New York and London: G. P. Putnam Sons, 1885. — 316 p.
I have no apologies to offer for presenting this American edition of Professor Meynerts "Psychiatry" to the English medical public. It is a scientific
treatise on diseases of the mind by the one best fitted to write such a treatise. To most medical men Meynert is known as the great brain-anatomist.
This book may serve incidentally as a text-book on the anatomy of the brain; but it is not merely that. I would direct particular attention to the subsequent chapters of this treatise, from which the students of ps3xhiatry, of physiology, and of psychology may gather much information and much food for reflection.