372 Scientific Intelligence. — Ethnology. 



§ 2. Physiological and moral evidence of an Indian connection. 



§ 3. General ethnic principles and tendencies observable in the 

 ethnology of Eastern Asia and Asianesia. 



a. Mutual physiological and moral action of tribes. 

 6. Linguistic development and mutual action of tribes. 



§ 4. Character of primordial phonology. Remnants of it in S. E. 

 Asia. 



§ 5. Cause of the transition from the monotonic to dissyllabic 

 glossaries. 



§ 6. Comparative value of structural and glossarial comparisons for 

 ethnology. Superiority of the glossarial. Supreme import- 

 ance of Phonology. 



II. — Phonetic and structural character of the Archaic languages of 



India. 

 § 7. Prepositional and postpositional languages. 

 § 8. Character of the Tibetan and Burmese with relation to each 



other and to the Tartarian and S. E. Asian languages. 

 § 9. The N. Gangetic or Himalayan languages. 

 § 10. The S. E. Gangetic languages. 

 § 11. The S. Gangetic languages. 

 § 12. The Telugu-Tamulian languages. 

 § 13. Comparison of the Telugu-Tamulian with the African 



languages. 



III. — Phonetic and structural character of the Asianesian 

 languages. 

 § 14. Australian. 

 § 15. Polynesian. 

 § 15.* Papuanesian. 

 § 16. S. and S, E. Indonesian. 

 § 17. N. E. Indonesian. 

 § 18. W. Indonesian. 



IV. — The Asianesian languages compared with the American arid 



Tartar-Japanese languages. 

 § 19.* Asianesian compared with American languages. 

 § 20.* The Asianesian compared with the Japanese, Korian, and 

 Tungusian languages. 

 Sub-sect. 1. Japanese. 



— 2. Korian. 



— 3. Manchu. 



— 4. Results. 



V . — Eth^iic Glosso logy . 



§ 1 9. Principles of glossarial comparison. 

 § 20. Character of Asianesian glossology. 



