+ York <cite>Sun</cite> says:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“The case of Miss Cass, who was arrested in Regent Street as a
+ disreputable character, has started in the <cite>Pall Mall Gazette</cite> a discussion
+ of the annoyances to which decent women are subjected in
+ the streets of London. It will be remembered that she was a
+ respectable girl recently arrived in London, where she had obtained
+ employment in a milliner’s shop, and that while waiting in Regent
+ Street early in the evening she was arrested by a policeman, who
+ insisted in regarding her as a professional street-walker, as which,
+ also, she was held by a magistrate, who refused, to listen to her
+ denials and explanations.</p>
+
+ <p>“Many women have accordingly written to the <cite>Pall Mall Gazette</cite>
+ to ask why, if a woman is liable to arrest on the mere suspicion of
+ having addressed a man, men are allowed to annoy and insult women
+ in the London streets with perfect impunity. The testimony of
+ them all is that, even in the daytime, a lady with any claims to good
+ looks, and who walks alone, is always liable to such treatment, no
+ matter how modest her apparel and reserved her demeanor. It is
+ not merely of insolent and persistent staring that they complain, for
+ they have grown to expect that as a matter of course; but they are
+ actually spoken to by men who are strangers to them, in the most
+ insinuating and offensively flattering terms. These men are commonly
+ described as ‘gentlemen’ in appearance; ‘a tall, distinguished,
+ military-looking man;’ ‘a youthful diplomat;’ ‘a government
+ official, a man holding a lucrative appointment,’ and the like.
+ They are not roughs; from them ladies have nothing of the sort to
+ fear; but men who think to have the greater success and to enjoy
+ the complete immunity because they wear the garb of gentlemen.</p>
+
+ <p>“Rev. Mr. Haweis writes that ‘you might easily fill the <cite>Pall Mall
+ Gazette</cite> with nothing else for months, for we have come to such a
+ pass as this, that a young girl cannot stand aside at a railway station
+ while papa takes tickets, nor a girl lead her blind relative through
+ the streets, nor can a married woman go twenty paces in a London
+ thoroughfare without the risk of insult or even assault.’”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>These evils are a relic of the old ideas of woman’s inferiority, and
+ their only sure remedy is the destruction of that inferiority by the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page16" title="16"> </a>industrial and professional education, which will make the woman
+ the par of her brother, and enable her to maintain her equal rights
+ everywhere.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc13" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">A Woman’s Triumph in Paris.</strong>—The public examination of
+ Miss Bradley at the Ecole de Medicine in Paris is thus described:</p>
+
+ <p>When Miss Bradley stepped into the arena, clad in the traditional
+ garb, the general comment of the audience was:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“How like <em>Portia</em> in the trial scene of the ‘Merchant of Venice.’”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>It was known to Miss Bradley’s college mates and other friends
+ that her thesis would be on “Iodism,” and that she had taken a year
+ to write an elaborate book on the subject, which will soon be republished
+ in England from the original French. For an hour and a
+ half she was questioned with great shrewdness and ability by four
+ of the leading professors of the Ecole de Medicine,—Drs. Fournier,
+ Gautier, Porchet, and Robin. Each of these gentlemen had previously
+ received a copy of Miss Bradley’s bold book, and they had
+ brought their copies to the examining room, with multitudinous interrogation
+ marks on the margins, showing that the new treatise
+ had not only been very carefully read, but had excited much curiosity
+ and attention. Miss Bradley had the great advantage of an unhackneyed
+ theme, which she skilfully illustrated by a numerous array of
+ unfamiliar facts.</p>
+
+ <p>Her triumph was of a very peculiar character. Her four examiners
+ said to her, with admiring frankness: “You have been working
+ a new field; we cannot agree with many of your conclusions;
+ further investigation may lead either yourself or us to different
+ views; but, meanwhile, you have presented to the college a thesis
+ which does you uncommon honor, and for which we unanimously
+ award you the maximum mark of merit.”</p>
+
+ <p>After the announcement of the award, Miss Bradley was entertained
+ at dinner by Miss Augusta Klumpke, the first female physician
+ who has ever been admitted to practice in the hospitals of Paris.
+ Both these ladies are Americans—Miss Klumpke from San Francisco,
+ and Miss Bradley from New York.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc14" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">A Woman’s Bible.</strong>—We have not reached the end of revision.
+ A woman’s translation of the Bible is expected next. Mrs. Elizabeth
+ Cady Stanton is the chairman of the American committee having this
+ matter in charge, and a woman’s Bible and commentary are to be
+ expected in due time.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc15" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Work for Women.</strong>—Miss Katie Young, of Ironton, Mo., writes
+ <cite>The Voice</cite> a letter upon the advantages of plating, as a new and
+ pleasant field of work for women. A relative made her a plating-machine
+ at a cost of $4; she readily obtained orders for work from
+ everybody in the neighborhood; the outlay for chemicals, etc.,
+ proved slight; and in 22 days she netted $95.45. Her brother,
+ working 24 days, cleared $90.50. Miss Young states that she is
+ making a collection of curiosities, and that to any lady sending her a
+ sea-shell, fancy stone, piece of rock, ore or crystal, an old coin, or
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page17" title="17"> </a>curious specimen of any description, she will be glad to mail complete
+ directions for making a machine similar to hers, that will do gold,
+ silver and nickel-plating.</p>
+
+ <p>F. Henry Greer writes: “Two young gentlewomen are studying
+ electrical engineering, which profession has not yet been overcrowded.
+ Great fortunes have been made in its pursuit. If any readers of
+ your valuable journal are interested, I will freely give them any
+ information in my power.”</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc16" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Mrs. Stanton on the Jubilee.</strong>—“If mine has been the one discordant
+ note in the grand jubilee chorus to the Queen, it is because
+ behind all the busy preparations for the most brilliant pageant the
+ world has ever witnessed, of gilded royalty and nobility, my eyes
+ beheld the dark shadows on the background of homeless, starving
+ men, women and children, into whose desolate lives would never
+ come one touch of light or love. There is something to me unspeakably
+ sad in the eager, gazing multitudes that crowd the streets on
+ these grand gala days. There is ever a sphinx-like questioning look
+ in their upturned faces that seems to say, ‘Ah! must the many ever
+ suffer that the few may shine?’ As the sun went down on that
+ 21st of June, what a contrast in the close of the day’s festivities
+ between the children of luxury and want.</p>
+
+ <p>“Who that can share in imagination one hour the miseries of
+ England’s impoverished people, can rejoice in a reign of fifty years
+ that has cost the nation 22,000,000 of pounds sterling in extra
+ allowances to the Queen and her children, in addition to the
+ legitimate cost of the royal household and the hereditary property
+ rights of the throne?” Nevertheless the Jubilee was a fine exhibition,
+ and the <cite>London Baptist</cite> says that $4,000 was paid for the use
+ of the windows of one house to see the Jubilee.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc17" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Electricity</strong> seems destined to be the motor power for street cars.
+ In Montgomery, Alabama, the mule has already been superseded, and
+ there are fifteen miles of street railways operated by the electric motor.
+ Some satisfactory experiments have been made on the Cambridge
+ Street railway. Edison’s latest discoveries in the conversion
+ of heat into electricity are expected to produce important results,
+ dispensing with the intermediate use of steam, and ultimately
+ getting the power from the sun’s rays.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc18" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Progress of the Telegraph.</strong>—The <cite>London Times</cite> thus summarizes
+ some of the statements made by Mr. Raikes, the postmaster-general,
+ in his speech delivered at the telegraph jubilee the other
+ day:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>At first a machine required five wires before it could dispatch a
+ message. Now on one single wire seven or eight messages can be
+ sent simultaneously. At first the rate of sending did not amount to
+ more than four or five words a minute. Now on the latest machine
+ no less than 462 words a minute can be dispatched. The number of
+ messages has increased by steady steps, until now, under the new
+ tariff and with the facilities that have been so widely extended since
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page18" title="18"> </a>the telegraphs came into the hands of the government, the number
+ is truly portentous. Those sent during the past year amounted to
+ close upon a million a week—fifty-one and one-half millions in all.
+ Letters have grown from 80,000,000 in the year of the Queen’s
+ accession to more than 1,400,000,000. According to Mr. Pender,
+ there are some 115,000 miles of cables lying at the bottom of the sea.
+ The progress in this department has been constant. The latest scheme,
+ as the new colonial blue-books show, is for laying a cable under the
+ Pacific Ocean, from Vancouver to New Zealand. Surely there is no
+ task from which modern science will recoil.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc19" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">The Mystery of the Ages.</strong>—A work recently published at
+ London by the Countess of Caithness is a work of ability and learning,
+ devoted especially to a philosophy which is thus defined:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“Theosophy is the essence of all doctrines, the inner truth of all
+ religions…. God is Spirit, and Spirit is One, Infinite, and Eternal,
+ whether it speak through the life of Buddha or Jesus, Zoroaster
+ or Mahommed…. The ideal of the Theosophist is the at one-ment
+ of his own spirit with that of the Infinite. This is the essential
+ teaching of all religions, and to obtain this union you must believe
+ in and obey the voice of your own higher conscience; for the
+ true Christ is the Divine Spirit within you, and thus, God manifest
+ in humanity.”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc20" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Progress of the Marvellous.</strong>—Mrs. Herbert, of St. Joseph’s
+ Hospital, Joliet, Illinois, as reported Aug. 16, had slept 219 days,
+ sitting in an easy chair, in a cataleptic state. She rarely moves a
+ muscle, and if her arm is lifted and not replaced it remains as it was
+ left. Her hands are cold, and her face very pallid. The food given
+ her daily, it is said, would only sustain life in a bird, and the doctors
+ are expecting her death.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. C. J. Helleberg, of Cincinnati, says that a lady of his family
+ has become developed as a medium, and many messages have been
+ written through her. Among others, a message from Charles XII.
+ of Sweden declared that “Sweden will be a republic sooner than
+ any other power in Europe,” and the elections will be easily and
+ honestly managed.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc21" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">A Grand Aerolite.</strong>—The <cite>Galt Gazette</cite> (California) describes
+ the fall of a meteor in that vicinity, witnessed by Dr. Goodspeed,
+ which fell in a slough and so heated the water as to kill the catfish
+ that inhabited it. It lies in the pond, and looks as if a hundred
+ feet wide. A much more marvellous story has been published of an
+ engraved meteoric stone falling in an obscure portion of Georgia
+ near Clayton Court-house, which is a hoax, and has been so pronounced
+ by the postmaster at Clayton.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether the California story is true I have not ascertained, but
+ the fall of a great meteor in this region has developed a grand
+ meteoric capacity for lying. The despatch first published by the
+ <cite>Boston Herald</cite> described the stone as falling near McAdam Junction,
+ not far from Bangor, Maine, making the crockery rattle at the
+ Junction, and plunging into the earth all but about ten feet of the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page19" title="19"> </a>stone, which was so hot that no one could come within fifty yards of
+ it. It has not been found at all, for it dropped into the Bay of
+ Fundy; but it illuminated the whole country for a vast distance, and
+ looked as large as the moon. It had a long trailing violet light
+ behind it as it fell. Our meteoric showers generally occur in
+ August, this was on the 15th of September.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc22" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">The Boy Pianist.</strong>—Joseph Hoffmann is considered in London
+ the greatest young pianist since the days of Mozart. He is coming
+ to America. He is from Poland.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc23" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Centenarians.</strong>—The <em>Rabbi Hirsch</em>, born in Poland, died a few
+ weeks ago in Brooklyn, aged 109. He saw Napoleon on his march
+ to Moscow. Mrs. Paradis of North Grosvenordale, Conn., died
+ Aug. 26, aged 120. The <cite>Boston Globe</cite> in making a record of old
+ people in Maine, has mentioned Miss Betsey Sargent, of Canterbury,
+ aged 100; Mrs. Ellen Scott, Portsmouth, 100; Mrs. Mary Mann,
+ Oxford, 101; Mrs. Jane Wilson, Edgecomb, 102; John Chandler,
+ Concord, 102; Mrs. Nancy Chase, Edgerly, 103; Perault Pickard,
+ Colchester, 107; Robert Peters, Berwick, 107; George McQueen,
+ Portland, 109; Giles Bronson, Castleton, 115; Mrs. Mary Ludkends,
+ Portland, 117.</p>
+
+ <p>Samuel Zielinski, a Pole, who came to the United States after he
+ was 100 years old, is now living a mile from Dubois, Illinois, with
+ his descendants, at the age of 120.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc24" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Educated Monkeys.</strong>—The story comes from Brazil, by way of
+ Panama, that on a hemp farm seven large monkeys have been taught
+ to work as laborers, and that they work faster and eat less than
+ negroes. If they can pull hemp, why not do other work? If this
+ report is confirmed it may be of some importance.</p>
+
+ <p>A correspondent of the <cite>New York Times</cite> says that monkeys from
+ Cape Town, Africa, have been introduced successfully into the
+ hemp fields of Kentucky. One gentleman employs twelve near
+ Shelbyville, Perkins &amp; Chirsman have eleven, Smith &amp; Murphy
+ twenty-six, and J. B. Park, near Kingston, who introduced monkey
+ labor, employs seventeen. The monkeys cost about $60 each, they
+ are docile, easily taught, and cost about one fourth of human labor.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc25" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Causes of Idiocy.</strong>—Dr. T. Langdon Down, inquiring into the
+ causes of idiocy, has found that intemperance of parents is one of
+ the most considerable factors in producing the affection. His view is
+ confirmed by some French and German investigators, one of whom,
+ Dr. Delasiauve, has said that in the village of Careme, whose riches
+ were in its vineyards, ten years’ comparative sobriety, enforced by
+ vine-disease, had a sensible effect in diminishing the cases of idiocy.
+ Nervous constitution and consumption exercise important influence.
+ Of the professions, lawyers furnish the smallest proportion of idiots,
+ while they are credited with the procreation of a relatively very
+ large number of men of eminence. With the clergy, these proportions
+ are more than reversed. The influence of consanguineous
+ marriage, <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">per se</em>, is insignificant, if it exists.—<cite>Pop. Science Monthly</cite>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc26" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page20" title="20"> </a><strong class="headline">A Powerful Temperance Argument.</strong>—A most powerful
+ argument for temperance is furnished by the records of the British
+ army in India for 1886, showing the comparative amount of crime,
+ disease, and death among 12,807 soldiers, of whom 3,278 were temperate,
+ and 8,828 were drinking men. The number of cases of
+ crime among the abstainers was 172, among the drinkers 3,988,
+ a difference of one to twenty-three in number, or more than ten to
+ one in percentage. The temperate had but 4.32 per cent. of crime,
+ the drinkers 45.17 per cent. The percentage of sickness and death
+ was more than twice as great among the drinkers. Liquor, therefore,
+ <em>more than doubled</em> the proportion of disease and mortality, and
+ increased the <em>criminality more than tenfold</em>. Of the numbers tried
+ by court martial there were 120 times as many proportionally
+ among the drinkers as among the temperate. The destructive
+ effects of drink are far greater in hot climates, and perceptibly
+ greater in hot weather.</p>
+
+ <p>The Southern States of the Union are in advance of the Northern
+ on the temperance question. The legislature of Georgia has passed
+ a bill by a large majority which taxes wine rooms in prohibition
+ counties $10,000. At present this covers nearly all the State.</p>
+
+ <p>The forty-fifth annual report of the Registrar General of England
+ shows that estimating the average mortality of males in England at
+ 1,000, that of brewers is 1,361, of innkeepers and publicans 1,521.
+ Scotch reports show the mortality of males engaged in the liquor
+ business to be 68 per cent. above the actuaries table for healthy
+ males, and 49 per cent. over the English life table.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc27" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Slow Progress.</strong>—It was a long time before lobelia was recognized
+ by the profession—before anything good was found to belong
+ to it. Now one of our leading professors thinks lobelia will become
+ the most valuable of our cardiac sedatives—regulator of the heart’s
+ action. I wrote up the value of lobelia in surgery, obstetrics and
+ practice over thirty years ago; also the valuable properties of hydrastis
+ can., both of which were almost unnoticed then and since by
+ regular practitioners. But now Prof. Bartholow has discovered their
+ great merits and written the latter up especially, and what I and
+ Prof. Dodd, (V. S.,) wrote a third of a century ago will be credited to
+ others. Well, who cares? The tincture of calendule flavas I have
+ tried to force upon the profession for forty years as a dressing for
+ wounds, but it will require some one higher in the profession to give
+ it a hurrah, boys!—<cite>Med. Summary</cite>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc28" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Community Doctors.</strong>—It is manifestly the interest of society
+ that the doctor should be engaged and paid by the year, so that his
+ interest would be to keep the people well instead of sick. Moreover,
+ it would be more economical, as a doctor, secure of steady
+ support, would not be inclined to make heavy charges, and the
+ patient would not find a fit of illness making a dangerous inroad on
+ his finances, so as to double his misfortune. The scheme has been
+ advocated in the newspapers.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc29" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page21" title="21"> </a><strong class="headline">The Selfish System of Society</strong>.—The system of antagonism
+ and competition results in a universal system of plunder by exorbitant
+ charges, and each man protects himself by overcharging in return.
+ Plunder by overcharging is so much the custom that no one
+ objects to it. The <cite>Boston Herald</cite> says: “There is a baker in New
+ York, who sells large loaves of bread of the finest quality for five
+ cents a loaf. The same-sized loaf sells for ten cents in Boston.” In
+ like manner, Americans generally pay ten cents for a loaf about half
+ as large as that sold for ten cents, in London; yet the London baker
+ has to buy the same flour after its cost is enhanced by an ocean voyage.
+ This is the custom of society; the glass of lemonade, costing
+ perhaps two cents, is sold at all prices, from five or ten cents up to
+ twenty-five.</p>
+
+ <p>The correspondent of a Denver paper says that lumber costing
+ forty-five cents a hundred feet, is sold at $2.25. These are samples
+ of the financial disorder of life in all departments.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc30" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Educated Beetles.</strong>—Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 24. Miss Emily
+ Nelson, of this city, has received a present from Merida, Yucatan, in
+ the shape of an educated jewelled bug. It has a harness of gold
+ and is jewelled with precious stones.</p>
+
+ <p>The custom is said to have originated among the Spanish nobility
+ several centuries ago, when the first bug was educated and worn by
+ a princess. The bug became greatly attached to the maiden, and
+ partook of her moods and dispositions. When she was sad or disheartened
+ the bug became sluggish; and when she was joyous and
+ vivacious the bug was likewise lively in its movements. At her
+ death, the bug pined away and died, too.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Nelson is very happy and justly very proud of her present.
+ The insect is about the size of an ordinary black beetle. Around
+ the body is firmly fastened a gold band. A gold strap is riveted to
+ this and passes down the back around and under the body, and is
+ welded upon the under side to the gold belt. Upon the back are
+ tiny jewels set in gold and fastened into the shell. The coloring of
+ the shell is a brilliant Nile green, edged with black. The movement
+ of the bug gives flashes of variegated colors. Upon the under side
+ is fastened a delicate gold chain which in turn is attached to a
+ brooch. It is educated to eat from the lips. It understands various
+ whistles and calls, and appears and disappears at the word of command.—<cite>Globe</cite>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc31" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Rustless Iron</strong> is being manufactured in New York by a new
+ process which, it is claimed, converts the surface of the metal into
+ magnetic oxide of iron. This is done by subjecting it successively
+ to the action of highly heated air and carbonic acid gas from coal
+ fires. The process can be applied with most satisfactory results to
+ water-pipes and architectural work.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc32" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Weighing the Earth.</strong>—Prof. Proctor proposes to repeat in
+ Florida an experiment to determine the weight of the earth, and
+ mentions the results of the methods heretofore tried. Newton first
+ estimated the weight of the earth to be between five and six times
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page22" title="22"> </a>as great as that of water. Such a weight it would have if it were
+ one half iron and the other half limestone, or half copper and half
+ clay. Evidently the metallic weight preponderates.</p>
+
+ <p>Weighing the earth is accomplished by comparing the effect of its
+ attraction with that of much smaller bodies. One method is to
+ compare, by balancing the weight of two balls, one above a globe of
+ lead, as large as practicable, and the other below it, so as to have the
+ attraction of the leaden globe pulling up and counteracting the
+ gravitation to the earth. The effect is very slight and requires
+ delicate apparatus.</p>
+
+ <p>By another, but more inaccurate method, the attraction of the
+ earth has been compared with that of a mountain—a very indefinite
+ method indeed. A better method was that of Astronomer Airy and
+ Mr. Dunkin, who went down into the Harton coal pit 1,260 feet to
+ see how much difference that depth would make in the movements
+ of a pendulum. It gained 2¼ seconds in 24 hours, and the weight
+ of the earth was inferred to be over 6½ times as great as that of
+ water; but it is manifest that such a method could yield nothing
+ much more accurate than the mountain experiment which indicated
+ a weight 4¾ times that of water. The ball experiment, which is
+ the most reliable, indicated 5½ times the weight of water, thus
+ coinciding with Newton’s astronomical opinion, which is probably
+ true.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc33" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">Head and Heart.</strong>—The popular use of the terms head and
+ heart to represent thought and emotion, which is contrary to physiology,
+ is analogous to Dr. Hartmann’s statement of the oriental
+ doctrine that thought alone belongs to the brain, but life and will to
+ the heart. This ancient <em>speculation</em> (not intuition) is easily refuted.
+ If it were true, the will power and powers of life would be proportional
+ to the development of the heart, regardless of the brain, but
+ the reverse is the fact. Great development of heart does not
+ increase either will power, or life, but is injurious to both. The
+ enlarged (hypertrophied) heart is injurious to vital power and will
+ power, and in proportion to its increase, it tends to shorten life by
+ apoplexy or some other form of cerebral disorder. It produces no
+ increase of either life, will, or love. In fact, the stomach is more
+ nearly associated with love than the heart, for men are much more
+ amiable after enjoying a feast, but the heart, which is a part of the
+ muscular system, is at its maximum of action in combat and war.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div id="misc34" class="miscellany_item">
+ <p><strong class="headline">The Rectification of Cerebral Science</strong>, commenced in
+ this number, will be continued in the November number, bringing
+ the science up to its present condition, and showing how, after the
+ rectification is completed, the science attains a grand simplicity, and,
+ instead of being puzzled by cerebral organology, a very brief instruction
+ will enable us to master the subject. In 1836 I instructed
+ Prof. Cubi at New Orleans in the old organology, giving him six
+ lessons in exchange for his instructions in Spanish. Three lessons
+ would give an equal familiarity with the new system, though it is
+ four times as extensive.</p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<div id="art3" class="article">
+ <h2 class="title"><a class="pagenum" id="page23" title="23"> </a>Chapter IX.—Rectification of Cerebral Science, Correcting the Organology of Gall and Spurzheim.</h2>
+
+ <p class="chapter_outline">Approximate correctness and incompleteness of Gall and Spurzheim—Grand
+ anatomical discoveries of Gall—-Reception of his doctrines—His
+ successors—Omission of Pneumatology and Physiology
+ by Gall and Spurzheim—Organs and faculties overlooked—True
+ locations of the faculties they recognized, Amativeness,
+ Philoprogenitiveness, Adhesiveness, Inhabitiveness, Destructiveness,
+ Combativeness, Secretiveness, Acquisitiveness, Constructiveness,
+ Cautiousness, Approbativeness, Self-Esteem, Firmness,
+ Religion, Benevolence, Hope, Marvellousness, Poetry, Ideality,
+ Imitation, Wit or Mirthfulness, Eventuality, Individuality, Perceptive
+ Organs, Time, Comparative Sagacity, Causality, Tune, Constructiveness,
+ Language—Comments on the Organology of Gall.</p>
+
+ <p>The first question that occurs to the enlightened enquirer, when
+ he learns that the functions of the brain have been positively determined
+ by experiment, is whether the cranioscopy of Gall and Spurzheim
+ was successful in locating the cerebral functions, and how
+ nearly their inferences from development correspond with the
+ revelations of experiment.</p>
+
+ <p>It is with great pleasure that I am able to say that the system of
+ Gall and Spurzheim was a wonderful approximation to the truth.
+ Dr. Gall was pre-eminently the scientific pioneer of the nineteenth
+ century. No single individual ever did so much to enlarge the
+ sphere of human knowledge, and to establish the permanent foundations
+ of philosophy. Up to his time, the brain of man was at once
+ the greatest mystery of anatomy and the repository of a greater
+ amount of wisdom and truth than all other realms of science which
+ had previously been explored. But so limited was the knowledge,
+ and so narrow the understanding of the learned, that the grandeur of
+ cerebral science was not even suspected, and, even at the present time,
+ it is so remote from the speculations of the learned that, like a distant
+ star, it has few practical relations to their life; nor will its magnitude be
+ realized until an ample literature shall have made its scientific record.</p>
+
+ <p>Into this field of mystery, Dr. Gall advanced with a courage unknown
+ to his predecessors, and his success was equal to his courage.
+ The entire plan and constitution of the brain were revealed by his
+ anatomical genius, and his successors have but carried further and
+ perfected his anatomical system. His anatomical exposition of the
+ brain, addressed to the French Institute in 1808, is one of the great
+ landmarks of the progress of science—the commencement of a new
+ era; and his exposition of its functions was the solution of a
+ problem which had defied the genius and learning of all his predecessors.
+ His discoveries in anatomy were so great that Reil (himself
+ a brain anatomist of the highest rank, whose name is permanently
+ associated with anatomy by the name “Island of Reil,” which
+ belongs to the location in which Gall made his first discovery of the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page24" title="24"> </a>faculty and organ of language), Reil, I say, declared that Dr. Gall
+ had shown him more in his dissections of the brain than he
+ thought it possible for any one man to have discovered in his lifetime;
+ and, in fact, some of the old anatomists, not having been
+ personally instructed by Gall, professed to find it difficult, if not
+ impossible, to unfold the brain after his manner.</p>
+
+ <p>These discoveries gave Dr. Gall at once a very eminent rank
+ among the learned, for anatomy being a physical science, there never has
+ been any opposition, jealousy, or scepticism against its cultivation among
+ the educated, nor was there anything marvellous in his revelation of
+ cerebral functions, for he studied only the common familiar faculties of
+ men and animals, and never looked into the mysterious and marvellous
+ powers which a more thorough investigation has revealed.</p>
+
+ <p>Indeed, his reception at first was quite triumphant, and it was not
+ until the death of Gall and Spurzheim, leaving no able and competent
+ representative to carry on their labors, that the drift of medical
+ scepticism and ignorance arrested the progress of his doctrines. I
+ say <em>ignorance</em>, for the aversion to the doctrines of Gall was due far
+ more to the ignorance of the profession and their entire neglect of
+ the craniological method than to any other causes.</p>
+
+ <p>Gall had good reason to be satisfied with his first reception, except
+ as to the hostility of the Austrian government, which suppressed
+ his lectures and compelled him to go abroad, settling finally
+ in Paris, where he again encountered governmental hostility in the
+ unfriendliness of Bonaparte, whose rejection alike of Gall and of
+ Fulton, who wished to introduce steam navigation, demonstrated
+ that great military and political ability may co-exist with great shallowness
+ of mind in reference to all things new, original, and philanthropic.
+ So it has always been, and so it continues.</p>
+
+ <p>In his travels in Germany, from 1805 to 1807, accompanied by Dr.
+ Spurzheim, “I experienced everywhere (said Gall) the most flattering
+ reception. Sovereigns, ministers, philosophers, legislators, artists
+ seconded my design on all occasions, augmenting my collection, and
+ furnishing me everywhere with new observations. The circumstances
+ were too favorable to permit me to resist the invitations which
+ came to me from most of the universities.” Thirty-four of the leading
+ cities and seats of learning enjoyed the visits of Gall and Spurzheim
+ before they settled in Paris, where, although French jealousy
+ arose against this German invasion, and the influence of Napoleon
+ prevented their cordial reception, they nevertheless commanded and
+ retained the respect of scientists and had many devoted friends, including
+ Broussais and Andral, who then stood at the head of the
+ medical profession, and of Corvisart, Napoleon’s physician, who
+ could not overcome his master’s prejudice.</p>
+
+ <p>In speaking of the great void left by the decease of Gall and
+ Spurzheim, I do not forget that for a few years George Combe, Dr.
+ Elliotson, and Dr. Macartney, of England, and Dr. Caldwell, of
+ America, survived, but these eminent gentlemen were not so identified
+ with the science, or so competent to sustain it as to wear the
+ mantle of its founders. My own labors beginning after the death of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page25" title="25"> </a>the founders were those of investigation and discovery, and never to
+ any great extent those of propagation. Indeed, for twenty years I
+ entirely abandoned the scientific rostrum, and almost ended my
+ labors, feeling that my duty had been done in the way of development
+ and demonstration. But in accordance with the great law of
+ periodicity, I resumed my labors in 1877-78.</p>
+
+ <p>When we look at the doctrines of Gall and Spurzheim in the light of
+ positive science and philosophy, our first observation is that they fell
+ very far short of revealing the entire functions of the brain, and discovering
+ in it all the important spiritual and physical faculties and energies of
+ life. They did not attempt to explore the brain as a physiological organ,
+ and determine how or in what special organs it controls the physiological
+ functions. These may be regarded as one half, though the lower half,
+ of its capacities, out of which arises a vast amount of medical philosophy.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the psychic half of the cerebral functions, they omitted
+ entirely that portion which relates to pneumatology. They thought
+ nothing of the soul as an object of science, and made no attempt to
+ trace its connection with the brain, and the vast number of phenomena
+ which lie along the border line between the physical and
+ spiritual, and which are conspicuous in the phenomena of somnambulism,
+ sleep, dreaming, hypnotism, spiritualism, clairvoyance, trance,
+ ecstasy, and religious marvels.</p>
+
+ <p>Overlooking these things, they sought the seats of from twenty-seven
+ faculties (as with Gall) to thirty-five (as with Spurzheim), and
+ did not appear to realize how many had been entirely omitted.
+ When all they attempted to locate are located by positive experiment
+ and assigned their proper localities and limits, we find fully
+ one half of the cerebral surface vacant for organs of other functions.
+ Indeed, the first large publication of Gall and Spurzheim, in four
+ volumes folio, with an atlas of 100 plates, begun in 1809 and finished
+ in 1819, did not in the cranial map of organs profess to be a complete
+ development of the functions of the brain. It located organs, but
+ did not determine the functions intermediate between their boundaries.
+ This was the map of Gall. In that of Spurzheim the intermediate
+ spaces were occupied and the entire exterior surface of the
+ brain devoted to organology, yet still the basilar and interior surface
+ of the brain remained unknown to Spurzheim, and the exterior
+ regions which he supposed entirely occupied by his organs were but
+ half occupied by them. Thus when we consider the unexplored
+ basilar and interior regions, and that half of its exterior surface
+ which was erroneously appropriated to the thirty-five organs, as well
+ as the erroneous location of several, we perceive that <em>more than half</em>
+ of the organs and functions of the brain remained for investigation.</p>
+
+ <p>Turning away from the anatomy to contemplate the psychology,
+ we perceive that <em>more than half of human nature</em> had been omitted
+ from the German scheme,—that half of the mental functions which
+ belongs to the organs of the vacant spaces on the corrected map, and
+ in addition to these the higher psychic functions, and the lower
+ physiological functions, neither of which Gall and Spurzheim
+ explored, because they did not attempt to study the brain as a
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page26" title="26"> </a>physiological organ, and they did not bring the soul and the higher
+ functions of the mind within the scope of their science.</p>
+
+ <p>Gall was a bold, original naturalist and anatomist but not a psychologist;
+ and the incorrectness of his psychology hindered his
+ investigations, and prevented him from carrying out a proper subdivision
+ of faculties and organs. He says in the last volume: “Each
+ fundamental power, essentially distinct, includes sensation, perception,
+ memory and recollection, judgment and imagination,”—disregarding
+ the truth that these are distinct intellectual powers, belonging
+ to different organs, and therefore bearing no proportion to each
+ other. One may have an immense memory without imagination, or a
+ brilliant imagination without much memory. These, and many other
+ psychological errors, are apparent in the writings of Gall, and still
+ more in those of Spurzheim.</p>
+
+ <div class="image">
+ <a href="images/illo1.png"><img src="images/illo1-th.png" width="362" height="443" alt="Sketch of head in profile, with areas named on it." /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the drawing herewith presented, the thirty-five organs of Spurzheim
+ are assigned their proper locations and dimensions. The first
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page27" title="27"> </a>organ, <strong class="emphasis">Amativeness</strong> (made second by Spurzheim), was assumed to
+ occupy the entire cerebellum. It really occupies only its median
+ and superior portion, and a small section of the anterior surface of
+ the spinal cord, adjacent to the encephalon. This error of Gall and
+ Spurzheim did a great deal to discredit their system. It manifested
+ on their part a fallibility of judgment, and a dogmatic adherence to
+ first impressions in the face of evidence to the contrary; for the
+ experiments of Rolando and Flourens demonstrated a connection
+ between the cerebellum and the general vital force and muscular
+ action. The relation may not have been clearly understood, but the
+ facts were decisive, and the researches of Majendie, with the more
+ recent ones of Ferrier, have made more clear the relations of the
+ cerebellum to the muscular system and vital force.</p>
+
+ <p>The doctrine of Gall has been abandoned by physiologists because
+ refuted by many facts, the most decisive of which is that the cerebellum
+ of castrated horses is larger than that of stallions, which
+ could not be possible if the cerebellum had only sexual functions.
+ Moreover, the doctrine of Gall was essentially unreasonable in itself.
+ To suppose that so large a portion of the brain which is continually
+ active, being well supplied with blood, could have a function which
+ is but occasionally active, and which, through the greater part of
+ human life, is unnoticed or inactive, is extremely unreasonable; and
+ to suppose that the serious disturbances of animal life and muscular
+ motion, caused by ablations of the cerebellum, were due to the disturbance
+ of an organ having only sexual functions, was thoroughly
+ absurd. The parrot-like repetition of these exploded errors by the
+ followers of the phrenological system contributed to its discredit in
+ the medical profession.</p>
+
+ <p>The 2d organ of Gall (3d of Spurzheim), <strong class="emphasis">Philoprogenitiveness</strong>,
+ was regarded as one of the best known phrenological
+ organs, but my unprejudiced study of heads soon assured me of its
+ inaccuracy. The organ was small in Spurzheim, who was remarkably
+ fond of children, and I have found it small in ladies who showed
+ no lack of parental love, but generally well developed and active in
+ criminal skulls. One which I obtained in Arkansas, of a man named
+ Richmond, had this region large and active, although he was the one
+ of a group of murderers by whom the children, or, rather, boys, were
+ killed. This region is <em>extremely defective</em> in the brains of birds,
+ which are certainly very devoted to their young. The attachment to
+ children belongs really to an interior region of the occiput, where
+ the occipital lobes face the median line. Hence it is that a large
+ occipital development very often coincides with the love of children;
+ but the true position of the organ renders it difficult to determine
+ its development in life.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Adhesiveness</strong> (3d) is located by Spurzheim farther back and lower
+ than it should be; also, too far back in Gall’s map. It belongs to
+ the vacant space in front of Gall’s location.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Inhabitiveness</strong> (5th) is an imaginary definition of the function
+ located behind Self-esteem. Equally imaginary is the doctrine of
+ the Edinburgh phrenologists, who call it Concentrativeness. The
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page28" title="28"> </a>observations of Gall led him to regard it as a portion of the organ of
+ Pride, and as giving to animals a love of lofty locations. Gall was
+ nearer right than Spurzheim or Combe. The only function I find
+ in this spot is Self-confidence. The tendencies to a quiet love of
+ home, and the ability to tranquillize and concentrate the mind, are
+ located, virtually, above the ear on the temporal arch, the ridge
+ which separates the lateral from the superior surface of the
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Destructiveness</strong>, the 5th organ of Gall and 1st of Spurzheim,
+ was located much too high and too far forward by Gall. I am surprised
+ at this, since it differs so widely from the indications of comparative
+ anatomy that it is difficult to imagine how Gall was misled.
+ Any one comparing the skull of a dog with that of a sheep may discover
+ the error. He called it Murder, or the wish to destroy. Spurzheim,
+ who does not describe its location, says, “At the beginning
+ Gall placed the seat of this organ too far behind the ear, but a great
+ number of observations convinced us that its seat is immediately
+ above the ear.” The truth is that the convolutions which terminate
+ on the temporal bone over the ear are only on the border of Destructiveness,
+ and produce only an irritable and impulsive temper. The
+ true Destructiveness extends fully an inch under the surface of the
+ middle lobe, along the petrous ridge of the temporal bone, and is
+ manifested externally just behind the ear by the prominence of the
+ mastoid process.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Combativeness</strong> (the 6th of Spurzheim, or Courage and Self-defence,
+ the 4th of Gall) is located with tolerable correctness by
+ each and properly described.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Secretiveness</strong>, which is but a modification of Cautiousness, occupying
+ its middle region, is much too large on the maps, and on
+ that of Gall it is quite out of place—too far forward and too high
+ up, occupying a region which produces modesty and refinement.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Acquisitiveness</strong> (7th of Gall, 8th of Spurzheim) is still farther
+ mislocated on the map of Gall, occupying a region of intellectual,
+ inventive and literary capacity. This is the most <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">outre</em> and absurd of
+ all Gall’s locations. Placing this selfish and grasping propensity in
+ the front lobe which belongs to intellect, when it really belongs to
+ the selfish, adhesive, and combative elements of the occiput, is an
+ error of so extravagant a character as to show that Gall had no correct
+ psychology in his mind, and no capacity or desire to construct a
+ harmonious system. Spurzheim’s location, much farther back, is
+ somewhat less erroneous, but both are thoroughly false, and a few
+ months of my first observations fifty-two years ago satisfied me as to
+ this error. That it should have flourished unchallenged by Phrenologists
+ for eighty years, seems to show that when a dominant idea
+ is once established in the mind, all facts are made to conform to it.
+ Is is remarkable, too, that the very great difference between the locations
+ given by Gall and by Spurzheim has not attracted notice. But
+ in fact the map of Gall has never had any popular currency. Spurzheim
+ and Combe have been the accepted authors. The true location
+ of acquisitiveness is anterior to combativeness, and lower than
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page29" title="29"> </a>adhesiveness. Gall was misled by studying the young pickpockets
+ and thieves of Vienna. The organ that he found suits a low cunning
+ and dextrous character when the head lacks elevation.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Constructiveness</strong>, Spurzheim’s 9th (Bausinn, or aptitude for
+ mechanical arts, of Gall No. 19), is decidedly mislocated by Spurzheim.
+ Instead of being placed in the purely intellectual region adjacent
+ to calculation, order, and system, it is carried back and down
+ into the region of somnolence and sensitive impressibility. Gall’s
+ location is a little worse because lower, being carried out of the
+ intellectual region into the middle lobe according to his published
+ map. It is very easy to detect this error in examining a number of
+ heads, and it was quite apparent to me in my first year’s observations.
+ In impressible persons the touch upon this locality produces nothing
+ but a dreamy influence, and a disposition to close the eyes. Carried
+ farther, it produces the mesmeric sleep.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Cautiousness</strong> (the 10th of both Spurzheim and Gall) was too far
+ back in Spurzheim’s map, occupying space that belongs to adhesiveness.
+ It runs downward along the course of the lateral convolutions,
+ and its more timid and gloomy functions are developed near the ear,
+ differing widely from the functions of its upper portion.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Approbativeness</strong> (the 11th of Spurzheim, and 9th of Gall)
+ is located with substantial correctness, covering, however, more functions
+ than that term expresses. Gall’s location and definition
+ are also substantially correct.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Self-Esteem</strong> (the 12th of Spurzheim, 8th of Gall) is well located
+ and described with approximative correctness.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Firmness, Religion</strong> (Veneration or Theosophy), and <strong class="emphasis">Benevolence</strong>
+ are so well located and described by both Gall and Spurzheim
+ as to need but little comment at present. The four superior
+ organs on the median line, and the organ of <strong class="emphasis">Conscientiousness</strong>
+ were more correctly located and described than any other large portion
+ of the brain.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Hope</strong> is not adjacent to Conscientiousness, but parallel to Religion.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Marvellousness</strong> has a preposterously large space assigned it,
+ being really a small organ at the summit of Ideality, which exercises
+ a more intellectual and less superstitious function than has been
+ given it. Marvellousness, Hope, Conscientiousness, Time, Order,
+ Weight, Size, and Individuality are the eight organs discovered and
+ added by Spurzheim, not having been recognized by Gall. The
+ exterior portion of Spurzheim’s Marvellousness occupies the space
+ devoted by Gall to Poetry.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Poetry</strong>, recognized by Gall, is brought lower by Spurzheim and
+ called <strong class="emphasis">Ideality</strong>. Both locations are substantially correct. The location
+ of Gall is the seat of Marvellousness, Imagination, and Spirituality;
+ that of Spurzheim is well expressed by the term Ideality, and the
+ description given, but the word Poetry is rather too limited as the
+ definition of Gall’s organ. It gives brilliance to prose and to oratory,
+ or even conversation, as well as to poetry.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Imitation</strong>, adjacent to Benevolence, is somewhat better located by
+ Gall than by Spurzheim, who gives it too much breadth anteriorly.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page30" title="30"> </a><strong class="emphasis">Wit</strong> or <strong class="emphasis">Mirthfulness</strong> is a confused and erroneous statement.
+ The two faculties are distinct, Wit being intellectual and occupying a
+ small space adjacent to Causality or Reason, while Mirthfulness, or
+ the sentiment of the ludicrous, is just above it, and should properly
+ be called Humor. The mirthful or playful faculty is in the posterior
+ region adjacent to Approbativeness, and may be quite conspicuous
+ when there is neither wit nor humor in the mirth. Imitation, Mirth
+ or Humor, and Wit follow each other in a line. The so-called organ
+ of Wit (Gall) or Mirthfulness (Spurzheim) is the seat of the most
+ profound reasoning faculty, while the <strong class="emphasis">Causality</strong> of Spurzheim, the
+ <strong class="emphasis">Metaphysical Depth</strong> of thought of Gall, though it gives a clear
+ analytical intelligence has really less profundity and ability
+ in reasoning than the organ which they have misnamed Wit and
+ Mirthfulness, which is pre-eminently the organ of profound reasoning.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Eventuality</strong> and <strong class="emphasis">Individuality</strong> are confounded as one
+ organ by Gall, calling it Educability, or Memory of Things
+ but rightly separated by Spurzheim, as the observation and
+ memory of events are distinct from the observation of things.
+ Though I do not use the word Individuality, it is not an objectionable
+ expression, as it suggests the fine perceptive power of its location.
+ Both Gall and Spurzheim had a practically good idea of the
+ region of Eventuality, which Gall first called the memory of things.
+ Spurzheim’s description is good; but when the organ is analyzed, it
+ yields consciousness and observation on the median line, memory
+ more exterior, extending to Time.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Perceptive Organs</strong>—The most marvellous feature of the old
+ phrenological system, is the accuracy with which the smallest organs
+ of the brain have been discovered, located, and described. The organs
+ of Form, Size, Weight, Color, Order, and Number, or Calculation,
+ were so accurately located and described by Spurzheim, that little remains
+ to be said about them. Gall discovered only Form, Color, and
+ Number, and the latter he located in the position which belongs to Order.
+ These organs were but little developed in Gall, whose great success
+ was due to his philosophic originality and independence. He was not a
+ close observer, and there was a sternness in his nature which prevented
+ him from accepting readily the suggestions of Spurzheim,
+ who with less boldness of character and greater accuracy of perception,
+ was better fitted for minute observation and anatomical
+ analysis. His own cranium has been preserved, in which I found
+ these perceptive organs distinctly marked by their digital impressions
+ on the superorbital plate over the eye. It is a remarkable fact that
+ the intellectual faculties have been most easily understood and
+ located, while their antagonists in the occipital region have proved
+ the greatest puzzle in psychic and cerebral investigations. Gall
+ failed, and left a vacant space in the occiput. Spurzheim failed, but
+ covered the ground incorrectly, and it was many years after I discovered
+ cerebral impressibility before I attained a satisfactory view
+ of the psychology of this region. The location and definition of
+ <strong class="emphasis">Locality</strong> are substantially correct.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page31" title="31"> </a>The organ of <strong class="emphasis">Time</strong>, another of Spurzheim’s discoveries, was very
+ correctly located and defined by him. It lies just above the organ of
+ Color.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Comparative Sagacity</strong>, or Perspicacity, as Gall called it, was a
+ better term than Comparison, which was introduced by Spurzheim.
+ Direct perception of truth is its leading character. Illustration by
+ comparison belongs to the breadth of the forehead, to the Ideal and
+ Inventive region, and is the characteristic of poetry. Spurzheim’s
+ description, however, is substantially correct. It qualifies for clear
+ statement, but not for comprehensive or ingenious reasoning. The
+ portion on the median line has still more penetration, in consequence
+ of which it perceives the nature and tendencies of everything, and
+ is enabled to exercise foresight. Still farther in on the median line
+ are located the powers which are more intuitive, and transcending
+ ordinary foresight are entitled to be called prophecy.</p>
+
+ <p>The <strong class="emphasis">Causality</strong> of Spurzheim, or Metaphysical Depth of thought
+ of Gall, was defined with approximate correctness. The immediate
+ perception of causation lies just above the organ of Time, and
+ the special organ of Reason extends therefrom upwards. If the
+ reflective organs of one side of the forehead are divided into an
+ interior and exterior group by a vertical line from the pupil of the
+ eye, the interior group would represent a comprehensive understanding
+ possessing sagacity and judgment, while the exterior would
+ represent profound ingenious thought and originality, a capacity for
+ discovering truth by reason and meditation, by analysis and synthesis,
+ while the interior would discover it only by direct perception.
+ In the exterior group would be included the misnamed organ
+ of Wit or Mirthfulness, which is really a source of philosophy and
+ originality.</p>
+
+ <p><strong class="emphasis">Tune</strong> and <strong class="emphasis">Constructiveness</strong> have really reversed their positions
+ in the maps of Spurzheim and Gall. The inventive faculty of
+ musical composers was what Gall discovered as Music. The sense
+ of Melody and Tune lies behind the brow in connection with the
+ <em>sense of hearing</em>, at the anterior portion of Sensibility, which forty
+ years after my discovery is beginning to be recognized in consequence
+ of the experiments of Ferrier on animals. The organ of
+ hearing which he demonstrated in the monkey, occupies the same
+ position in the superior temporal convolution, behind the eye, which
+ I have given it in man, which brings it into close connection with
+ the organs of Language and Tune. Its close connection with the
+ region of impressibility called Somnolence explains its supreme
+ control over our emotions.</p>
+
+ <p>The organ of <strong class="emphasis">Language</strong>, the first discovery of Gall, has been the
+ first to receive its demonstration from pathology and vivisection.
+ But the pioneer teacher to whom contemporaries are unjust has to
+ wait very long for an honorable recognition. The existence of an
+ organ of Language at the junction of the front and middle lobes, at
+ the back of the eye-sockets, has become established in our physiology
+ from the developments of disease and autopsies, without
+ mentioning in connection that it was the discovery of Gall. Perhaps
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page32" title="32"> </a>the authors of the text-books may not even know the location of
+ Gall’s discovery in the brain, and think only of the external sign,
+ the prominence of the eyes, produced by the convolution at the back
+ of their orbits.</p>
+
+ <p>Dr. Spurzheim simply located the external sign of the prominence
+ of the organ at the eye, while Gall recognized the talent for
+ languages as lying further back than that for verbal memory, and
+ consequently being manifested lower at the eye. Nevertheless Gall
+ made a correct observation, as he noticed that a full development
+ was indicated when the temples were broad behind the eye.
+ The true location of the organ externally is just behind the outer
+ angle of the eye, a position central to Gall’s observations, and corresponding
+ in the brain to that junction of the front and middle lobes
+ in which the organ has been demonstrated by pathology, though not
+ so accurately defined as in my experiments.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps in twenty or thirty years more my demonstrations having
+ been brought before the public may attract the attention of the laborious
+ vivisectors in Europe, who have done so much to verify them, and
+ who will find that their labors do not refute but do confirm what I
+ have discovered by methods so much simpler, easier and more
+ pleasant.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second volume I propose to show in detail how much the
+ pathologists and vivisectors have done to illustrate and corroborate
+ the new Anthropology.</p>
+
+ <div class="image">
+ <a href="images/illo2.png"><img src="images/illo2-th.png" width="569" height="260" alt="Front and side views of a skull with markings on it." /></a>
+ <p class="caption"><strong class="emphasis">Organology of Gall</strong>, 1809.</p>
+ <ol style="text-align:left;margin-left:5em;font-size:.85em;">
+ <li>Instinct of Generation.</li>
+ <li>Love of Offspring.</li>
+ <li>Friendship, Attachment.</li>
+ <li>Courage, Self-Defence.</li>
+ <li>Murder, Wish to Destroy.</li>
+ <li>Cunning.</li>
+ <li>Sentiment of Property.</li>
+ <li>Pride, Self-Esteem, Haughtiness.</li>
+ <li>Vanity, Ambition.</li>
+ <li>Cautiousness, Foresight, Prudence.</li>
+ <li>Memory of Things, Educability.</li>
+ <li>Local Memory.</li>
+ <li>Memory of Persons.</li>
+ <li>Verbal Memory.</li>
+ <li>Memory for Languages.</li>
+ <li>Colors.</li>
+ <li>Music.</li>
+ <li>Number.</li>
+ <li>Aptitude for Mechanical Arts.</li>
+ <li>Comparative Aptitude for Drawing Comparisons.</li>
+ <li>Metaphysical Depth of Thought, Aptitude for Drawing Conclusions.</li>
+ <li>Wit.</li>
+ <li>Poetry.</li>
+ <li>Good Nature.</li>
+ <li>Mimicry.</li>
+ <li>Theosophy, Religion.</li>
+ <li>Firmness of Character.</li>
+ </ol>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<div id="footnotes">
+ <h2>Footnotes</h2>
+ <ol>
+ <li id="footnote_1">
+ <p>There is no higher gift of Divinity than the gift of intelligence, which, if pervaded by the light of
+ Divine love, constitutes the Christ, and those who are thus gifted are indeed the &#8220;favorites of God.&#8221;
+ But if such a people kill the Christ-principle in their hearts, and use their intellectual powers merely
+ for selfish purposes, they will become <em>accursed</em>. A system of medicine or theology which is based
+ upon self-interests of the privileged class of doctors and priests is a curse to humanity. <a href="#fnm1" title="Return to marker 1" class="returnFN">Return</a></p>
+ </li>
+ </ol>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<div id="business">
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page33" title="33"> </a>BUSINESS DEPARTMENT.</h2>
+
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <h3>COLLEGE OF THERAPEUTICS.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_3">Next Session Begins November 1, 1887.</p>
+
+ <p>This institution is the germ of what will be an
+ immense revolution in education hereafter, when
+ the knowledge now given to small classes will hold
+ a conspicuous place in every college, and will be
+ presented in every high school.</p>
+
+ <p>The mountain mass of inertia, which opposes, passively,
+ all fundamental changes, cannot now resist
+ scientific demonstration as it has in the past.
+ The instruction in the College of Therapeutics, is
+ thoroughly demonstrative, leaving no room for
+ doubt, and it gives a species of knowledge which
+ ought to be a part of every one’s education—a
+ knowledge of the constitution of man, not obtainable
+ to-day in any medical or literary college, nor
+ in our mammoth libraries. It is not merely as a
+ deep philosophy that this interests us, but as a
+ guide in the preservation of health, and in the
+ regulation of spiritual phenomena, which would, to
+ a very great extent, supersede our reliance on the
+ medical profession by giving us the control of the
+ vital powers, by which we may protect ourselves,
+ and control the development of the young.</p>
+
+ <p>Each student was made to feel the effects of local
+ treatment on the body, and the power of rapidly
+ changing disease to health, and was personally
+ taught to perform the manipulations for this purpose,
+ and to investigate disease or portray character
+ by the psychometric methods as well as to test
+ the value of medicines.</p>
+
+ <p>The various uses and scientific application of
+ electricity were shown, and many things entirely
+ unknown and unrecognized in works on Electro-Therapeutics.
+ The entire class was placed under
+ a medical influence simultaneously by the agency
+ of electricity—an operation so marvelous that it
+ would be considered incredible in medical colleges.
+ By these and other experiments and numerous
+ illustrations and lucid explanations of the brain
+ and nervous system, the instruction was made
+ deeply interesting, and students have attended
+ more than one course to perfect themselves in
+ the science. The following declaration of sentiments
+ shows how the course was regarded by the
+ class:</p>
+
+ <p>“The summer class of 1887 in the College of
+ Therapeutics, feeling it their duty to add their
+ testimony to that of many others in reference to
+ the grand scientific discoveries which they have
+ seen thoroughly demonstrated by Prof. J. R.
+ Buchanan, would say to the public that no one can
+ attend such a course of instruction as we have recently
+ been engaged in, without realizing that
+ Therapeutic Sarcognomy greatly enlarges the practical
+ resources of the healing art for the medical
+ practitioner, magnetizer and electro-therapeutist,
+ while Psychometry, whose positive truths we have
+ tested and proven, like the sun’s rays, illumines
+ all the dark problems of medical practice and of
+ psycho-physiological sciences.</p>
+
+ <p>“Therapeutic Sarcognomy explains the very intricate
+ and mysterious relations of the soul, the brain
+ and body, which prior to Prof. Buchanan’s discoveries
+ were unknown to all scientific teachers,
+ and are even now only known to his students and
+ the readers of his works,</p>
+
+ <p>“We feel that we have been very fortunate in finding
+ so valuable a source of knowledge, whose future
+ benefits to the human race, in many ways, cannot
+ be briefly stated, and we would assure all who may
+ attend this college, or read the published works of
+ Prof. Buchanan, and his monthly, the <cite>Journal of
+ Man</cite>, that they will, when acquainted with the subject,
+ be ready to unite with us in appreciating and
+ honoring the greatest addition ever made to biological
+ and psychological sciences. Hoping that the time
+ is not for distant when all students in medical colleges
+ may obtain access to this most important
+ knowledge, we give our testimony to the public.”</p>
+
+ <p style="text-indent:0em;margin-left:2.5em;"><span class="name">H. C. Aldrich, M. D., D. D. S.</span>, <em>Chairman</em>.<br />
+ <span class="name">Dr. Jno. C. Schlarbaum</span>, <em>Secretary</em>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <h3>OBITUARY RECORD.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_3">Visit to our Cemetery.</p>
+
+ <p>Sad are the words, “<em>It might have been</em>,” sad
+ the recollection of lives untimely ended, and
+ equally sad the lives that perished unborn. We
+ have been looking among the latter, the spirit life
+ that might have gone forth to bless society, but
+ perished ere its birth.</p>
+
+ <p>The <cite class="name">Journal of Man</cite> has brought forth many
+ a bright, strong thought that will have its career
+ among men, but the other bright, strong thoughts
+ that could not be forced through its narrow limits
+ must be buried and lost to its readers, and they
+ have been interred with sorrow. The following
+ is a list of our early dead—perhaps for some of
+ them there may be a resurrection when a larger
+ <cite class="name">Journal</cite> is issued, but perhaps the majority are
+ interred forever.</p>
+
+ <p>1. Career of Mohammedanism in Africa. 2. The
+ True History of Buddha. 3. Influence of Christianity
+ in history. 4. Startling Calculations for the
+ Future. 6. The Snake Charmers in Tunis. 6. Mesmerism
+ in China before the Christian Era. 7. Dr.
+ Montgomery on the Cell Theory. 8. A Race of
+ Dwarfs in the Pyrenees. 9. Religious Hallucination
+ in the Bahamas. 10. Philosophy of Death.
+ 11. The Delsarte System of Elocution and Acting.
+ 12. Why Should the Chinese go? an eloquent argument
+ by a learned Mandarin. 13. An Organic
+ Index of Human Longevity—the Doctrine of
+ Powell. 15. Anthropological Laws of Longevity.
+ 16. Psychometry and Thought Transference in
+ India. 17. Prof. Dana on Evolution. 18. Statistics
+ of Heads and Brains. 19. Cures by Prayer. 20.
+ Indian Witchcraft. 21. Hypnotism among Turkish
+ Dervishes. 22. Discussion of Heredity and Temperaments.
+ 23. Theory and Practice of the Divining
+ Rod. 24. Mrs. Stanton on Sleep. 25. Cures
+ for Insomnia, and Singular Case of Night-sweats.
+ 26. A Modern Samson. 27. Transactions in
+ Psychic Research. 28. A Critique of Unreason—a
+ Caustic Review of the Psychic Society. 29. Scientific
+ View of the Antiquity of Man. 30. Phrenological
+ Quackery. 31. English and German
+ Industrial Education. 32. Training of Viennese
+ Girls. 33. Revolutions in Medicine. 34. History
+ and Progress of Russian Nihilists. 35. The Paradise
+ of Labor—the Familistère at Guise in
+ France. 36. Exhibition of the Keeley Motor. 37.
+ A New Element in the Blood. 38. Reform of the
+ Lunacy Laws. 39. Marvellous Dreams. 40.
+ Byron’s Spiritual Belief. 41. How to Deal with
+ Drunkards and Medical Treatment of Intemperance.
+ 42. Combination of Electricity and Medicine.
+ 43. Meynert’s Psychiatry, a Treatise on Diseases
+ of the Fore-brain. 44. A Mesmerized Detective.
+ 45. Wonderful Spirit Telegraphy. 46. Discovery
+ of Dead Bodies by Intuition. 47. How Clouds are
+ formed. 48. Psychometric Reports on Simon of
+ Samaria, Henry George, Dr. McGlynn, Lucretia
+ Mott, Dr. Gall, Charlemagne and Julius Cæsar.
+ 49. The Puget Sound Colony. 50. English Rule in
+ Ireland. 51. Dr. Eadon on Memory. 52. Harrison
+ on Mysticism. 53. Progress in Many Parts of the
+ World. 54. Communications from various correspondents,
+ etc., etc. This is not <em>one half</em>, but it is
+ needless to prolong the catalogue of the buried
+ innocents,—the interesting narratives, discussions
+ and expositions of rare knowledge which the
+ limited area of the <cite class="name">Journal</cite> has compelled me to
+ exclude.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us hope that in our enlarged <cite class="name">Journal</cite> next
+ year, there may be room to review the most important
+ features of social and scientific progress as
+ well as to present gradually the elements of that
+ world-embracing science which is called Anthropology,—the
+ presentation of which will require at
+ least ten years. I am making every effort at
+ present to prepare the improved and enlarged
+ edition of the Therapeutic Sarcognomy for the
+ coming winter.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <h3><a class="pagenum" id="page34" title="34"> </a>LIBERAL PUBLICATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Golden Gate</cite> at San Francisco is a
+ successful eight-page weekly Spiritual newspaper
+ now in its fourth volume, well filled with interesting
+ matter. It illustrates spiritual phenomena by
+ engravings, is well edited and highly appreciated.
+ Published by J. J. Owen at $2.50 per annum.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">Hall’s Journal of Health</cite> at New York, a
+ monthly of twenty-four pages, one dollar per annum,
+ has been well received for thirty-three years, and
+ of late, with a new editor, it has renewed its vigor
+ and prosperity. It contains not only valuable
+ hygienic instruction but interesting sketches of
+ Spiritual and progressive science and has honored
+ the editor of this Journal with a friendly biographical
+ sketch. Its circulation is increasing.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Better Way</cite>, a Spiritual weekly published
+ at Cincinnati at $2 a year, is the successor to four
+ Spiritual papers that have ceased, and appears to
+ have the elements of success.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Eastern Star</cite>, published at Glenburn,
+ Maine, by C. M. Brown, weekly, at $1 per year, is
+ full of the enthusiasm and energy that win success.
+ The editor appears to have a clear head and warm
+ heart and devotes his journal to Spiritualism.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Carrier Dove</cite>, a large folio weekly illustrated
+ Spiritual journal. $2.50 per annum, published
+ at San Francisco, is now in its fourth volume,
+ and has obtained a merited success.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Truth-Seeker</cite>, a weekly journal ($3 a
+ year) established by the late D. M. Bennett, still
+ carries on with undiminished ability the honest
+ agnostic work for which it has been famous. It is
+ a vigorous iconoclast but does little for constructive
+ progress.</p>
+
+ <p><cite class="name">The Open Court</cite>, by B. F. Underwood, Chicago,
+ with an able corps of correspondents, maintains a
+ high literary character, and discusses philosophy
+ and current topics from the agnostic standpoint.
+ Its belief in dry metaphysics, and its stubborn
+ materialistic scepticism are its greatest peculiarities.
+ Published fortnightly at $3 a year.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <h3>UNLIKE ANY OTHER PAPER.</h3>
+
+ <p>The <cite>Spectator</cite>, unlike other home papers, seeks
+ (1) to acquaint every family with simple and efficient
+ treatment for the various common diseases,
+ to, in a word, educate the people so they can avoid
+ disease and cure sickness, thus saving enormous
+ doctors’ bills, and many precious lives. (2) To
+ elevate and cultivate the moral nature, awakening
+ the conscience, and developing the noblest attributes
+ of manhood. (3) To give instructive and
+ entertaining food to literary taste, thus developing
+ the mind. (4) To give just such hints to housekeepers
+ that they need to tell how to prepare
+ delicious dishes, to beautify homes, and to make
+ the fireside the most attractive spot in the world.—<cite>Am.
+ Spectator</cite>.</p>
+
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <h3>MAYO’S ANÆSTHETIC.</h3>
+
+ <p>The suspension of pain, under dangerous surgical
+ operations, is the greatest triumph of Therapeutic
+ Science in the present century. It came
+ first by mesmeric hypnotism, which was applicable
+ only to a few, and was restricted by the jealous
+ hostility of the old medical profession. Then
+ came the nitrous oxide, introduced by Dr. Wells,
+ of Hartford, and promptly discountenanced by the
+ enlightened (?) medical profession of Boston, and
+ set aside for the next candidate, ether, discovered
+ in the United States also, but far interior to the
+ nitrous oxide as a safe and pleasant agent. This was
+ largely superseded by chloroform, discovered much
+ earlier by Liebig and others, but introduced as an
+ anæsthetic in 1847, by Prof. Simpson. This proved
+ to be the most powerful and dangerous of all.
+ Thus the whole policy of the medical profession
+ was to discourage the safe, and encourage the more
+ dangerous agents. The magnetic sleep, the most
+ perfect of all anæsthetic agents, was expelled from
+ the realm of college authority; ether was substituted
+ for nitrous oxide, and chloroform preferred to
+ ether, until frequent deaths gave warning.</p>
+
+ <p>Nitrous oxide, much the safest of the three, has
+ not been the favorite, but has held its ground,
+ especially with dentists. But even nitrous oxide is
+ not perfect. It is not equal to the magnetic sleep,
+ when the latter is practicable, but fortunately it is
+ applicable to all. To perfect the nitrous oxide,
+ making it universally safe and pleasant, Dr. U. K.
+ Mayo, of Boston, has combined it with certain
+ harmless vegetable nervines, which appear to control
+ the fatal tendency which belongs to all anæsthetics
+ when carried too far. The success of Dr.
+ Mayo, in perfecting our best anæsthetic, is amply
+ attested by those who have used it. Dr. Thorndike,
+ than whom, Boston had no better surgeon, pronounced
+ it “the safest the world has yet seen.”
+ It has been administered to children and to patients
+ in extreme debility. Drs. Frizzell and Williams,
+ say they have given it “repeatedly in heart disease,
+ severe lung diseases, Bright’s disease, etc., where
+ the patients were so feeble as to require assistance
+ in walking, many of them under medical treatment,
+ and the results have been all that we could
+ ask—no irritation, suffocation, nor depression.
+ We heartily commend it to all as the anæsthetic of
+ the age.” Dr. Morrill, of Boston, administered
+ Mayo’s anæsthetic to his wife with delightful
+ results when “her lungs were so badly disorganized,
+ that the administration of ether or gas
+ would be entirely unsafe.” The reputation of this
+ anæsthetic is now well established; in fact, it is
+ not only safe and harmless, but has great medical
+ virtue for daily use in many diseases, and is coming
+ into use for such purposes. In a paper before
+ the Georgia State Dental Society, Dr. E. Parsons
+ testified strongly to its superiority. “The nitrous
+ oxide, (says Dr. P.) causes the patient when fully
+ under its influence to have very like the appearance
+ of a corpse,” but under this new anæsthetic
+ “the patient appears like one in a natural sleep.”
+ The language of the press, generally has been highly
+ commendatory, and if Dr. Mayo had occupied so
+ conspicuous a rank as Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh,
+ his new anæsthetic would have been adopted at
+ once in every college of America and Europe.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_1">Mayo’s Vegetable Anæsthetic.</p>
+
+ <p>A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform,
+ ether, nitrous oxide gas, and all other
+ anæsthetics. Discovered by Dr. U. K. Mayo, April,
+ 1883, and since administered by him and others in
+ over 300,000 cases successfully. The youngest child,
+ the most sensitive lady, and those having heart
+ disease, and lung complaint, inhale this vapor with
+ impunity. It stimulates the circulation of the
+ blood and builds up the tissues. Indorsed by the
+ highest authority in the professions, recommended
+ in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration.
+ Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families
+ supplied with this vapor, liquefied, in cylinders of
+ various capacities. It should be administered the
+ same as Nitrous Oxide, but it does not produce
+ headache and nausea as that sometimes does. For
+ further information pamphlets, testimonials, etc.,
+ apply to</p>
+
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_6"><span class="segment">DR. U. K. MAYO, Dentist,</span><br />
+ 378 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="ad_narrow">
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_1">THE CARRIER DOVE,</p>
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_8">An Illustrated Monthly Magazine, Devoted to</p>
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_2">SPRITUALISM AND REFORM.</p>
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_8">Edited by <em class="name">Mrs. J. Schlesinger</em>.</p>
+ <p>Each number will contain the portraits and Biographical
+ Sketches of prominent Mediums and Spiritual
+ workers of the Pacific Coast, and elsewhere. Also,
+ Spirit Pictures by our Artist Mediums. Lectures,
+ essays, poems, spirit messages, editorials and miscellaneous
+ items.</p>
+ <table summary="publishers" class="ad_table_2">
+ <tr><td>DR. L. SCHLESINGER,</td><td rowspan="2"><em class="name">Publishers</em>.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>MRS. J. SCHLESINGER,</td></tr>
+ </table>
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_8">Terms:—$2.50 per Year. Single Copies, 10 cts.</p>
+
+ <p class="ad_pstyle_8">Address, <strong>THE CARRIER DOVE</strong>,<br />
+ 32 Ellis Street, San Francisco, California.</p>
+
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div id="transcriber_note">
+ <p>Transcriber’s Note: The Table of Contents was copied from
+ the index to the volume.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div id="the_end"> </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
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+Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887
+ Volume 1, Number 9
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: J. R. Buchanan
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2009 [EBook #27717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ BUCHANAN'S
+ JOURNAL OF MAN.
+
+ VOL. I. OCTOBER, 1887. NO. 9.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF JOURNAL OF MAN.
+
+
+ The Oriental View of Anthropology
+ MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE--Religion and Science; Good Psychology;
+ The Far-away Battle; How not to do it; Robbery of Public Lands;
+ Land Reform in England; Life in Europe; Education in France;
+ Canada and the Union; Woman in the Moon; Emancipation from
+ Petticoats; Women's Rights on the Streets; A Woman's Triumph in
+ Paris; A Woman's Bible; Work for Women; Mrs. Stanton on the
+ Jubilee; Electricity; Progress of the Telegraph; The Mystery of
+ the Ages; Progress of the Marvellous; A Grand Aerolite; The Boy
+ Pianist; Centenarians; Educated Monkeys; Causes of Idiocy; A
+ Powerful Temperance Argument; Slow Progress; Community Doctors;
+ The Selfish System of Society; Educated Beetles; Rustless Iron;
+ Weighing the Earth; Head and Heart; The Rectification of
+ Cerebral Science
+ Chapter IX.--Rectification of Cerebral Science, Correcting the
+ Organology of Gall and Spurzheim
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIENTAL VIEW OF ANTHROPOLOGY.
+
+
+In the following essay, DR. F. HARTMANN, an enlightened author of the
+Theosophical and Occult school, presents the mystic or Oriental view
+of man, in an interesting manner, deducing therefrom a philosophy of
+the healing art. My readers will no doubt be interested in his
+exposition, and, as the ancient doctrine differs materially from the
+results of experimental investigation, I take the liberty of
+incorporating my comments in publishing the essay.
+
+
+A RATIONAL SYSTEM OF MEDICINE.
+
+All lovers of truth, progress, and freedom of thought must be grateful
+to Dr. J. R. Buchanan for his discovery of the science of SARCOGNOMY.
+His system brings us nearer to a recognition of the true nature of
+man, his origin and his destiny, and of the relations which he bears
+to the Divine Source from which he emanated in the beginning, and to
+which he will ultimately return; for the enlightened ones of all
+nations agree that the _real_ man, who resides temporarily in the
+physical human body, who feels through the instrumentality of the
+heart, and thinks through the instrumentality of the brain of the
+external body, does not originate in the womb of the mother from which
+the physical body is born, but is of a spiritual origin, again and
+again re-incarnating itself in physical masks and forms of flesh and
+blood, living and dying, and being reborn, until, having attained that
+state of perfection, which renders the inner man capable to exist in a
+state of spiritual consciousness without being encumbered by a gross
+earthly organization, which chains him to animal life.
+
+ [It should here be remarked that the great majority of those who
+ are considered enlightened, and to whom the world is indebted
+ for the sciences which it now possesses, do not accept this
+ theory of re-incarnation. As commonly stated, it is liable to
+ many decisive objections, and these objections, which I have
+ clearly stated in the Religio-Philosophical Journal, have not
+ been, and I think will not be, removed by the teachers of
+ re-incarnation.]
+
+It may perhaps not be premature to examine how far the doctrines of
+Dr. Buchanan correspond with the doctrines of occult science; that is
+to say, with that science which is based upon a perception and
+understanding of certain facts, which, to be perceived, require
+spiritual powers of perception, such as are not yet developed in the
+majority of mankind, but which are only in possession of those who
+have mentally risen above the sphere of external phenomena and
+accustomed themselves to look at spiritual things with the eye of the
+spirit. It is not my intention to enter at present into an elaborate
+review of the most prominent writers on occult subjects, and to quote
+passages from such authors to support the views expressed in the
+following pages, but rather to give a short statement of their
+doctrines in regard to the omnipotent power of Will and Life; both
+these powers being fundamentally identical; both being merely
+different modes of actions, or functions, of that universal, eternal,
+and divine Central Power of the universe, which is beyond the
+conception of mortals, and which the latter call _God_.
+
+The ancient religions, as well as reason and logic, tell us that there
+is, and can be, only one supreme God, or First Cause of the universe,
+and that from this one first and fundamental Cause or Power every
+secondary power and everything that exists has come into existence, or
+been evolved within it and through its eternal activity. The whole of
+the universe with everything contained therein, man included, is and
+can be nothing else but a manifestation of this internal fundamental
+power, or, as it has been expressed by the ancient philosophers, the
+universe is the product of the Divine Imagination (thought) of the
+First Great Cause, thrown into objectivity by its eternal Will.
+
+We see, therefore, the great unmanifested _One_ manifesting itself in
+its own _Substance_ (Space) by means of _two_ powers, _Thought_
+(imagination) and _Will_ (the _Word_ or Life); both powers being
+fundamentally identical and merely two different modes of activity or
+functions of the _One_ Eternal, internal Principle, called God.
+According to the _Bible_, God said, "Let there be light," and through
+the power of this outspoken "_Word_," the world came into existence.
+This allegory, expressed in modern language, means that by the
+_active_ Will of the universal First Cause, the images existing in its
+eternal memory were thrown into objectivity and thus produced the
+germs from which the worlds with all things existing therein were
+evolved and grew into the shapes in which we see them now. The
+_Brahmins_ say that when _Brahm_ awoke from his slumber after the
+night of creation (the great Pralaya) was over, he _breathed out_ of
+his own substance, and thus the evolution of worlds began. If he
+_in-breathes_ again, the worlds will be re-absorbed in his substance,
+and the day of creation will be over.
+
+ [God being essentially and self-evidently inconceivable by man,
+ all attempts of Brahmin, Christian, or any other theologians to
+ explain his existence and his methods of creation can be
+ recognized by the scientific mind only as hypotheses
+ unsusceptible of verification, and, therefore, incapable of
+ becoming a proper basis of Philosophy.]
+
+Thus we find, on examining the doctrines of all the greatest religions
+of the world, that they all teach the same truth, although they teach
+it in different words and in different allegories. They all teach that
+there exist two fundamental powers, originating from the absolute
+_One_, namely, _Thought_ and _Will_; and it logically follows that if
+a man were a complete master over his thoughts and his will, he could
+become a creator within the realm to which his thought and imagination
+extend; he could, consequently, by the power of his will and thought,
+control all the functions of his organism, the so-called involuntary
+ones as well as those which are voluntary. He could--if he possessed a
+perfect knowledge of his own constitution--restore abnormal functions
+to their normal state, and restore diseased organs to health.
+
+ [The mode of expression used in this paragraph is rather
+ misleading. One may have a complete mastery of his thoughts and
+ will, while both thought and will are very feeble and
+ ineffective. It requires great POWER in the will and thought to
+ acquire such control over bodily functions, and any expression
+ leading persons of feeble character to suppose they can attain
+ such results would be delusive. Many persons of feeble character
+ have been led by current speculations to aspire far beyond their
+ ability.]
+
+Another fundamental doctrine of Occultism is that man is a Microcosm,
+in which is germinally (potentially) contained everything that exists
+in the Macrocosm of the universe. [An unproved hypothesis.] As the
+will and thought of that universal and divine internal power, which is
+called God, penetrates and pervades the whole of the universe;
+likewise the will and thought of man, if he has once attained perfect
+mastery over himself, extends through all parts of his organization,
+pervades every organ, and may be made to act consciously wherever man
+chooses to employ it. But in the present state of man's condition upon
+this earth, no one but the adepts have acquired this power. In them
+thought and will act as one. In the vast majority of human beings
+thought and will are not yet in entire harmony, and do not act as one.
+In the regenerated one (the adept) heart and head act in perfect
+unison. The adept thinks what he wills, and wills what he thinks. In
+unregenerated humanity will and thought are divided and occupy two
+different centres. In them the will has its seat in the _blood_ (whose
+central organ is the heart), and their thought or imagination has its
+seat in the brain. In them heart and brain are often not only not in
+perfect harmony, but even opposed to each other. But the _will_ and
+_life_ being one, and identical, we see that the central seat of
+_life_ is not, as has been maintained by Dr. Buchanan, the _brain_,
+but the primary source of all life is the _heart_.
+
+We see, therefore, a discrepancy between the doctrines of Dr. Buchanan
+and the occult doctrines in regard to Anthropology; but this
+discrepancy is of no serious consequence; because the _moon_ (the
+_intellect_) is in our solar system as necessary as the _sun_ (the
+_will_), and as the vast majority of people have a considerably
+developed intellect, but only a very little developed will, and live,
+so to say, more in their brains than in their hearts, they may be
+looked upon as receiving their powers and energies from their brains,
+while the brain receives its stimulus from the heart. The ancient
+Rosicrucians compared the heart to the _sun_, the intellect, or
+_brain_, to the moon. The moon receives her light from the sun, the
+centre of life of our solar system. If the sun were to cease to exist,
+the moon would soon lose her borrowed light; likewise if the sun of
+divine love ceases to shine in the human heart, the cold, calculating
+intellect may continue to glitter for a while, but it will finally
+cease to exist. If the brain vampyrizes the heart, that is to say, if
+it absorbs the greater part of the life principle, which ought to go
+to develop love and virtue in the heart, man may become a great
+reasoner, a scientist, arguer, and sophist; but he will not become
+_wise_, and his intellect will perish in this life or in the state
+after death. We often see very intellectual people becoming criminals,
+and even lunatics are often very cunning. That which a man may call
+his own in the end, are not the thoughts which he has stored in his
+perishable memory; but the fire of love and light which he has kindled
+in his heart. If this fire of life burns at his heart it will
+illuminate his mind, and enable the brain to see clear; it will
+develop his spiritual powers of perception, and cause him to perceive
+things which no amount of intellectual brain-labor can grasp. It will
+penetrate even the physical body, and cause the soul therein to assume
+shape and to become immortal.
+
+It is not to be supposed that the above truths will be at once
+accepted by every reader of the JOURNAL, except by such as have given
+deep thought to the true nature of man. Neither are they a subject for
+scientific controversy or disputation. A knowledge of the truth is not
+produced by disputations and quarrels, but only by direct perception,
+experience, and understanding. The conclusions which man arrives at by
+logic are merely productive of certain opinions, and these opinions
+are liable to be changed again as soon as the basis from which his
+logic started, changes. A real knowledge of spiritual truths requires
+a power of spiritual perception, which few men possess. Nevertheless,
+even our logical deductions, taking as a starting point that which we
+know to be true, will help us to arrive at the same conclusions at
+which the Hermetic philosophers arrived by the power of spiritual
+perception.
+
+ [In the foregoing passage, Dr. H. professes to state doctrines
+ derived from intuition or spiritual perception by the ancients,
+ and also recognized to-day by spiritual perception. To me they
+ appear as the results only of that sort of ancient SPECULATION,
+ which recognized earth, air, fire, and water as the four
+ chemical elements of all things. I do not find them sustained by
+ the spiritual perception of those who have the intuitive powers
+ to-day, nor by scientific investigation. The substance of the
+ heart is _not the seat of life_. It is a merely muscular
+ substance, and ceases all action when separated from its
+ controlling ganglia. The vitality of the heart lies in its
+ ganglia--in other words, in the nervous system, _in which alone
+ is life_, and of which the brain is the commanding centre. That
+ life resides exclusively in the nervous system is one of the
+ established principles of physiology, which cannot be disturbed
+ by any theories descending from antiquity, before the dawn of
+ positive science. That the will resides in the blood and the
+ heart, is about as near the truth as Plato's doctrine that the
+ prophetic power belonged to the liver. If the region of Firmness
+ in the brain be large, it will be strongly manifested, even
+ though the heart be feeble, and as easily arrested as Col.
+ Townsend's. But if the upper surface of the brain be diseased,
+ or sensibly softened, the will power is almost destroyed, even
+ if the plethoric, hypertrophied heart is shaking the head with
+ its power. Many an individual of a delicate frame, has
+ overpowered by firmness and courage stout, muscular men of far
+ larger hearts. That the brain is the organ of thought alone, is
+ a very old crudity. It contains every human emotion and passion,
+ which we may stimulate in the impressible, or suspend instantly
+ by a slight pressure on the brain. There is no intense exercise
+ of any of the emotions or passions without a corresponding
+ warmth and tension in the portion of the brain to which they
+ belong, the development and activity of which determine their
+ power. The will and life are not _identical_, as Dr. H.
+ suggests, for if they were, we should not have these two words
+ with different meanings. If will is an attribute of life, that
+ does not constitute _identity_. The speculations of Rosicrucians
+ are of no authority in science. The divine love or influence is
+ in direct relation to the brain, the central organ of the soul,
+ and not to a muscular structure of the body, which is far below
+ the brain in rank. It would be just as reasonable to affirm that
+ courage belongs only to the muscles. That illuminating love
+ which Dr. H. ascribes to the heart, belongs to the upper region
+ of the brain, and is never found when that region lacks
+ development, or is in a cold, torpid condition. I deny entirely
+ that these mystic theories are the product of true, spiritual
+ perception. They arise from the fact that the thoracic region
+ sympathizes with the seat of true love and will in the brain.
+ This secondary effect has been felt and realized by those to
+ whom the functions of the brain were unknown. Spiritual
+ perception, now guided by the spirit of investigation, discovers
+ the whole truth--that all human faculties and impulses belong to
+ the brain, but have a secondary influence on the localities of
+ the body to which SARCOGNOMY shows their relations.]
+
+If we believe in one great spiritual cause of all, and conceive of it
+as the great spiritual Sun of the universe (of which our terrestrial
+sun is merely an image or reflection), we find that spiritual man (the
+image of God) can be nothing else but an individual ray of that
+spiritual sun, shining into matter, becoming polarized and forming a
+centre of life in the developing human foetus, and causing this
+foetus to grow in a living form of human shape, according to the
+conditions presented to it by the maternal organism, and when it is
+born, and becomes conscious, the illusion of self is created within
+that individual form. Besides the gross, visible, external form, more
+ethereal internal forms are evolved, which are of a longer duration
+than the outward physical form, but of which it is not necessary to
+speak at present.
+
+At all events, all that we positively know of man, is that he is an
+invisible internal power, which evolves an outward shape, which we
+call a human being. The material through which the organism is built
+up is the blood, and the centre from which the blood flows into all
+parts of the body and to which it returns from all parts, is the
+heart. The heart is consequently the centre from which that power
+which builds up the organism of man emanates, and as this power can be
+nothing else but Life, the heart is the centre of life. The heart and
+the brain stand in the most intimate relation to each other, and
+neither one can continue to live if the other one ceases to act; but
+according to the doctrines of the ancient and modern occultists the
+heart is of superior importance than the brain. A man may live a long
+time without thinking, but he ceases to live when his heart ceases to
+beat. The heart is the seat of life, the brain the seat of thought,
+but both are equally necessary to enjoy life; there is no intellectual
+activity without life, and a life without intelligence is worthless.
+That the force which constructs the organism of man emanates from the
+heart, appears to me to be self-evident; that the power which guides
+this construction emanates from the brain has been demonstrated by Dr.
+Buchanan.
+
+ [This is quite incorrect. The heart may cease acting, as in
+ apparent death while the processes of thought and feeling are
+ going on, and the individual is conscious that he is going to be
+ buried, but incapable of giving the alarm. On the other hand the
+ action of the brain may be suspended, as in apoplexy, while the
+ heart is beating vigorously. In such cases, though the action of
+ the cerebrum is suspended, the physiological brain or cerebellum
+ sustains physical life. We cannot say that the heart is superior
+ to the brain, because it supplies the brain with blood for its
+ growth, any more than we could say the same of the lungs, which
+ supply oxygen, without which the action of the brain is speedily
+ arrested. We might even extend the remark to the stomach and
+ thoracic duct, which supply the material for making a brain,
+ which certainly does not prove their superiority. The action of
+ the brain is far more important, for the quickest death is
+ produced by crushing the brain, or by cutting it off from the
+ body in the spinal cord of the neck, when heart, lungs, and
+ stomach are promptly arrested by losing the help of the brain.
+ If prior development in growth proved a superiority of rank, the
+ ganglionic system which accompanies the arteries and precedes
+ the evolution of the convoluted cerebrum would hold the highest
+ rank, although it is destitute of consciousness and volition,
+ which belong to the brain alone.]
+
+But what is this power which emanates from the brain, and which guides
+the organizing activity of the soul, but the power of life which is
+transmitted to the brain from the heart, and which is modified in its
+activity by the peculiar organization of the latter? Man in his
+present state does not think with his heart, but with his brain;
+nevertheless, the heart is superior to the brain, for the brain has
+been built up by the power which came from the heart; and it is a
+universal law of nature, that no thing can produce anything superior
+to itself. During its foetal existence the brain of the child is built
+up by the blood of the mother; after man is born his brain receives
+its power of life through the heart, and in spiritually developed man
+the thought-force created in the brain reacts again upon the will in
+the heart, controlling its desires and entering into harmonious union
+with the latter. The ancient alchemists say: "If the Sun (the heart)
+enters in conjunction with the _Moon_ (the brain) then will Gold
+(Wisdom) be produced."
+
+We see, therefore, in man two centres of life, the heart and the
+brain, and it may properly be said that the brain is the seat of life,
+only it may perhaps be added, that it is the secondary seat, while the
+principal seat is, or ought to be, in the heart. [Dr. H. identifies
+will with life, yet every one knows that all acts of volition proceed
+from the brain alone, and never from the heart; hence by his own
+statement the brain is the seat of life.] According to the doctrines
+of the Hermetic philosophers, God is the invisible central fire in the
+universe from which the Light of the Logos (Christ or the celestial
+Adam) emanated in the beginning. Man being a Microcosm, contains in
+his heart the image of that internal and invisible central fire of
+_Love_, which sends the light of thought to the brain and illuminates
+the mind of the seer. We are at present not living in the age of Love,
+but in the age of Thought (not the age of _Reason_, but the age of
+_Reasoning_ and Speculation), and by the law of heredity, life has
+become pre-eminently concentrated in the brain; while in a more
+advanced age, when the principle of universal Love and Benevolence
+will be generally recognized, life will become more strongly
+concentrated at the heart. Men will then not only think, but feel and
+become able to recognize the truth by that power which is known to us
+in its rudimental state as _Intuition_, but which, if developed, will
+be far superior to that uncertain feeling called Intuition, and become
+a Sun within the heart, sending its rays far up into the regions of
+thought. Then, as their Love for the supreme Good increases, will
+their knowledge increase, and as their knowledge expands will their
+Will become powerful and free.
+
+ [The physiology of this passage is all erroneous. In the ages of
+ animalism and barbarism the heart is more powerful, like the
+ rest of the muscular system to which it belongs. In a more
+ humane and refined condition the brain is more predominant. The
+ female heart is not as well developed as the male. The moral
+ superiority of women is due not to the heart but to the superior
+ region of the brain, to which we owe all elevation of
+ individuals and society.]
+
+It has been said above that Will and Life are identical, and there are
+sufficient facts to prove that they are one. A man may prolong his
+life by an effort of will, or he may cease to live if he wills to die.
+A loss of will-power in a limb is identical with paralysis of the
+latter. If the will (conscious or unconscious will) ceases to act, man
+ceases to live. No amount of thought exercised by the brain will raise
+a limb of a person, unless the person has the will to raise it; no
+amount of imagination on the part of the brain will execute an act,
+unless the will guided by the imagination causes the act to be
+executed. In the blood,--the representative of the animal
+life-principle (Kama-rupa) is the seat of the will, its central office
+is the heart. There the will or life-power acts consciously or
+unconsciously, sending its rays to the brain, where they become more
+refined, and from thence they radiate again back through the organism,
+causing the unconscious or conscious processes of imagination and
+thought. The way in which these processes take place, has been well
+described in Dr. Buchanan's "Therapeutic Sarcognomy." Love, Will, and
+Life are ultimately one and the same power; they are like the three
+sides of a pyramid ending in one point, or like a star emitting a
+light of three different hues. Without the fire of divine Love at the
+centre there will be no good and powerful Will, without Will man is a
+useless being, without virtue and without real life, an empty shell or
+form kept alive by the play of the elements, ceasing to exist when the
+form falls to pieces. But he who possesses a strong love for the good,
+the beautiful, and true, grows strong in Will and strong in Life. His
+heart sends a pure current of life to the brain, which enables the
+latter to see and grasp the ideas existing in the Astral light. The
+purer the will the more pure will be the imagination, and the more
+will the latter be able to rise to the highest regions of thought,
+while these exalted thoughts will radiate their light back again to
+the heart and stimulate the heart as the heart stimulated the brain.
+
+A consideration of the above will go to prove that Love (Will or Life)
+and Thought (Imagination or Light) are the forces by which the soul
+forms and regenerates the external body, and that he who obtains
+mastery over these forces within his own organism will be able to
+change and remodel his body and to cure it of all ills. The fountain
+of life is the will, and if the will is good and pure and not poisoned
+by the imagination, a pure blood and a strong and healthy body will be
+the result. If the imagination (thought) is pure, it will purify the
+will and expel from the latter the elements of evil. _The fundamental
+doctrine of the most rational system of medicine is therefore the
+purification of the Will and the Imagination_, and every one carries
+within his own heart the _universal panacea_, which cures all ills, if
+he only knows how to employ it. The purification and strengthening of
+the will by acts of love and human kindness and by leading a pure and
+unselfish life, should be the principal object of all religious and
+scientific education. The Bible says: "If the _salt_ (the will) of the
+earth is worthless, wherewith shall it be salted?" If the fountain
+from which all life springs is poisoned by evil thoughts, how can the
+soul and body be healthy? The best _blood-purifier_ is a pure will,
+rendered pure by pure and holy thoughts.
+
+This fundamental and self-evident truth is continually overlooked in
+our present age. The education of the intellect for the purpose of
+attaining selfish interests is made of paramount interest and the
+heart is neglected and left to starve.[1] The life-energy which ought
+to be employed to educate the heart and to render the will good and
+pure, is wasted in the top story of the temple of man in idle
+speculations about external and worthless things, in scientific
+quarrels and dogmatic disputations, which have usually no other object
+but to tickle personal vanity and to give to ignorance an external
+coat of learning. Many of our modern scientific authorities resemble
+ants, which crawl over a leaf which fell from a tree: they know all
+about the veins and cells of that leaf, but they know nothing whatever
+of the living tree, which produces such leaves, and moreover flowers
+and fruits. Likewise the rational medicine based upon reason and
+understanding, the science springing from a true knowledge of man will
+forever remain an enigma to the legally-authorized guardians of the
+health of humanity, as long as they know nothing of man except his
+external form and refuse to open their eyes and to see the eternal
+internal power, of which the external form is merely an evanescent
+image, a transient manifestation.
+
+ [1] There is no higher gift of Divinity than the gift of
+ intelligence, which, if pervaded by the light of Divine
+ love, constitutes the Christ, and those who are thus gifted
+ are indeed the "favorites of God." But if such a people kill
+ the Christ-principle in their hearts, and use their
+ intellectual powers merely for selfish purposes, they will
+ become _accursed_. A system of medicine or theology which is
+ based upon self-interests of the privileged class of doctors
+ and priests is a curse to humanity.
+
+
+Hoping that with the appearance of the JOURNAL OF MAN a new era of
+truly rational medicine will begin in progressive America,
+
+ I am yours truly and fraternally,
+ FRANZ HARTMANN, M.D.
+
+KEMPTEN, BAVARIA, April 7, 1887.
+
+ [While reaching my conclusions in a different manner by careful
+ and prolonged experimental investigation, and expressing them
+ differently, I agree with Dr. Hartmann in his most important
+ principle,--the importance of love as the best element of life,
+ in sustaining health and intelligence, and the necessity of its
+ culture in education, which has been so long neglected, and
+ which I have endeavored to enforce in the "New Education." The
+ structure and functions of the brain demonstrate that its love
+ region is the chief support of its life, that it supports both
+ will and intelligence, and that it not only sustains the highest
+ health of him in whom it is developed and exercised, but
+ ministers also to the health of all whom he meets, and is the
+ great healing power in those whose presence or touch relieves
+ the sick. The existence of this beneficent power in the human
+ constitution, more restorative and pleasant than all medicines
+ when present in sufficient fulness, is rapidly becoming known
+ throughout our country, and is made intelligible as to its
+ origin, nature and application by Sarcognomy, as I am teaching
+ in the College of Therapeutics. Medical colleges, in their
+ ignorance and jealousy, unwisely exclude and war against this
+ nobler and more ethical method of healing, thus compelling its
+ development and practice as a distinct profession, which is
+ rapidly undermining their influence and diminishing their
+ patronage by showing that, in many cases where drug remedies
+ have totally failed as applied by colleges, the psycho-dynamic
+ faculty of man may accomplish wonders.]
+
+
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE.
+
+
+RELIGION AND SCIENCE are exceedingly harmonious in assisting each
+other, but theologians and scientists are exceedingly discordant. Who
+is in fault? It is the fault of both. Both are bigoted and
+narrow-minded. Neither can see the truths that belong to the other
+party; theologians dislike science, not being able to see that science
+is a grander and more unquestionable revelation than any they have
+derived from tradition, and scientists deride religion and theology,
+not being able in their narrowness to recognize the higher forms of
+science in the great spiritual truths which have been apparent to all
+races from the most ancient limits of history. Of the scientific class
+the majority are averse to the religion of the times, partly from
+their own sceptical nature, and partly because religion has been
+presented in the repulsive forms of an absurd theology.
+
+Prof. E. S. Morse, the president of the American Association, is a
+very sceptical agnostic.
+
+ Proud Huxley's the Prince of Agnostics, you see,
+ And Huxley and I do sweetly agree.
+
+At the late meeting of the Association, August 10, at Columbia
+College, New York, Prof. Morse made an address in which he is reported
+as saying that "Dr. Darwin's theory was accepted by science, although
+ecclesiastical bodies now and then rose up to protest against it. He
+asserted that the missing links for which there was such a clamor were
+being supplied with such rapidity that even the zoologist had to work
+to keep up with his science. It was a singular fact that no sooner did
+some one raise an objection to the theories of derivative science,
+than some discovery was made which swept down the barrier. It was safe
+enough for an intelligent man, no matter what he knew of science, to
+accept as true what science put forth, and to set down as false
+whatever the church offered in opposition. Every theory and
+declaration of science had been opposed by the church. The penalty of
+original sin, according to a scientific writer, was the penalty of man
+being raised to an upright position. [Laughter.] Cannot it be proved
+without question that the illiteracy of Spain was the result of
+centuries of religious oppression and of the inquisition?"
+
+One of the scientists told a _World_ reporter (says the _Truth
+Seeker_) that at last year's convention in Buffalo, Prof. Morse made
+an address that was so full of infidelity that the Catholic diocesan
+authorities there forbade the clergy from attending the meetings.
+
+However, the Association has a small orthodox element in it, and on
+Sunday about one-eighth of the members held a prayer-meeting at
+Columbia College, at which allusions were made to the ungodly
+character of the majority of their associates, which the said
+associates on Monday regarded as a very objectionable proceeding.
+
+In the contests between scientists and theologians it has long been
+apparent that the theologians are steadily receding. The time was, two
+or three hundred years ago, when fearless scientists were imprisoned
+or burned by theologians. Now, the scientists who lead the age treat
+theology with contempt and the press sustains them. Meanwhile,
+scientific scepticism is invading the pulpit, and all that
+distinguishes the Bible from any treatise on moral philosophy is
+gradually being surrendered by leading theologians; they are losing
+religion as well as theology.
+
+
+GOOD PSYCHOLOGY.--Prof. Wm. James, of the chair of Philosophy in
+Harvard College, and apparently the most philosophic gentleman in that
+conservative institution, has published in the _Popular Science
+Monthly_ an essay on _Human Instincts_, characterized by a vigorous
+common sense and close observation. When he asserts (contrary to the
+old metaphysics) the existence of such instincts as fear,
+acquisitiveness, constructiveness, play (or, properly, playfulness),
+curiosity, sociability, shyness, secretiveness, cleanliness, modesty,
+shame, love, coyness or personal isolation, jealousy, parental love,
+etc., he shows the spirit of science. But is it not self-evident, Mr.
+James, to a man of your fine intelligence, that all strong impulses
+(or instincts, as you call them) must have a special nervous apparatus
+in the psychic region of the brain; and that loving, blushing,
+stealing, and fighting cannot be functions of the same organs
+concerned in perceiving color, or comprehending music? If I have
+traced these instincts to the special convolutions in which they
+reside, and given innumerable demonstrations of their locality, even
+in Boston, and before critical observers, why have you not interested
+yourself in the question of the cerebral localities and the complete
+demonstration of all the instincts by that method?
+
+I have even found an instinct of the _love of truth_ among the higher
+sentiments, which, to a few rare individuals, is the predominant
+impulse of their lives, though, alas, in college professors, as well
+as in other classes generally, it is "inhibited" by a great variety of
+opposing instincts, interests, and social influences. Nowhere is it
+more completely "inhibited" than in Boston and Cambridge, as I have
+been informed by the most intelligent old citizens.
+
+
+THE FAR-AWAY BATTLE.--In the quiet home the sounds of the far-away
+strife are not heard. The war of the cannon is determining the destiny
+of empires, but it is unheard in the cottage. The myriad sounds of
+commerce in the city do not disturb the quiet of that home. Its quiet
+life attracts no attention. But there is something in that home more
+important than war or commerce or king-craft--something that concerns
+human welfare more profoundly. In that quiet home, a human life is
+developing; a human soul preparing for its life work--a work that will
+change the destiny of coming generations. In many quiet homes such a
+work is in progress, determining a nation's future.
+
+All important movements are quiet and obscure in their origin. As the
+magnificent forest was slowly and obscurely germinated in darkness, in
+the seeds from which it sprung, so are the great discoveries in
+science and philosophy matured in quietness and obscurity. The thinker
+hears afar the sound of strife and the agitation of parties warring
+for power. He knows the follies and errors that agitate mankind, but
+he is withheld from entering the strife, for he has a more important
+work to accomplish--a work for the future. It is to such work that the
+JOURNAL OF MAN is devoted; laying the foundation of that philosophy in
+which future thinkers shall find the principles of social
+reorganization. It does not join in the strife of contending parties,
+nor does it recognize any existing party as entirely free from error.
+It gives its care to new and growing truths, knowing that, as Carlyle
+says, "The weak thing weaker than a child becomes strong one day if it
+be a true thing."
+
+
+HOW NOT TO DO IT.--The Seybert commission having made a splendid
+failure to find interesting and valuable facts where other
+investigators have succeeded, their blundering ignorance is now
+assisted by newspaper mendacity. The _New York Times_, of Aug. 22,
+concludes an extremely stupid article on this subject, by the
+following paragraph, which, if the writer gave any indications of
+intelligence, would be set down as a pure specimen of mendacity, but
+is more probably a specimen of indolent ignorance:
+
+ "If Spiritualists could furnish one clearly-proved case of a
+ spirit from the other world, seen and tested by those now living
+ on the earth, there would be some sense and reason in their
+ claims to be heard; but until they do, the great mass of
+ intelligent people will refuse to listen, and rightly, too."
+
+There must be an immense mass of the same kind of lazy ignorance in
+the community, when such stuff is tolerated in a newspaper. The
+contents of daily newspapers show that they expect more patronage from
+the debased and ignorant classes than from the intelligent and
+honorable.
+
+
+ROBBERY OF PUBLIC LANDS.--The report of Surveyor General Geo. W.
+Julian, of Colorado, shows that of the patented and unpatented lands
+referred to, aggregating 8,694,965 acres, it will be safe to estimate
+that at least one-half have been illegally devoted to private uses
+under invalid grants, or unauthorized surveys.
+
+He thinks it would not be extravagance to say that these land
+claimants, with their enormous interests, have exercised a shaping
+influence upon Congress. Congress has approved 47 out of 49 of these
+claims. In this connection the report calls attention to the action of
+Congress in 1860, and the Interior Department in 1879 in the famous
+Maxwell land grant case, which he characterizes as a wanton and
+shameful surrender to the rapacity of monopolists of 1,662,764 acres
+of the public domain, on which hundreds of poor men had settled in
+good faith and made valuable improvements. It has been as calamitous
+to New Mexico, says the Surveyor General, as it is humiliating to the
+United States. The report says:
+
+ "During the last Congress several members of both Houses,
+ including the delegate from this Territory, reported bills for
+ the confirmation of the Socorro grant, which is one of the most
+ shocking of the many attempts yet made to plunder the public
+ domain. I do not say that the men who introduced these bills
+ intended to make themselves parties to any scheme of robbery,
+ but their action shows that the hidden hand of roguery is still
+ feeling its way in Congress for a friendly go-between."
+
+As a remedy for this condition of affairs, Mr. Julian recommends
+resurveys of all grants about which there is any doubt, and the
+entering of suits to set aside patents obtained by fraud.
+
+
+LAND REFORM IN ENGLAND.--One hundred and twenty-four members of the
+English Parliament are in favor of the following land scheme
+propounded by Charles Bradlaugh:
+
+ "Ownership of land should carry with it the duty of cultivation.
+
+ "Where land capable of cultivation with profit, and not devoted
+ to some purpose of public utility or enjoyment, is held in a
+ waste or uncultivated state, the local authorities ought to have
+ the power to compulsorily acquire such land.
+
+ "The compensation is to be only the 'payment to the owner for a
+ limited term of an annual sum not exceeding the then average net
+ annual produce of the said lands.'
+
+ "The local authorities are to let the lands thus acquired to
+ tenant cultivators.
+
+ "The conditions of tenure are to be such 'as shall afford
+ reasonable encouragement, opportunities, facilities, and
+ security for the due cultivation and development of the said
+ land.'"
+
+
+LIFE IN EUROPE.--Senator Frye, of Maine, having returned from Europe,
+spoke thus to a reporter, at Lewiston:
+
+ "We have taken a tour of the continent and of Great Britain, and
+ although we have seen many places, we have seen no place like
+ home--no place in all respects equal to America. You will find
+ in the Old World much that is admirable, but what impressed me
+ most painfully was the poverty of the masses of the people. Why,
+ the people in Europe live on the poorest food, and mighty little
+ of it. I found that laborers in Glasgow work for 2s. 6d. a
+ day--sixty-two cents. I was charmed with Edinburgh, but when I
+ saw women drunk and fighting in her beautiful streets, the
+ modern Athens lost her charms. I cannot convey to you the
+ picture of the degradation and want throughout Great Britain,
+ caused by drink. I come back a stouter cold-water man than when
+ I went away. The drink evil is a horror. Speaking of wages, I
+ found girls in factories in Venice working with great skill for
+ from five to twelve cents a day, the most experienced getting
+ twelve cents a day, out of which they have to live, but how they
+ live is a wonder. Their chief diet is macaroni. Farm hands all
+ over Europe--women--earn twenty cents a day. Women do most of
+ the field work. I saw no improved machinery on the farms of the
+ continent. I have seen twenty women in one field at work--not a
+ man in sight. The plain people see no meat to eat once a week on
+ the continent. The condition of American wage-earners is
+ incomparably better than that of working people in Europe. It's
+ the difference between comfort and competence, and discomfort
+ and insufficient food and clothing.
+
+ "Perhaps the most contemptible people one meets abroad are the
+ Anglicized Americans--the man who apes, both in manners and
+ language, what he regards as the English aristocracy, affects to
+ believe everything in England perfect, and seems to be ashamed
+ to institute any favorable comparison between his country and
+ that."
+
+
+EDUCATION IN FRANCE.--The Academy of Medicine has passed a resolution
+demanding of the government changes in the hours of study for
+children, larger play grounds, removal of schools to the country, and
+daily teaching of gymnastics. These suggestions are urgently needed in
+France, where children are subjected to a far more rigid and
+enfeebling method than in America. The power of the church over
+education is destroyed in France, and religious instruction is now
+prohibited.
+
+
+CANADA AND THE UNION.--Rev. W. H. Murray reports a strong feeling in
+Canada for annexation. He says:
+
+ "A gentleman of great influence in this city, and of established
+ loyalty to the land of his birth, described the position here
+ very distinctly in the following words: 'I wish I could make
+ money and remain an Englishman, but I can't, and hence I propose
+ to become an American, for I cannot impoverish myself and my
+ family for a sentiment, however honorable.'
+
+ "In the many conversations I have heard on the part of many
+ people of all classes touching commercial union, it has, in
+ every case, been assumed that it was only a prelude to political
+ union also. Many have insisted, as they talked, that the two
+ countries should come together, and at once; that the feeling of
+ the country was fast ripening for it, and that what it lacked in
+ education in this matter would soon be learned. This has
+ surprised me; for it was not so a few years ago."
+
+
+WOMAN IN THE MOON.--The discovery of a woman in the moon is announced
+by W. H. Burr, in a letter to the New York _Sun_, It was made more
+than a year ago by Dr. James H. Thompson, a retired physician of
+Washington. It is a profile occupying the west half of the moon, the
+dark spot above answering to the banged hair. She faces a little
+upward, and has a neck big enough to require a collar of the size that
+Mr. Cleveland wears. And yet she is good-looking. The profile may be
+seen through an opera-glass.--_Truth Seeker_.
+
+
+EMANCIPATION FROM PETTICOATS.--"That distinguished Parisienne, Mme. de
+Valsayre, has been petitioning the French legislature in favor of the
+emancipation of women from petticoats. Her case is that petticoats are
+very dangerous, leading to innumerable fatal accidents, and that
+trousers are just as decent, more healthy and far less expensive. 'All
+this is very true,' says Labouchere, in the _World_, 'though I do not
+suppose that if the French women were as free as our own countrywomen
+are to dress as they like, they would make much use of their liberty.
+Trousers do not afford the same scope for decoration as petticoats.
+They cannot be trimmed to any considerable extent, and the effect of
+an improver or bustle worn under them would be absurd. I have always
+wondered, however, that serious ladies in this country do not set more
+store by this branch of progress. If I were a woman I would much
+rather have a pair of trousers than a vote or even a university
+degree.'"
+
+
+WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE STREETS.--The lawless freedom with which men
+approach or assail women in some American cities, while women on the
+other hand are subjected to the meddlesome and domineering
+interference of policemen, lends some interest to the case of Miss
+Cass in London, one of the victims of police brutality, which has
+excited an inquiry and comment in Parliament, and is likely to result
+in the punishment of the policeman. The New York _Sun_ says:
+
+ "The case of Miss Cass, who was arrested in Regent Street as a
+ disreputable character, has started in the _Pall Mall Gazette_ a
+ discussion of the annoyances to which decent women are subjected
+ in the streets of London. It will be remembered that she was a
+ respectable girl recently arrived in London, where she had
+ obtained employment in a milliner's shop, and that while waiting
+ in Regent Street early in the evening she was arrested by a
+ policeman, who insisted in regarding her as a professional
+ street-walker, as which, also, she was held by a magistrate, who
+ refused, to listen to her denials and explanations.
+
+ "Many women have accordingly written to the _Pall Mall Gazette_
+ to ask why, if a woman is liable to arrest on the mere suspicion
+ of having addressed a man, men are allowed to annoy and insult
+ women in the London streets with perfect impunity. The testimony
+ of them all is that, even in the daytime, a lady with any claims
+ to good looks, and who walks alone, is always liable to such
+ treatment, no matter how modest her apparel and reserved her
+ demeanor. It is not merely of insolent and persistent staring
+ that they complain, for they have grown to expect that as a
+ matter of course; but they are actually spoken to by men who are
+ strangers to them, in the most insinuating and offensively
+ flattering terms. These men are commonly described as
+ 'gentlemen' in appearance; 'a tall, distinguished,
+ military-looking man;' 'a youthful diplomat;' 'a government
+ official, a man holding a lucrative appointment,' and the like.
+ They are not roughs; from them ladies have nothing of the sort
+ to fear; but men who think to have the greater success and to
+ enjoy the complete immunity because they wear the garb of
+ gentlemen.
+
+ "Rev. Mr. Haweis writes that 'you might easily fill the _Pall
+ Mall Gazette_ with nothing else for months, for we have come to
+ such a pass as this, that a young girl cannot stand aside at a
+ railway station while papa takes tickets, nor a girl lead her
+ blind relative through the streets, nor can a married woman go
+ twenty paces in a London thoroughfare without the risk of insult
+ or even assault.'"
+
+These evils are a relic of the old ideas of woman's inferiority, and
+their only sure remedy is the destruction of that inferiority by the
+industrial and professional education, which will make the woman the
+par of her brother, and enable her to maintain her equal rights
+everywhere.
+
+
+A WOMAN'S TRIUMPH IN PARIS.--The public examination of Miss Bradley at
+the Ecole de Medicine in Paris is thus described:
+
+When Miss Bradley stepped into the arena, clad in the traditional
+garb, the general comment of the audience was:
+
+ "How like _Portia_ in the trial scene of the 'Merchant of
+ Venice.'"
+
+It was known to Miss Bradley's college mates and other friends that
+her thesis would be on "Iodism," and that she had taken a year to
+write an elaborate book on the subject, which will soon be republished
+in England from the original French. For an hour and a half she was
+questioned with great shrewdness and ability by four of the leading
+professors of the Ecole de Medicine,--Drs. Fournier, Gautier, Porchet,
+and Robin. Each of these gentlemen had previously received a copy of
+Miss Bradley's bold book, and they had brought their copies to the
+examining room, with multitudinous interrogation marks on the margins,
+showing that the new treatise had not only been very carefully read,
+but had excited much curiosity and attention. Miss Bradley had the
+great advantage of an unhackneyed theme, which she skilfully
+illustrated by a numerous array of unfamiliar facts.
+
+Her triumph was of a very peculiar character. Her four examiners said
+to her, with admiring frankness: "You have been working a new field;
+we cannot agree with many of your conclusions; further investigation
+may lead either yourself or us to different views; but, meanwhile, you
+have presented to the college a thesis which does you uncommon honor,
+and for which we unanimously award you the maximum mark of merit."
+
+After the announcement of the award, Miss Bradley was entertained at
+dinner by Miss Augusta Klumpke, the first female physician who has
+ever been admitted to practice in the hospitals of Paris. Both these
+ladies are Americans--Miss Klumpke from San Francisco, and Miss
+Bradley from New York.
+
+
+A WOMAN'S BIBLE.--We have not reached the end of revision. A woman's
+translation of the Bible is expected next. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton
+is the chairman of the American committee having this matter in
+charge, and a woman's Bible and commentary are to be expected in due
+time.
+
+
+WORK FOR WOMEN.--Miss Katie Young, of Ironton, Mo., writes _The Voice_
+a letter upon the advantages of plating, as a new and pleasant field
+of work for women. A relative made her a plating-machine at a cost of
+$4; she readily obtained orders for work from everybody in the
+neighborhood; the outlay for chemicals, etc., proved slight; and in 22
+days she netted $95.45. Her brother, working 24 days, cleared $90.50.
+Miss Young states that she is making a collection of curiosities, and
+that to any lady sending her a sea-shell, fancy stone, piece of rock,
+ore or crystal, an old coin, or curious specimen of any description,
+she will be glad to mail complete directions for making a machine
+similar to hers, that will do gold, silver and nickel-plating.
+
+F. Henry Greer writes: "Two young gentlewomen are studying electrical
+engineering, which profession has not yet been overcrowded. Great
+fortunes have been made in its pursuit. If any readers of your
+valuable journal are interested, I will freely give them any
+information in my power."
+
+
+MRS. STANTON ON THE JUBILEE.--"If mine has been the one discordant
+note in the grand jubilee chorus to the Queen, it is because behind
+all the busy preparations for the most brilliant pageant the world has
+ever witnessed, of gilded royalty and nobility, my eyes beheld the
+dark shadows on the background of homeless, starving men, women and
+children, into whose desolate lives would never come one touch of
+light or love. There is something to me unspeakably sad in the eager,
+gazing multitudes that crowd the streets on these grand gala days.
+There is ever a sphinx-like questioning look in their upturned faces
+that seems to say, 'Ah! must the many ever suffer that the few may
+shine?' As the sun went down on that 21st of June, what a contrast in
+the close of the day's festivities between the children of luxury and
+want.
+
+"Who that can share in imagination one hour the miseries of England's
+impoverished people, can rejoice in a reign of fifty years that has
+cost the nation 22,000,000 of pounds sterling in extra allowances to
+the Queen and her children, in addition to the legitimate cost of the
+royal household and the hereditary property rights of the throne?"
+Nevertheless the Jubilee was a fine exhibition, and the _London
+Baptist_ says that $4,000 was paid for the use of the windows of one
+house to see the Jubilee.
+
+
+ELECTRICITY seems destined to be the motor power for street cars. In
+Montgomery, Alabama, the mule has already been superseded, and there
+are fifteen miles of street railways operated by the electric motor.
+Some satisfactory experiments have been made on the Cambridge Street
+railway. Edison's latest discoveries in the conversion of heat into
+electricity are expected to produce important results, dispensing with
+the intermediate use of steam, and ultimately getting the power from
+the sun's rays.
+
+
+PROGRESS OF THE TELEGRAPH.--The _London Times_ thus summarizes some of
+the statements made by Mr. Raikes, the postmaster-general, in his
+speech delivered at the telegraph jubilee the other day:
+
+ At first a machine required five wires before it could dispatch
+ a message. Now on one single wire seven or eight messages can be
+ sent simultaneously. At first the rate of sending did not amount
+ to more than four or five words a minute. Now on the latest
+ machine no less than 462 words a minute can be dispatched. The
+ number of messages has increased by steady steps, until now,
+ under the new tariff and with the facilities that have been so
+ widely extended since the telegraphs came into the hands of the
+ government, the number is truly portentous. Those sent during
+ the past year amounted to close upon a million a week--fifty-one
+ and one-half millions in all. Letters have grown from 80,000,000
+ in the year of the Queen's accession to more than 1,400,000,000.
+ According to Mr. Pender, there are some 115,000 miles of cables
+ lying at the bottom of the sea. The progress in this department
+ has been constant. The latest scheme, as the new colonial
+ blue-books show, is for laying a cable under the Pacific Ocean,
+ from Vancouver to New Zealand. Surely there is no task from
+ which modern science will recoil.
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF THE AGES.--A work recently published at London by the
+Countess of Caithness is a work of ability and learning, devoted
+especially to a philosophy which is thus defined:
+
+ "Theosophy is the essence of all doctrines, the inner truth of
+ all religions.... God is Spirit, and Spirit is One, Infinite,
+ and Eternal, whether it speak through the life of Buddha or
+ Jesus, Zoroaster or Mahommed.... The ideal of the Theosophist is
+ the at one-ment of his own spirit with that of the Infinite.
+ This is the essential teaching of all religions, and to obtain
+ this union you must believe in and obey the voice of your own
+ higher conscience; for the true Christ is the Divine Spirit
+ within you, and thus, God manifest in humanity."
+
+
+PROGRESS OF THE MARVELLOUS.--Mrs. Herbert, of St. Joseph's Hospital,
+Joliet, Illinois, as reported Aug. 16, had slept 219 days, sitting in
+an easy chair, in a cataleptic state. She rarely moves a muscle, and
+if her arm is lifted and not replaced it remains as it was left. Her
+hands are cold, and her face very pallid. The food given her daily, it
+is said, would only sustain life in a bird, and the doctors are
+expecting her death.
+
+Mr. C. J. Helleberg, of Cincinnati, says that a lady of his family has
+become developed as a medium, and many messages have been written
+through her. Among others, a message from Charles XII. of Sweden
+declared that "Sweden will be a republic sooner than any other power
+in Europe," and the elections will be easily and honestly managed.
+
+
+A GRAND AEROLITE.--The _Galt Gazette_ (California) describes the fall
+of a meteor in that vicinity, witnessed by Dr. Goodspeed, which fell
+in a slough and so heated the water as to kill the catfish that
+inhabited it. It lies in the pond, and looks as if a hundred feet
+wide. A much more marvellous story has been published of an engraved
+meteoric stone falling in an obscure portion of Georgia near Clayton
+Court-house, which is a hoax, and has been so pronounced by the
+postmaster at Clayton.
+
+Whether the California story is true I have not ascertained, but the
+fall of a great meteor in this region has developed a grand meteoric
+capacity for lying. The despatch first published by the _Boston
+Herald_ described the stone as falling near McAdam Junction, not far
+from Bangor, Maine, making the crockery rattle at the Junction, and
+plunging into the earth all but about ten feet of the stone, which was
+so hot that no one could come within fifty yards of it. It has not
+been found at all, for it dropped into the Bay of Fundy; but it
+illuminated the whole country for a vast distance, and looked as large
+as the moon. It had a long trailing violet light behind it as it fell.
+Our meteoric showers generally occur in August, this was on the 15th
+of September.
+
+
+THE BOY PIANIST.--Joseph Hoffmann is considered in London the greatest
+young pianist since the days of Mozart. He is coming to America. He is
+from Poland.
+
+
+CENTENARIANS.--The _Rabbi Hirsch_, born in Poland, died a few weeks
+ago in Brooklyn, aged 109. He saw Napoleon on his march to Moscow.
+Mrs. Paradis of North Grosvenordale, Conn., died Aug. 26, aged 120.
+The _Boston Globe_ in making a record of old people in Maine, has
+mentioned Miss Betsey Sargent, of Canterbury, aged 100; Mrs. Ellen
+Scott, Portsmouth, 100; Mrs. Mary Mann, Oxford, 101; Mrs. Jane Wilson,
+Edgecomb, 102; John Chandler, Concord, 102; Mrs. Nancy Chase, Edgerly,
+103; Perault Pickard, Colchester, 107; Robert Peters, Berwick, 107;
+George McQueen, Portland, 109; Giles Bronson, Castleton, 115; Mrs.
+Mary Ludkends, Portland, 117.
+
+Samuel Zielinski, a Pole, who came to the United States after he was
+100 years old, is now living a mile from Dubois, Illinois, with his
+descendants, at the age of 120.
+
+
+EDUCATED MONKEYS.--The story comes from Brazil, by way of Panama, that
+on a hemp farm seven large monkeys have been taught to work as
+laborers, and that they work faster and eat less than negroes. If they
+can pull hemp, why not do other work? If this report is confirmed it
+may be of some importance.
+
+A correspondent of the _New York Times_ says that monkeys from Cape
+Town, Africa, have been introduced successfully into the hemp fields
+of Kentucky. One gentleman employs twelve near Shelbyville, Perkins &
+Chirsman have eleven, Smith & Murphy twenty-six, and J. B. Park, near
+Kingston, who introduced monkey labor, employs seventeen. The monkeys
+cost about $60 each, they are docile, easily taught, and cost about
+one fourth of human labor.
+
+
+CAUSES OF IDIOCY.--Dr. T. Langdon Down, inquiring into the causes of
+idiocy, has found that intemperance of parents is one of the most
+considerable factors in producing the affection. His view is confirmed
+by some French and German investigators, one of whom, Dr. Delasiauve,
+has said that in the village of Careme, whose riches were in its
+vineyards, ten years' comparative sobriety, enforced by vine-disease,
+had a sensible effect in diminishing the cases of idiocy. Nervous
+constitution and consumption exercise important influence. Of the
+professions, lawyers furnish the smallest proportion of idiots, while
+they are credited with the procreation of a relatively very large
+number of men of eminence. With the clergy, these proportions are more
+than reversed. The influence of consanguineous marriage, _per se_, is
+insignificant, if it exists.--_Pop. Science Monthly_.
+
+
+A POWERFUL TEMPERANCE ARGUMENT.--A most powerful argument for
+temperance is furnished by the records of the British army in India
+for 1886, showing the comparative amount of crime, disease, and death
+among 12,807 soldiers, of whom 3,278 were temperate, and 8,828 were
+drinking men. The number of cases of crime among the abstainers was
+172, among the drinkers 3,988, a difference of one to twenty-three in
+number, or more than ten to one in percentage. The temperate had but
+4.32 per cent. of crime, the drinkers 45.17 per cent. The percentage
+of sickness and death was more than twice as great among the drinkers.
+Liquor, therefore, _more than doubled_ the proportion of disease and
+mortality, and increased the _criminality more than tenfold_. Of the
+numbers tried by court martial there were 120 times as many
+proportionally among the drinkers as among the temperate. The
+destructive effects of drink are far greater in hot climates, and
+perceptibly greater in hot weather.
+
+The Southern States of the Union are in advance of the Northern on the
+temperance question. The legislature of Georgia has passed a bill by a
+large majority which taxes wine rooms in prohibition counties $10,000.
+At present this covers nearly all the State.
+
+The forty-fifth annual report of the Registrar General of England
+shows that estimating the average mortality of males in England at
+1,000, that of brewers is 1,361, of innkeepers and publicans 1,521.
+Scotch reports show the mortality of males engaged in the liquor
+business to be 68 per cent. above the actuaries table for healthy
+males, and 49 per cent. over the English life table.
+
+
+SLOW PROGRESS.--It was a long time before lobelia was recognized by
+the profession--before anything good was found to belong to it. Now
+one of our leading professors thinks lobelia will become the most
+valuable of our cardiac sedatives--regulator of the heart's action. I
+wrote up the value of lobelia in surgery, obstetrics and practice over
+thirty years ago; also the valuable properties of hydrastis can., both
+of which were almost unnoticed then and since by regular
+practitioners. But now Prof. Bartholow has discovered their great
+merits and written the latter up especially, and what I and Prof.
+Dodd, (V. S.,) wrote a third of a century ago will be credited to
+others. Well, who cares? The tincture of calendule flavas I have tried
+to force upon the profession for forty years as a dressing for wounds,
+but it will require some one higher in the profession to give it a
+hurrah, boys!--_Med. Summary_.
+
+
+COMMUNITY DOCTORS.--It is manifestly the interest of society that the
+doctor should be engaged and paid by the year, so that his interest
+would be to keep the people well instead of sick. Moreover, it would
+be more economical, as a doctor, secure of steady support, would not
+be inclined to make heavy charges, and the patient would not find a
+fit of illness making a dangerous inroad on his finances, so as to
+double his misfortune. The scheme has been advocated in the
+newspapers.
+
+
+THE SELFISH SYSTEM OF SOCIETY.--The system of antagonism and
+competition results in a universal system of plunder by exorbitant
+charges, and each man protects himself by overcharging in return.
+Plunder by overcharging is so much the custom that no one objects to
+it. The _Boston Herald_ says: "There is a baker in New York, who sells
+large loaves of bread of the finest quality for five cents a loaf. The
+same-sized loaf sells for ten cents in Boston." In like manner,
+Americans generally pay ten cents for a loaf about half as large as
+that sold for ten cents, in London; yet the London baker has to buy
+the same flour after its cost is enhanced by an ocean voyage. This is
+the custom of society; the glass of lemonade, costing perhaps two
+cents, is sold at all prices, from five or ten cents up to
+twenty-five.
+
+The correspondent of a Denver paper says that lumber costing
+forty-five cents a hundred feet, is sold at $2.25. These are samples
+of the financial disorder of life in all departments.
+
+
+EDUCATED BEETLES.--Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 24. Miss Emily Nelson, of
+this city, has received a present from Merida, Yucatan, in the shape
+of an educated jewelled bug. It has a harness of gold and is jewelled
+with precious stones.
+
+The custom is said to have originated among the Spanish nobility
+several centuries ago, when the first bug was educated and worn by a
+princess. The bug became greatly attached to the maiden, and partook
+of her moods and dispositions. When she was sad or disheartened the
+bug became sluggish; and when she was joyous and vivacious the bug was
+likewise lively in its movements. At her death, the bug pined away and
+died, too.
+
+Miss Nelson is very happy and justly very proud of her present. The
+insect is about the size of an ordinary black beetle. Around the body
+is firmly fastened a gold band. A gold strap is riveted to this and
+passes down the back around and under the body, and is welded upon the
+under side to the gold belt. Upon the back are tiny jewels set in gold
+and fastened into the shell. The coloring of the shell is a brilliant
+Nile green, edged with black. The movement of the bug gives flashes of
+variegated colors. Upon the under side is fastened a delicate gold
+chain which in turn is attached to a brooch. It is educated to eat
+from the lips. It understands various whistles and calls, and appears
+and disappears at the word of command.--_Globe_.
+
+
+RUSTLESS IRON is being manufactured in New York by a new process
+which, it is claimed, converts the surface of the metal into magnetic
+oxide of iron. This is done by subjecting it successively to the
+action of highly heated air and carbonic acid gas from coal fires. The
+process can be applied with most satisfactory results to water-pipes
+and architectural work.
+
+
+WEIGHING THE EARTH.--Prof. Proctor proposes to repeat in Florida an
+experiment to determine the weight of the earth, and mentions the
+results of the methods heretofore tried. Newton first estimated the
+weight of the earth to be between five and six times as great as that
+of water. Such a weight it would have if it were one half iron and the
+other half limestone, or half copper and half clay. Evidently the
+metallic weight preponderates.
+
+Weighing the earth is accomplished by comparing the effect of its
+attraction with that of much smaller bodies. One method is to compare,
+by balancing the weight of two balls, one above a globe of lead, as
+large as practicable, and the other below it, so as to have the
+attraction of the leaden globe pulling up and counteracting the
+gravitation to the earth. The effect is very slight and requires
+delicate apparatus.
+
+By another, but more inaccurate method, the attraction of the earth
+has been compared with that of a mountain--a very indefinite method
+indeed. A better method was that of Astronomer Airy and Mr. Dunkin,
+who went down into the Harton coal pit 1,260 feet to see how much
+difference that depth would make in the movements of a pendulum. It
+gained 2-1/4 seconds in 24 hours, and the weight of the earth was
+inferred to be over 6-1/2 times as great as that of water; but it is
+manifest that such a method could yield nothing much more accurate
+than the mountain experiment which indicated a weight 4-3/4 times that
+of water. The ball experiment, which is the most reliable, indicated
+5-1/2 times the weight of water, thus coinciding with Newton's
+astronomical opinion, which is probably true.
+
+
+HEAD AND HEART.--The popular use of the terms head and heart to
+represent thought and emotion, which is contrary to physiology, is
+analogous to Dr. Hartmann's statement of the oriental doctrine that
+thought alone belongs to the brain, but life and will to the heart.
+This ancient _speculation_ (not intuition) is easily refuted. If it
+were true, the will power and powers of life would be proportional to
+the development of the heart, regardless of the brain, but the reverse
+is the fact. Great development of heart does not increase either will
+power, or life, but is injurious to both. The enlarged (hypertrophied)
+heart is injurious to vital power and will power, and in proportion to
+its increase, it tends to shorten life by apoplexy or some other form
+of cerebral disorder. It produces no increase of either life, will, or
+love. In fact, the stomach is more nearly associated with love than
+the heart, for men are much more amiable after enjoying a feast, but
+the heart, which is a part of the muscular system, is at its maximum
+of action in combat and war.
+
+
+THE RECTIFICATION OF CEREBRAL SCIENCE, commenced in this number, will
+be continued in the November number, bringing the science up to its
+present condition, and showing how, after the rectification is
+completed, the science attains a grand simplicity, and, instead of
+being puzzled by cerebral organology, a very brief instruction will
+enable us to master the subject. In 1836 I instructed Prof. Cubi at
+New Orleans in the old organology, giving him six lessons in exchange
+for his instructions in Spanish. Three lessons would give an equal
+familiarity with the new system, though it is four times as extensive.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.--RECTIFICATION OF CEREBRAL SCIENCE, CORRECTING THE
+ORGANOLOGY OF GALL AND SPURZHEIM.
+
+ Approximate correctness and incompleteness of Gall and
+ Spurzheim--Grand anatomical discoveries of Gall---Reception of
+ his doctrines--His successors--Omission of Pneumatology and
+ Physiology by Gall and Spurzheim--Organs and faculties
+ overlooked--True locations of the faculties they recognized,
+ Amativeness, Philoprogenitiveness, Adhesiveness, Inhabitiveness,
+ Destructiveness, Combativeness, Secretiveness, Acquisitiveness,
+ Constructiveness, Cautiousness, Approbativeness, Self-Esteem,
+ Firmness, Religion, Benevolence, Hope, Marvellousness, Poetry,
+ Ideality, Imitation, Wit or Mirthfulness, Eventuality,
+ Individuality, Perceptive Organs, Time, Comparative Sagacity,
+ Causality, Tune, Constructiveness, Language--Comments on the
+ Organology of Gall.
+
+
+The first question that occurs to the enlightened enquirer, when he
+learns that the functions of the brain have been positively determined
+by experiment, is whether the cranioscopy of Gall and Spurzheim was
+successful in locating the cerebral functions, and how nearly their
+inferences from development correspond with the revelations of
+experiment.
+
+It is with great pleasure that I am able to say that the system of
+Gall and Spurzheim was a wonderful approximation to the truth. Dr.
+Gall was pre-eminently the scientific pioneer of the nineteenth
+century. No single individual ever did so much to enlarge the sphere
+of human knowledge, and to establish the permanent foundations of
+philosophy. Up to his time, the brain of man was at once the greatest
+mystery of anatomy and the repository of a greater amount of wisdom
+and truth than all other realms of science which had previously been
+explored. But so limited was the knowledge, and so narrow the
+understanding of the learned, that the grandeur of cerebral science
+was not even suspected, and, even at the present time, it is so remote
+from the speculations of the learned that, like a distant star, it has
+few practical relations to their life; nor will its magnitude be
+realized until an ample literature shall have made its scientific
+record.
+
+Into this field of mystery, Dr. Gall advanced with a courage unknown
+to his predecessors, and his success was equal to his courage. The
+entire plan and constitution of the brain were revealed by his
+anatomical genius, and his successors have but carried further and
+perfected his anatomical system. His anatomical exposition of the
+brain, addressed to the French Institute in 1808, is one of the great
+landmarks of the progress of science--the commencement of a new era;
+and his exposition of its functions was the solution of a problem
+which had defied the genius and learning of all his predecessors. His
+discoveries in anatomy were so great that Reil (himself a brain
+anatomist of the highest rank, whose name is permanently associated
+with anatomy by the name "Island of Reil," which belongs to the
+location in which Gall made his first discovery of the faculty and
+organ of language), Reil, I say, declared that Dr. Gall had shown him
+more in his dissections of the brain than he thought it possible for
+any one man to have discovered in his lifetime; and, in fact, some of
+the old anatomists, not having been personally instructed by Gall,
+professed to find it difficult, if not impossible, to unfold the brain
+after his manner.
+
+These discoveries gave Dr. Gall at once a very eminent rank among the
+learned, for anatomy being a physical science, there never has been
+any opposition, jealousy, or scepticism against its cultivation among
+the educated, nor was there anything marvellous in his revelation of
+cerebral functions, for he studied only the common familiar faculties
+of men and animals, and never looked into the mysterious and
+marvellous powers which a more thorough investigation has revealed.
+
+Indeed, his reception at first was quite triumphant, and it was not
+until the death of Gall and Spurzheim, leaving no able and competent
+representative to carry on their labors, that the drift of medical
+scepticism and ignorance arrested the progress of his doctrines. I say
+_ignorance_, for the aversion to the doctrines of Gall was due far
+more to the ignorance of the profession and their entire neglect of
+the craniological method than to any other causes.
+
+Gall had good reason to be satisfied with his first reception, except
+as to the hostility of the Austrian government, which suppressed his
+lectures and compelled him to go abroad, settling finally in Paris,
+where he again encountered governmental hostility in the
+unfriendliness of Bonaparte, whose rejection alike of Gall and of
+Fulton, who wished to introduce steam navigation, demonstrated that
+great military and political ability may co-exist with great
+shallowness of mind in reference to all things new, original, and
+philanthropic. So it has always been, and so it continues.
+
+In his travels in Germany, from 1805 to 1807, accompanied by Dr.
+Spurzheim, "I experienced everywhere (said Gall) the most flattering
+reception. Sovereigns, ministers, philosophers, legislators, artists
+seconded my design on all occasions, augmenting my collection, and
+furnishing me everywhere with new observations. The circumstances were
+too favorable to permit me to resist the invitations which came to me
+from most of the universities." Thirty-four of the leading cities and
+seats of learning enjoyed the visits of Gall and Spurzheim before they
+settled in Paris, where, although French jealousy arose against this
+German invasion, and the influence of Napoleon prevented their cordial
+reception, they nevertheless commanded and retained the respect of
+scientists and had many devoted friends, including Broussais and
+Andral, who then stood at the head of the medical profession, and of
+Corvisart, Napoleon's physician, who could not overcome his master's
+prejudice.
+
+In speaking of the great void left by the decease of Gall and
+Spurzheim, I do not forget that for a few years George Combe, Dr.
+Elliotson, and Dr. Macartney, of England, and Dr. Caldwell, of
+America, survived, but these eminent gentlemen were not so identified
+with the science, or so competent to sustain it as to wear the mantle
+of its founders. My own labors beginning after the death of the
+founders were those of investigation and discovery, and never to any
+great extent those of propagation. Indeed, for twenty years I entirely
+abandoned the scientific rostrum, and almost ended my labors, feeling
+that my duty had been done in the way of development and
+demonstration. But in accordance with the great law of periodicity, I
+resumed my labors in 1877-78.
+
+When we look at the doctrines of Gall and Spurzheim in the light of
+positive science and philosophy, our first observation is that they
+fell very far short of revealing the entire functions of the brain,
+and discovering in it all the important spiritual and physical
+faculties and energies of life. They did not attempt to explore the
+brain as a physiological organ, and determine how or in what special
+organs it controls the physiological functions. These may be regarded
+as one half, though the lower half, of its capacities, out of which
+arises a vast amount of medical philosophy.
+
+As to the psychic half of the cerebral functions, they omitted
+entirely that portion which relates to pneumatology. They thought
+nothing of the soul as an object of science, and made no attempt to
+trace its connection with the brain, and the vast number of phenomena
+which lie along the border line between the physical and spiritual,
+and which are conspicuous in the phenomena of somnambulism, sleep,
+dreaming, hypnotism, spiritualism, clairvoyance, trance, ecstasy, and
+religious marvels.
+
+Overlooking these things, they sought the seats of from twenty-seven
+faculties (as with Gall) to thirty-five (as with Spurzheim), and did
+not appear to realize how many had been entirely omitted. When all
+they attempted to locate are located by positive experiment and
+assigned their proper localities and limits, we find fully one half of
+the cerebral surface vacant for organs of other functions. Indeed, the
+first large publication of Gall and Spurzheim, in four volumes folio,
+with an atlas of 100 plates, begun in 1809 and finished in 1819, did
+not in the cranial map of organs profess to be a complete development
+of the functions of the brain. It located organs, but did not
+determine the functions intermediate between their boundaries. This
+was the map of Gall. In that of Spurzheim the intermediate spaces were
+occupied and the entire exterior surface of the brain devoted to
+organology, yet still the basilar and interior surface of the brain
+remained unknown to Spurzheim, and the exterior regions which he
+supposed entirely occupied by his organs were but half occupied by
+them. Thus when we consider the unexplored basilar and interior
+regions, and that half of its exterior surface which was erroneously
+appropriated to the thirty-five organs, as well as the erroneous
+location of several, we perceive that _more than half_ of the organs
+and functions of the brain remained for investigation.
+
+Turning away from the anatomy to contemplate the psychology, we
+perceive that _more than half of human nature_ had been omitted from
+the German scheme,--that half of the mental functions which belongs to
+the organs of the vacant spaces on the corrected map, and in addition
+to these the higher psychic functions, and the lower physiological
+functions, neither of which Gall and Spurzheim explored, because they
+did not attempt to study the brain as a physiological organ, and they
+did not bring the soul and the higher functions of the mind within the
+scope of their science.
+
+Gall was a bold, original naturalist and anatomist but not a
+psychologist; and the incorrectness of his psychology hindered his
+investigations, and prevented him from carrying out a proper
+subdivision of faculties and organs. He says in the last volume: "Each
+fundamental power, essentially distinct, includes sensation,
+perception, memory and recollection, judgment and
+imagination,"--disregarding the truth that these are distinct
+intellectual powers, belonging to different organs, and therefore
+bearing no proportion to each other. One may have an immense memory
+without imagination, or a brilliant imagination without much memory.
+These, and many other psychological errors, are apparent in the
+writings of Gall, and still more in those of Spurzheim.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+In the drawing herewith presented, the thirty-five organs of Spurzheim
+are assigned their proper locations and dimensions. The first organ,
+AMATIVENESS (made second by Spurzheim), was assumed to occupy the
+entire cerebellum. It really occupies only its median and superior
+portion, and a small section of the anterior surface of the spinal
+cord, adjacent to the encephalon. This error of Gall and Spurzheim did
+a great deal to discredit their system. It manifested on their part a
+fallibility of judgment, and a dogmatic adherence to first impressions
+in the face of evidence to the contrary; for the experiments of
+Rolando and Flourens demonstrated a connection between the cerebellum
+and the general vital force and muscular action. The relation may not
+have been clearly understood, but the facts were decisive, and the
+researches of Majendie, with the more recent ones of Ferrier, have
+made more clear the relations of the cerebellum to the muscular system
+and vital force.
+
+The doctrine of Gall has been abandoned by physiologists because
+refuted by many facts, the most decisive of which is that the
+cerebellum of castrated horses is larger than that of stallions, which
+could not be possible if the cerebellum had only sexual functions.
+Moreover, the doctrine of Gall was essentially unreasonable in itself.
+To suppose that so large a portion of the brain which is continually
+active, being well supplied with blood, could have a function which is
+but occasionally active, and which, through the greater part of human
+life, is unnoticed or inactive, is extremely unreasonable; and to
+suppose that the serious disturbances of animal life and muscular
+motion, caused by ablations of the cerebellum, were due to the
+disturbance of an organ having only sexual functions, was thoroughly
+absurd. The parrot-like repetition of these exploded errors by the
+followers of the phrenological system contributed to its discredit in
+the medical profession.
+
+The 2d organ of Gall (3d of Spurzheim), PHILOPROGENITIVENESS, was
+regarded as one of the best known phrenological organs, but my
+unprejudiced study of heads soon assured me of its inaccuracy. The
+organ was small in Spurzheim, who was remarkably fond of children, and
+I have found it small in ladies who showed no lack of parental love,
+but generally well developed and active in criminal skulls. One which
+I obtained in Arkansas, of a man named Richmond, had this region large
+and active, although he was the one of a group of murderers by whom
+the children, or, rather, boys, were killed. This region is _extremely
+defective_ in the brains of birds, which are certainly very devoted to
+their young. The attachment to children belongs really to an interior
+region of the occiput, where the occipital lobes face the median line.
+Hence it is that a large occipital development very often coincides
+with the love of children; but the true position of the organ renders
+it difficult to determine its development in life.
+
+ADHESIVENESS (3d) is located by Spurzheim farther back and lower than
+it should be; also, too far back in Gall's map. It belongs to the
+vacant space in front of Gall's location.
+
+INHABITIVENESS (5th) is an imaginary definition of the function
+located behind Self-esteem. Equally imaginary is the doctrine of the
+Edinburgh phrenologists, who call it Concentrativeness. The
+observations of Gall led him to regard it as a portion of the organ of
+Pride, and as giving to animals a love of lofty locations. Gall was
+nearer right than Spurzheim or Combe. The only function I find in this
+spot is Self-confidence. The tendencies to a quiet love of home, and
+the ability to tranquillize and concentrate the mind, are located,
+virtually, above the ear on the temporal arch, the ridge which
+separates the lateral from the superior surface of the head.
+
+DESTRUCTIVENESS, the 5th organ of Gall and 1st of Spurzheim, was
+located much too high and too far forward by Gall. I am surprised at
+this, since it differs so widely from the indications of comparative
+anatomy that it is difficult to imagine how Gall was misled. Any one
+comparing the skull of a dog with that of a sheep may discover the
+error. He called it Murder, or the wish to destroy. Spurzheim, who
+does not describe its location, says, "At the beginning Gall placed
+the seat of this organ too far behind the ear, but a great number of
+observations convinced us that its seat is immediately above the ear."
+The truth is that the convolutions which terminate on the temporal
+bone over the ear are only on the border of Destructiveness, and
+produce only an irritable and impulsive temper. The true
+Destructiveness extends fully an inch under the surface of the middle
+lobe, along the petrous ridge of the temporal bone, and is manifested
+externally just behind the ear by the prominence of the mastoid
+process.
+
+COMBATIVENESS (the 6th of Spurzheim, or Courage and Self-defence, the
+4th of Gall) is located with tolerable correctness by each and
+properly described.
+
+SECRETIVENESS, which is but a modification of Cautiousness, occupying
+its middle region, is much too large on the maps, and on that of Gall
+it is quite out of place--too far forward and too high up, occupying a
+region which produces modesty and refinement.
+
+ACQUISITIVENESS (7th of Gall, 8th of Spurzheim) is still farther
+mislocated on the map of Gall, occupying a region of intellectual,
+inventive and literary capacity. This is the most _outre_ and absurd
+of all Gall's locations. Placing this selfish and grasping propensity
+in the front lobe which belongs to intellect, when it really belongs
+to the selfish, adhesive, and combative elements of the occiput, is an
+error of so extravagant a character as to show that Gall had no
+correct psychology in his mind, and no capacity or desire to construct
+a harmonious system. Spurzheim's location, much farther back, is
+somewhat less erroneous, but both are thoroughly false, and a few
+months of my first observations fifty-two years ago satisfied me as to
+this error. That it should have flourished unchallenged by
+Phrenologists for eighty years, seems to show that when a dominant
+idea is once established in the mind, all facts are made to conform to
+it. Is is remarkable, too, that the very great difference between the
+locations given by Gall and by Spurzheim has not attracted notice. But
+in fact the map of Gall has never had any popular currency. Spurzheim
+and Combe have been the accepted authors. The true location of
+acquisitiveness is anterior to combativeness, and lower than
+adhesiveness. Gall was misled by studying the young pickpockets and
+thieves of Vienna. The organ that he found suits a low cunning and
+dextrous character when the head lacks elevation.
+
+CONSTRUCTIVENESS, Spurzheim's 9th (Bausinn, or aptitude for mechanical
+arts, of Gall No. 19), is decidedly mislocated by Spurzheim. Instead
+of being placed in the purely intellectual region adjacent to
+calculation, order, and system, it is carried back and down into the
+region of somnolence and sensitive impressibility. Gall's location is
+a little worse because lower, being carried out of the intellectual
+region into the middle lobe according to his published map. It is very
+easy to detect this error in examining a number of heads, and it was
+quite apparent to me in my first year's observations. In impressible
+persons the touch upon this locality produces nothing but a dreamy
+influence, and a disposition to close the eyes. Carried farther, it
+produces the mesmeric sleep.
+
+CAUTIOUSNESS (the 10th of both Spurzheim and Gall) was too far back in
+Spurzheim's map, occupying space that belongs to adhesiveness. It runs
+downward along the course of the lateral convolutions, and its more
+timid and gloomy functions are developed near the ear, differing
+widely from the functions of its upper portion.
+
+APPROBATIVENESS (the 11th of Spurzheim, and 9th of Gall) is located
+with substantial correctness, covering, however, more functions than
+that term expresses. Gall's location and definition are also
+substantially correct.
+
+SELF-ESTEEM (the 12th of Spurzheim, 8th of Gall) is well located and
+described with approximative correctness.
+
+FIRMNESS, RELIGION (Veneration or Theosophy), and BENEVOLENCE are so
+well located and described by both Gall and Spurzheim as to need but
+little comment at present. The four superior organs on the median
+line, and the organ of CONSCIENTIOUSNESS were more correctly located
+and described than any other large portion of the brain.
+
+HOPE is not adjacent to Conscientiousness, but parallel to Religion.
+
+MARVELLOUSNESS has a preposterously large space assigned it, being
+really a small organ at the summit of Ideality, which exercises a more
+intellectual and less superstitious function than has been given it.
+Marvellousness, Hope, Conscientiousness, Time, Order, Weight, Size,
+and Individuality are the eight organs discovered and added by
+Spurzheim, not having been recognized by Gall. The exterior portion of
+Spurzheim's Marvellousness occupies the space devoted by Gall to
+Poetry.
+
+POETRY, recognized by Gall, is brought lower by Spurzheim and called
+IDEALITY. Both locations are substantially correct. The location of
+Gall is the seat of Marvellousness, Imagination, and Spirituality;
+that of Spurzheim is well expressed by the term Ideality, and the
+description given, but the word Poetry is rather too limited as the
+definition of Gall's organ. It gives brilliance to prose and to
+oratory, or even conversation, as well as to poetry.
+
+IMITATION, adjacent to Benevolence, is somewhat better located by Gall
+than by Spurzheim, who gives it too much breadth anteriorly.
+
+WIT or MIRTHFULNESS is a confused and erroneous statement. The two
+faculties are distinct, Wit being intellectual and occupying a small
+space adjacent to Causality or Reason, while Mirthfulness, or the
+sentiment of the ludicrous, is just above it, and should properly be
+called Humor. The mirthful or playful faculty is in the posterior
+region adjacent to Approbativeness, and may be quite conspicuous when
+there is neither wit nor humor in the mirth. Imitation, Mirth or
+Humor, and Wit follow each other in a line. The so-called organ of Wit
+(Gall) or Mirthfulness (Spurzheim) is the seat of the most profound
+reasoning faculty, while the CAUSALITY of Spurzheim, the METAPHYSICAL
+DEPTH of thought of Gall, though it gives a clear analytical
+intelligence has really less profundity and ability in reasoning than
+the organ which they have misnamed Wit and Mirthfulness, which is
+pre-eminently the organ of profound reasoning.
+
+EVENTUALITY and INDIVIDUALITY are confounded as one organ by Gall,
+calling it Educability, or Memory of Things but rightly separated by
+Spurzheim, as the observation and memory of events are distinct from
+the observation of things. Though I do not use the word Individuality,
+it is not an objectionable expression, as it suggests the fine
+perceptive power of its location. Both Gall and Spurzheim had a
+practically good idea of the region of Eventuality, which Gall first
+called the memory of things. Spurzheim's description is good; but when
+the organ is analyzed, it yields consciousness and observation on the
+median line, memory more exterior, extending to Time.
+
+PERCEPTIVE ORGANS--The most marvellous feature of the old
+phrenological system, is the accuracy with which the smallest organs
+of the brain have been discovered, located, and described. The organs
+of Form, Size, Weight, Color, Order, and Number, or Calculation, were
+so accurately located and described by Spurzheim, that little remains
+to be said about them. Gall discovered only Form, Color, and Number,
+and the latter he located in the position which belongs to Order.
+These organs were but little developed in Gall, whose great success
+was due to his philosophic originality and independence. He was not a
+close observer, and there was a sternness in his nature which
+prevented him from accepting readily the suggestions of Spurzheim, who
+with less boldness of character and greater accuracy of perception,
+was better fitted for minute observation and anatomical analysis. His
+own cranium has been preserved, in which I found these perceptive
+organs distinctly marked by their digital impressions on the
+superorbital plate over the eye. It is a remarkable fact that the
+intellectual faculties have been most easily understood and located,
+while their antagonists in the occipital region have proved the
+greatest puzzle in psychic and cerebral investigations. Gall failed,
+and left a vacant space in the occiput. Spurzheim failed, but covered
+the ground incorrectly, and it was many years after I discovered
+cerebral impressibility before I attained a satisfactory view of the
+psychology of this region. The location and definition of LOCALITY are
+substantially correct.
+
+The organ of TIME, another of Spurzheim's discoveries, was very
+correctly located and defined by him. It lies just above the organ of
+Color.
+
+COMPARATIVE SAGACITY, or Perspicacity, as Gall called it, was a better
+term than Comparison, which was introduced by Spurzheim. Direct
+perception of truth is its leading character. Illustration by
+comparison belongs to the breadth of the forehead, to the Ideal and
+Inventive region, and is the characteristic of poetry. Spurzheim's
+description, however, is substantially correct. It qualifies for clear
+statement, but not for comprehensive or ingenious reasoning. The
+portion on the median line has still more penetration, in consequence
+of which it perceives the nature and tendencies of everything, and is
+enabled to exercise foresight. Still farther in on the median line are
+located the powers which are more intuitive, and transcending ordinary
+foresight are entitled to be called prophecy.
+
+The CAUSALITY of Spurzheim, or Metaphysical Depth of thought of Gall,
+was defined with approximate correctness. The immediate perception of
+causation lies just above the organ of Time, and the special organ of
+Reason extends therefrom upwards. If the reflective organs of one side
+of the forehead are divided into an interior and exterior group by a
+vertical line from the pupil of the eye, the interior group would
+represent a comprehensive understanding possessing sagacity and
+judgment, while the exterior would represent profound ingenious
+thought and originality, a capacity for discovering truth by reason
+and meditation, by analysis and synthesis, while the interior would
+discover it only by direct perception. In the exterior group would be
+included the misnamed organ of Wit or Mirthfulness, which is really a
+source of philosophy and originality.
+
+TUNE and CONSTRUCTIVENESS have really reversed their positions in the
+maps of Spurzheim and Gall. The inventive faculty of musical composers
+was what Gall discovered as Music. The sense of Melody and Tune lies
+behind the brow in connection with the _sense of hearing_, at the
+anterior portion of Sensibility, which forty years after my discovery
+is beginning to be recognized in consequence of the experiments of
+Ferrier on animals. The organ of hearing which he demonstrated in the
+monkey, occupies the same position in the superior temporal
+convolution, behind the eye, which I have given it in man, which
+brings it into close connection with the organs of Language and Tune.
+Its close connection with the region of impressibility called
+Somnolence explains its supreme control over our emotions.
+
+The organ of LANGUAGE, the first discovery of Gall, has been the first
+to receive its demonstration from pathology and vivisection. But the
+pioneer teacher to whom contemporaries are unjust has to wait very
+long for an honorable recognition. The existence of an organ of
+Language at the junction of the front and middle lobes, at the back of
+the eye-sockets, has become established in our physiology from the
+developments of disease and autopsies, without mentioning in
+connection that it was the discovery of Gall. Perhaps the authors of
+the text-books may not even know the location of Gall's discovery in
+the brain, and think only of the external sign, the prominence of the
+eyes, produced by the convolution at the back of their orbits.
+
+Dr. Spurzheim simply located the external sign of the prominence of
+the organ at the eye, while Gall recognized the talent for languages
+as lying further back than that for verbal memory, and consequently
+being manifested lower at the eye. Nevertheless Gall made a correct
+observation, as he noticed that a full development was indicated when
+the temples were broad behind the eye. The true location of the organ
+externally is just behind the outer angle of the eye, a position
+central to Gall's observations, and corresponding in the brain to that
+junction of the front and middle lobes in which the organ has been
+demonstrated by pathology, though not so accurately defined as in my
+experiments.
+
+Perhaps in twenty or thirty years more my demonstrations having been
+brought before the public may attract the attention of the laborious
+vivisectors in Europe, who have done so much to verify them, and who
+will find that their labors do not refute but do confirm what I have
+discovered by methods so much simpler, easier and more pleasant.
+
+In the second volume I propose to show in detail how much the
+pathologists and vivisectors have done to illustrate and corroborate
+the new Anthropology.
+
+[Illustration: ORGANOLOGY OF GALL, 1809.
+
+ 1. Instinct of Generation.
+ 2. Love of Offspring.
+ 3. Friendship, Attachment.
+ 4. Courage, Self-Defence.
+ 5. Murder, Wish to Destroy.
+ 6. Cunning.
+ 7. Sentiment of Property.
+ 8. Pride, Self-Esteem, Haughtiness.
+ 9. Vanity, Ambition.
+ 10. Cautiousness, Foresight, Prudence.
+ 11. Memory of Things, Educability.
+ 12. Local Memory.
+ 13. Memory of Persons.
+ 14. Verbal Memory.
+ 15. Memory for Languages.
+ 16. Colors.
+ 17. Music.
+ 18. Number.
+ 19. Aptitude for Mechanical Arts.
+ 20. Comparative Aptitude for Drawing Comparisons.
+ 21. Metaphysical Depth of Thought, Aptitude for Drawing Conclusions.
+ 22. Wit.
+ 23. Poetry.
+ 24. Good Nature.
+ 25. Mimicry.
+ 26. Theosophy, Religion.
+ 27. Firmness of Character.]
+
+
+
+
+BUSINESS DEPARTMENT.
+
+
+COLLEGE OF THERAPEUTICS.
+
+Next Session Begins November 1, 1887.
+
+This institution is the germ of what will be an immense revolution in
+education hereafter, when the knowledge now given to small classes
+will hold a conspicuous place in every college, and will be presented
+in every high school.
+
+The mountain mass of inertia, which opposes, passively, all
+fundamental changes, cannot now resist scientific demonstration as it
+has in the past. The instruction in the College of Therapeutics, is
+thoroughly demonstrative, leaving no room for doubt, and it gives a
+species of knowledge which ought to be a part of every one's
+education--a knowledge of the constitution of man, not obtainable
+to-day in any medical or literary college, nor in our mammoth
+libraries. It is not merely as a deep philosophy that this interests
+us, but as a guide in the preservation of health, and in the
+regulation of spiritual phenomena, which would, to a very great
+extent, supersede our reliance on the medical profession by giving us
+the control of the vital powers, by which we may protect ourselves,
+and control the development of the young.
+
+Each student was made to feel the effects of local treatment on the
+body, and the power of rapidly changing disease to health, and was
+personally taught to perform the manipulations for this purpose, and
+to investigate disease or portray character by the psychometric
+methods as well as to test the value of medicines.
+
+The various uses and scientific application of electricity were shown,
+and many things entirely unknown and unrecognized in works on
+Electro-Therapeutics. The entire class was placed under a medical
+influence simultaneously by the agency of electricity--an operation so
+marvelous that it would be considered incredible in medical colleges.
+By these and other experiments and numerous illustrations and lucid
+explanations of the brain and nervous system, the instruction was made
+deeply interesting, and students have attended more than one course to
+perfect themselves in the science. The following declaration of
+sentiments shows how the course was regarded by the class:
+
+ "The summer class of 1887 in the College of Therapeutics,
+ feeling it their duty to add their testimony to that of many
+ others in reference to the grand scientific discoveries which
+ they have seen thoroughly demonstrated by Prof. J. R. Buchanan,
+ would say to the public that no one can attend such a course of
+ instruction as we have recently been engaged in, without
+ realizing that Therapeutic Sarcognomy greatly enlarges the
+ practical resources of the healing art for the medical
+ practitioner, magnetizer and electro-therapeutist, while
+ Psychometry, whose positive truths we have tested and proven,
+ like the sun's rays, illumines all the dark problems of medical
+ practice and of psycho-physiological sciences.
+
+ "Therapeutic Sarcognomy explains the very intricate and
+ mysterious relations of the soul, the brain and body, which
+ prior to Prof. Buchanan's discoveries were unknown to all
+ scientific teachers, and are even now only known to his students
+ and the readers of his works,
+
+ "We feel that we have been very fortunate in finding so valuable
+ a source of knowledge, whose future benefits to the human race,
+ in many ways, cannot be briefly stated, and we would assure all
+ who may attend this college, or read the published works of
+ Prof. Buchanan, and his monthly, the _Journal of Man_, that they
+ will, when acquainted with the subject, be ready to unite with
+ us in appreciating and honoring the greatest addition ever made
+ to biological and psychological sciences. Hoping that the time
+ is not for distant when all students in medical colleges may
+ obtain access to this most important knowledge, we give our
+ testimony to the public."
+
+ H. C. ALDRICH, M. D., D. D. S., _Chairman_.
+ DR. JNO. C. SCHLARBAUM, _Secretary_.
+
+
+OBITUARY RECORD.
+
+Visit to our Cemetery.
+
+Sad are the words, "_It might have been_," sad the recollection of
+lives untimely ended, and equally sad the lives that perished unborn.
+We have been looking among the latter, the spirit life that might have
+gone forth to bless society, but perished ere its birth.
+
+The JOURNAL OF MAN has brought forth many a bright, strong thought
+that will have its career among men, but the other bright, strong
+thoughts that could not be forced through its narrow limits must be
+buried and lost to its readers, and they have been interred with
+sorrow. The following is a list of our early dead--perhaps for some of
+them there may be a resurrection when a larger JOURNAL is issued, but
+perhaps the majority are interred forever.
+
+1. Career of Mohammedanism in Africa. 2. The True History of Buddha.
+3. Influence of Christianity in history. 4. Startling Calculations for
+the Future. 6. The Snake Charmers in Tunis. 6. Mesmerism in China
+before the Christian Era. 7. Dr. Montgomery on the Cell Theory. 8. A
+Race of Dwarfs in the Pyrenees. 9. Religious Hallucination in the
+Bahamas. 10. Philosophy of Death. 11. The Delsarte System of Elocution
+and Acting. 12. Why Should the Chinese go? an eloquent argument by a
+learned Mandarin. 13. An Organic Index of Human Longevity--the
+Doctrine of Powell. 15. Anthropological Laws of Longevity. 16.
+Psychometry and Thought Transference in India. 17. Prof. Dana on
+Evolution. 18. Statistics of Heads and Brains. 19. Cures by Prayer.
+20. Indian Witchcraft. 21. Hypnotism among Turkish Dervishes. 22.
+Discussion of Heredity and Temperaments. 23. Theory and Practice of
+the Divining Rod. 24. Mrs. Stanton on Sleep. 25. Cures for Insomnia,
+and Singular Case of Night-sweats. 26. A Modern Samson. 27.
+Transactions in Psychic Research. 28. A Critique of Unreason--a
+Caustic Review of the Psychic Society. 29. Scientific View of the
+Antiquity of Man. 30. Phrenological Quackery. 31. English and German
+Industrial Education. 32. Training of Viennese Girls. 33. Revolutions
+in Medicine. 34. History and Progress of Russian Nihilists. 35. The
+Paradise of Labor--the Familistere at Guise in France. 36. Exhibition
+of the Keeley Motor. 37. A New Element in the Blood. 38. Reform of the
+Lunacy Laws. 39. Marvellous Dreams. 40. Byron's Spiritual Belief. 41.
+How to Deal with Drunkards and Medical Treatment of Intemperance. 42.
+Combination of Electricity and Medicine. 43. Meynert's Psychiatry, a
+Treatise on Diseases of the Fore-brain. 44. A Mesmerized Detective.
+45. Wonderful Spirit Telegraphy. 46. Discovery of Dead Bodies by
+Intuition. 47. How Clouds are formed. 48. Psychometric Reports on
+Simon of Samaria, Henry George, Dr. McGlynn, Lucretia Mott, Dr. Gall,
+Charlemagne and Julius Caesar. 49. The Puget Sound Colony. 50. English
+Rule in Ireland. 51. Dr. Eadon on Memory. 52. Harrison on Mysticism.
+53. Progress in Many Parts of the World. 54. Communications from
+various correspondents, etc., etc. This is not _one half_, but it is
+needless to prolong the catalogue of the buried innocents,--the
+interesting narratives, discussions and expositions of rare knowledge
+which the limited area of the JOURNAL has compelled me to exclude.
+
+Let us hope that in our enlarged JOURNAL next year, there may be room
+to review the most important features of social and scientific
+progress as well as to present gradually the elements of that
+world-embracing science which is called Anthropology,--the
+presentation of which will require at least ten years. I am making
+every effort at present to prepare the improved and enlarged edition
+of the Therapeutic Sarcognomy for the coming winter.
+
+
+LIBERAL PUBLICATIONS.
+
+THE GOLDEN GATE at San Francisco is a successful eight-page weekly
+Spiritual newspaper now in its fourth volume, well filled with
+interesting matter. It illustrates spiritual phenomena by engravings,
+is well edited and highly appreciated. Published by J. J. Owen at
+$2.50 per annum.
+
+HALL'S JOURNAL OF HEALTH at New York, a monthly of twenty-four pages,
+one dollar per annum, has been well received for thirty-three years,
+and of late, with a new editor, it has renewed its vigor and
+prosperity. It contains not only valuable hygienic instruction but
+interesting sketches of Spiritual and progressive science and has
+honored the editor of this Journal with a friendly biographical
+sketch. Its circulation is increasing.
+
+THE BETTER WAY, a Spiritual weekly published at Cincinnati at $2 a
+year, is the successor to four Spiritual papers that have ceased, and
+appears to have the elements of success.
+
+THE EASTERN STAR, published at Glenburn, Maine, by C. M. Brown,
+weekly, at $1 per year, is full of the enthusiasm and energy that win
+success. The editor appears to have a clear head and warm heart and
+devotes his journal to Spiritualism.
+
+THE CARRIER DOVE, a large folio weekly illustrated Spiritual journal.
+$2.50 per annum, published at San Francisco, is now in its fourth
+volume, and has obtained a merited success.
+
+THE TRUTH-SEEKER, a weekly journal ($3 a year) established by the late
+D. M. Bennett, still carries on with undiminished ability the honest
+agnostic work for which it has been famous. It is a vigorous
+iconoclast but does little for constructive progress.
+
+THE OPEN COURT, by B. F. Underwood, Chicago, with an able corps of
+correspondents, maintains a high literary character, and discusses
+philosophy and current topics from the agnostic standpoint. Its belief
+in dry metaphysics, and its stubborn materialistic scepticism are its
+greatest peculiarities. Published fortnightly at $3 a year.
+
+
+UNLIKE ANY OTHER PAPER.
+
+The _Spectator_, unlike other home papers, seeks (1) to acquaint every
+family with simple and efficient treatment for the various common
+diseases, to, in a word, educate the people so they can avoid disease
+and cure sickness, thus saving enormous doctors' bills, and many
+precious lives. (2) To elevate and cultivate the moral nature,
+awakening the conscience, and developing the noblest attributes of
+manhood. (3) To give instructive and entertaining food to literary
+taste, thus developing the mind. (4) To give just such hints to
+housekeepers that they need to tell how to prepare delicious dishes,
+to beautify homes, and to make the fireside the most attractive spot
+in the world.--_Am. Spectator_.
+
+
+MAYO'S ANAESTHETIC.
+
+The suspension of pain, under dangerous surgical operations, is the
+greatest triumph of Therapeutic Science in the present century. It
+came first by mesmeric hypnotism, which was applicable only to a few,
+and was restricted by the jealous hostility of the old medical
+profession. Then came the nitrous oxide, introduced by Dr. Wells, of
+Hartford, and promptly discountenanced by the enlightened (?) medical
+profession of Boston, and set aside for the next candidate, ether,
+discovered in the United States also, but far interior to the nitrous
+oxide as a safe and pleasant agent. This was largely superseded by
+chloroform, discovered much earlier by Liebig and others, but
+introduced as an anaesthetic in 1847, by Prof. Simpson. This proved to
+be the most powerful and dangerous of all. Thus the whole policy of
+the medical profession was to discourage the safe, and encourage the
+more dangerous agents. The magnetic sleep, the most perfect of all
+anaesthetic agents, was expelled from the realm of college authority;
+ether was substituted for nitrous oxide, and chloroform preferred to
+ether, until frequent deaths gave warning.
+
+Nitrous oxide, much the safest of the three, has not been the
+favorite, but has held its ground, especially with dentists. But even
+nitrous oxide is not perfect. It is not equal to the magnetic sleep,
+when the latter is practicable, but fortunately it is applicable to
+all. To perfect the nitrous oxide, making it universally safe and
+pleasant, Dr. U. K. Mayo, of Boston, has combined it with certain
+harmless vegetable nervines, which appear to control the fatal
+tendency which belongs to all anaesthetics when carried too far. The
+success of Dr. Mayo, in perfecting our best anaesthetic, is amply
+attested by those who have used it. Dr. Thorndike, than whom, Boston
+had no better surgeon, pronounced it "the safest the world has yet
+seen." It has been administered to children and to patients in extreme
+debility. Drs. Frizzell and Williams, say they have given it
+"repeatedly in heart disease, severe lung diseases, Bright's disease,
+etc., where the patients were so feeble as to require assistance in
+walking, many of them under medical treatment, and the results have
+been all that we could ask--no irritation, suffocation, nor
+depression. We heartily commend it to all as the anaesthetic of the
+age." Dr. Morrill, of Boston, administered Mayo's anaesthetic to his
+wife with delightful results when "her lungs were so badly
+disorganized, that the administration of ether or gas would be
+entirely unsafe." The reputation of this anaesthetic is now well
+established; in fact, it is not only safe and harmless, but has great
+medical virtue for daily use in many diseases, and is coming into use
+for such purposes. In a paper before the Georgia State Dental Society,
+Dr. E. Parsons testified strongly to its superiority. "The nitrous
+oxide, (says Dr. P.) causes the patient when fully under its influence
+to have very like the appearance of a corpse," but under this new
+anaesthetic "the patient appears like one in a natural sleep." The
+language of the press, generally has been highly commendatory, and if
+Dr. Mayo had occupied so conspicuous a rank as Prof. Simpson, of
+Edinburgh, his new anaesthetic would have been adopted at once in every
+college of America and Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic.
+
+A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether,
+nitrous oxide gas, and all other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U. K.
+Mayo, April, 1883, and since administered by him and others in over
+300,000 cases successfully. The youngest child, the most sensitive
+lady, and those having heart disease, and lung complaint, inhale this
+vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation of the blood and
+builds up the tissues. Indorsed by the highest authority in the
+professions, recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous
+prostration. Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families
+supplied with this vapor, liquefied, in cylinders of various
+capacities. It should be administered the same as Nitrous Oxide, but
+it does not produce headache and nausea as that sometimes does. For
+further information pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to
+
+ DR. U. K. MAYO, Dentist,
+ 378 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE CARRIER DOVE.
+
+ An Illustrated Weekly Magazine, Devoted to
+
+ SPIRITUALISM AND REFORM.
+
+ Edited by MRS. J. SCHLESINGER.
+
+Each number will contain the portraits and Biographical Sketches of
+prominent Mediums and Spiritual workers of the Pacific Coast, and
+elsewhere. Also, Spirit Pictures by our Artist Mediums. Lectures,
+essays, poems, spirit messages, editorials and miscellaneous items.
+
+ DR. L. SCHLESINGER, }
+ MRS. J. SCHLESINGER, } PUBLISHERS.
+
+ Terms:--$2.50 per Year. Single Copies, 10 cts.
+
+ Address, THE CARRIER DOVE,
+ 32 Ellis Street, San Francisco, California.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note: The Table of Contents came from the first
+ issue of the volume.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUCHANAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 1887 ***
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