bibliography of chemistry how to start it
Answers
Explanation:
The Basic Law of Vocal Utterance. By Emil Sutro.
Pp. 124-
(London: Kegan Paul and Co., Ltd.,
n.d.)
Duality of Voice and Speech. An Outline of Original
Research. Pp. vi+224. (London: Kegan Paul and
Co., Ltd., n.d.)
Duality of Thought and Language. An Outline of
Original Research.
Pp.
Vlll +277.
(London:
Kegan Paul and Co., Ltd., n.d.)
THE first of these volumes, which was originally
published in America in 1894, contains the starting
point and main beliefs of the author; the second and
third volumes form the amplification and illustration.
Beginning with the practical problem of finding how
a foreigner, especially a German, can learn to speak
English correctly, Mr. Sutro ha s gone on until he has
become convinced that he has discovered several most
important scientific truths, and that he has a great
mission to carry out in proclaiming them.
Among the discoveries stated in these volumes the
following may be mentioned. There are two streams
in the air which is breathed, which keep separate, one
being for respiration, the other for sound. A person
who breathed correctly might use the air supplied by
the sound current in such a way as to speak for ever
without taking breath, were it not for fatigue. For
English speech we inspire through trachea and expire
through <:esophagus; for German the direction is
reversed. The author has discovered a new vocal cord
in the lower jaw. Air passages are diffused through
the body; it is through these that the emotional
na ture of sound is produced. The original source of
tone production has its location in the lungs, the
kidneys, and the bladder for the most part. For the
uttera nce of a word representing a flower there is an
impression made on the right side of the thigh, while
the expression is on the left side just opposite, the
order being reversed for the corresponding German
word. Just how we breathe into and out of the pelvis
the author expects to explain satisfactorily in a future
volume.
Statements such as these, together with
philosophical reflections and practical discussions as to
the way in which the production of different sounds
should be managed, fill the three volumes.
The volumes are not withou t a certain kind of
interest- tha t of observing the process by which
a ma n. who is evidently in earn est, comes to
elabora te and believe such nonsense. It is at the same
time possible that there may be in the remarks regarding the way in which sounds should be produced something which would be suggestive to one engaged in
the practical work of teaching in this subject. According to Mr. Sutro, America has left his works almost
unnoti ced, while Germany has given a more favourable reception to them. It appears that an International Physio-Psychic Society has been founded for
the propag a tion of the views put forward in these
volumes.
A S elect Bibliography of Chemistry, 1492-1902.
By
H. C. Bolton.
Second supplement.
Pp. 462.
(Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1904.)
THE present volume of the" Select Bibliography" is
the second supplement which has been published since
the first issue in 1893, and carries the work down to
1902.
One ca n only admire the pati ent labour of the
author, now unfortunately removed by death, who has
placed in -the hands of chemists all over the world a
book of reference of such perma nent value.
The supplement contains the titles of books published between 1898 and 1902 inclusive, in which the
NO. 1840, VOl. 71J
same subdivisions are preserved as in the first volume.
It is just a question whether the last subdivisiona cademic dissertations-which fills nearly half the
book, is worth the trouble it has entailed. It consists
almost entirely of the titles of dissertations for the
German doctorate, which in Germany often find their
way into booksellers' hands, but are merely reprints
of memoirs that have appeared in the scientific
journals. The list is necessarily incomplete, and the
trouble of indexing it must have been enormous.
The proof-reading, as well as the preparation of the
index, have been done by Mr. Axel Moth, of the New
York Public Library.
J. B. C.
Hints on Collecting and Preserving Plants. By
S. Guiton. Pp. ii+ 55. (London: West, Newman
a nd Co., 1905.) Price IS.
THE coll
e
ctor of
plants,
whether
he is
merely
pursuing
a
hobby
or
whether
his object
is
to acquire
specimens for reference which will enable him to
get a better knowledge of systema tic botany, ought
to be acquainted with the best methods of preparing
and
arranging
Answer:
Collect this information for each Web Site:
author name.
title of the publication (and the title of the article if it's a magazine or encyclopedia)
date of publication.
the place of publication of a book.
the publishing company of a book.
the volume number of a magazine or printed encyclopedia.
the page number(s)
Explanation:
MARK AS BRAINLIEST WORKED SO HARD