. Alienist and neurologist. . l, particularly Janet. And, looming up verylarge at present. Prince and Sidis come to our aid. I venture to predict that the viewsof Prince and Sidis will come in for greater and greater recognition and considerationas the years go on. The gaps between psychopathology and so-called normal psychol-ogy are slowly being bridged. Before long psychopathology, united on all fronts,will be walking side by side with normal psychology, both going in the same direction. The biological viewpoint is coming quickly into the field. Before long there will Page Two Hundred Sixty-


. Alienist and neurologist. . l, particularly Janet. And, looming up verylarge at present. Prince and Sidis come to our aid. I venture to predict that the viewsof Prince and Sidis will come in for greater and greater recognition and considerationas the years go on. The gaps between psychopathology and so-called normal psychol-ogy are slowly being bridged. Before long psychopathology, united on all fronts,will be walking side by side with normal psychology, both going in the same direction. The biological viewpoint is coming quickly into the field. Before long there will Page Two Hundred Sixty-Two THE ALIENIST AND NEUROLOGIST be a general agreement amongst most of the students laboring earnestly in this difficultwork. The crisis in psychopathology has practically passed. Uncritical thinking isgiving way to more scientific approach to the problem. The future of psychopathology is bigger and brighter than it would have other-wise been. Let us from now on hold fast to the scientific, critical trend in Page Two Hundred Sixty-Three EDITORIALS. Conducted by MARC RAY HUGHES. M. DAVID S. BOOTH. M. BA YARD HOLMES, M. D. MEDICINE FROM A BUSINESS STANDPOINT. Notwithstanding the physicians future worth or discount depends largely uponhis income, and it is proverbial that the physician is either inherently a poor businessman or becomes negligent of the business side of his profession by virtue of his ab-sorption in his professional duties, it appears to be an unwritten lawwith the profession not to consider or discuss business matters however much the physi-cian and his family may suffer from lax business methods, though it be due solelyto a failure to collect for services actually rendered. Occasionally we find a sporadic case of medical business agitatus, but itis apparently not infectious, though at times it is contagious, since we haveknowledge of a few districts in which it became endemic to the extent that thephysicians organized for their protecti


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectpsychology, bookyear1