INDEX. 



A priori ideas, their definition, 7, 

 8 ; the source of myth, 9 



Abstraction, unconscious and ex- 

 plicit, 138 ; its degrees, 139-150 



^Eschylus, 110 



Alger on the doctrine of a future 

 life, 74 



Animals and man, their intimate 

 connection, 19 ; their embryo- 

 genie evolution, 19 ; their com- 

 plete identity, 22 ; their self- 

 consciousness, 50; the projection 

 of themselves on other animals 

 and phenomena, 51, 53, 54, 55, 

 161 ; experiments on, 60-64. 



Animation of extrinsic phe- 

 nomena, 28, 58-65, 111, 125-128 



Anthropomorphism, 90, 97, 106, 

 181 



Apprehension, act of, 116; by 

 animals, 118; psychical law of, 

 119; three elements of, 120; by 

 a man, 122-127 



Arbrousset on the Basntos, 75 



Aristotle, his teaching, 231 



Aryan family, its primitive unity 

 with the Semitic. 31 ; its mytho- 

 logy, 179, 197, 219; its concep- 

 tion of Christianity, 184-192 



Bridgman, Laura, 207 



Christ, the apotheosis of man, 187 



Christianity, its diffusion, 178- 



192 ; its anthropomorphism, 181 



Dead, the worship of, 15 

 Demoniacal beliefs, 77, 78, 79 



Descartes, 234 

 Doric school, 211 

 Dreams, 253, 259, 270 



Entification, the term, 153; of 

 speerh. 310 



Eleatic school, 211 



Epicarmos, 109 



Evolution, of monotheism, 151 ; 

 of the faculties of myth and 

 science, 157; ot'language, 201- 

 204 ; of writing, 209 ; of music, 

 295-303 



Experiments on animal.-', 60-64 



Fetish worship, 78, 94-97, 163, 



168,291,311 

 Finns, their mythology, 101 



Galileo, 235 



Greece, her philosophy, 210-217 ; 

 her mythology, 99, 130 



Hallucinations, 272, 281 

 Hawaians, their concrete lan- 

 guage, 86 



Ionic school, 210 

 Kant, 233 



M'Lennan on the worship of 

 plants and animals, 73 



Wan, his intimate connection with 

 animals, 19-23; his psychical 

 force, 26; estimated according 

 to his absolute value, 35; his 

 power of reflection, 23, 52, 163 ; 



