Page:Philosophical Review Volume 3.djvu/144

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NOTES.

The following facts with reference to Experimental Psychology at the World's Fair are taken from the official catalogue of Department M (Anthropological Building), pp. 50 ff:—

The section of Psychology comprised two rooms, (1) The Psychological Laboratory. In this a series of tests was taken: (a) judgment of lengths by finger movements, judgment of weights, touch; (b) judgment of surfaces by feeling, rapidity of movement, sensitiveness to pain; (c) equality of movements, reproduction of lines, accuracy of aim, division of lengths, right and left movements; (d) accuracy of movements, judgment of lengths by sight, estimation of lengths in four directions, form alphabet; (e) quickness of perception, memory, reproduction of lengths by memory; (f) location reaction; (g) reactions, simple and complex; (h) copying test, association test, picture and word test; (i) optical tests. This room contained also a demonstration table, photographs of laboratories, charts, curves, etc. (2) Apparatus Room. Here were exhibited apparatus for the investigation of touch, light and form-sense, color-sense, binocular vision, visual inferences, hearing, movement, time-measurement, as well as recording apparatus, accessory apparatus for reactions, photographs, etc. The laboratory is designated a 'laboratory of mental anthropometry.' It was not intended for "demonstrations and instruction in psychology, but ... for the collection of tests." Professor J. Jastrow, of the University of Wisconsin, was in charge. E. B. T.

Simultaneously with the present issue of this journal it is announced that the first number of The Psychological Review will make its appearance. The new journal is to be published by Messrs. Macmillan & Company, and edited by Professors J. M. Baldwin of Princeton and J. McK. Cattell of Columbia, with the coöperation of Professor Binet of Paris, Stumpf of Munich, Sully of London, Dewey of Michigan, Fullerton of Pennsylvania, Donaldson of Chicago, Starr of New York, Professors James and Münsterberg of Harvard, and Ladd of Yale. It is to be devoted to the interests of experimental psychology, and will appear bi-monthly.

Through the generosity of Ex-President A. D. White, now United States Minister to Russia, the library of Cornell University has been enriched by an exceedingly valuable and complete Spinoza collection. This collection consists of about 450 volumes and 24 portraits, the fruit of fifty years' collecting by a German lover of the great philosopher. Among the contents are all the editions of Spinoza's Opera omnia which have appeared down to that of van Vloten and Land, the four editions of the Tractatus-Politicus of the year 1670, and still another edition with the date 1672 which was unknown to van der Linde, the original edition edited by Jarig Jellis of the Opera posthuma, Colerus's La vie de B. de Spinoza, 1706, Traité des trois imposteurs, etc. The various biographies of Spinoza, and the critical and historical writings which have grown up from his philosophy during two centuries are here in unusual completeness. Not the least interesting feature is the fine collection of portraits. It is to be hoped that this heritage of European scholarship may give an impetus to philosophical study in this country.