Abstract
THIS little volume, which forms one of Messrs. Methuen's “University Extension Series,” is not a mere compilation from larger works on psychology. Short as it is, it presents an independent development of the subject; and it is not infrequently characterized by a freshness and vigour most helpful to the student. We feel sure that Mr. Granger's short account of the human mind will be a most useful little book in the “psychology circles” of that National Home-Reading Union to the existence and work of which Dr. Hill drew attention in a recent issue of NATURE. And few subjects are better suited than psychology for study in this way.
Psychology; a Short Account of the Human Mind.
By F. S. Granger (London: Messrs. Methuen and Co., 1891.)
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M., C. “Extension” Psychology. Nature 45, 76 (1891). https://doi.org/10.1038/045076a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/045076a0