EMERSON HALL
39
find at once its technical shape and form. Whether those experi¬
mental ideas will be original and productive, whether their elabor¬
ation will be helpful for the progress of our young science, in short,
whether the work in the new laboratory will fulfil the hopes with
which we entered it, may be better decided as soon as a few
further volumes of the Harvard Psychological Studies shall have
followed the present one, which is still from cover to cover a pro¬
duct of Harvard’s pre-Emerson-Hall period.