3o6 



INDEX. 



Analogy of feelings to universals, 57, 

 158 



• reveals nature of infants and 



savages, 8 



Analysis of the verb, 252 



, ultimate, of nature shows voli- 

 tion, 235 



Analytic language, 231 



Anecdote, absurd one about a cocka- 

 too, 136 



Anecdotes about savages' defects ex- 

 aggerated, 274 



of animals, exaggerations in, 



129, 149 



of shot monkeys, 133-135 



Animals and infants, asserted parallel- 

 ism between, 16 



, dumb, if rational would invent 



a gesture-language, 163 



, irrational acts of, 124 



may have unimaginable powers, 



61 



obtaining help, 133 



share our lower mental powers, 



216 



speechless, 298 



understanding words, how, 148, 



160 



Animals' acts, their nature misrepre- 

 sented, 130 



natures may modify their re- 



cepts, 94, 124 



Animistic thought, 233, 234 

 Animus of narrators of anecdotes of 



animals, 130 

 Ant, psychical principle of, 73 

 Antecedent conditions for evocation 



of consciousness, 199 

 Anthropoid apes and primitive man, 



33 



shaping stones, 292 



Ants, tales of, 130, 131 



• tunnelling, and Mr. Belt, 76 



Any objects will call forth concepts, 



205 

 Ape and principle of the screw, 86 



, psychical principle of, Ti^ 



Apes and children, 17 



and primitive man, 33 



, chattering of, 286 



, gesture-signs of, 133, 135 



pointing, 82, 135 



Aphasia and gesture-language, 138 

 Apparently similar actions may differ 



profoundly, 219 

 Appearance, abstract idea of, 142 

 Apple-tree and boy, tale in gesture, 



140 



Appleyard, 274 



Apposition in consciousness, 221, 256 



not necessarily assertion, 256, 



257 



with meaning may be assertion, 



277 

 Apprehension, first, of general cha- 

 racters by nascent intelligence, 1 56 



of causation by dog, 85 



Aprons, etc., pulled by dogs, 132, 153, 



164 

 Apteryx, 108, 113 

 Aquinas, St. Thomas, 39, 57 

 Arbitrary signs invented by children, 



161 

 Archdeacon Farrar, 235, 237, 240 

 Archiepiscopal collie-dog, 78 

 Arguments, scholastic, against nomi- 

 nalism, 39 

 "Arise out of," ambiguity of the 



phrase, 43 

 Aristotelian system of philosophy, 



39, 57 

 Aristotle, 25, 31, 40 



and man, 25, 31, 32, 200, 231, 



239, 259 



, Buffon, and Bureau de la Malle, 



25 

 Arms of dog and telegraph-post, 220 

 Art and primitive man, 33 

 Article of Prof. Max Miiller in 



Ni7ieteeitth Ceiituiy^ 117 

 Articulate irrational sounds, 120 

 rational sounds, 12 1 



signs said to be extended by 



parrots, 157, 185 



the quickest and easiest 



ones, 244 

 Articulation and dog's tail, 152 



and prehistoric animals, 33 



, innate tendency to, 172 



, meaningless, 146 



not necessarily intellectual, 152 



, primitive, 147 



Articulns slantis vel cadentis ecclesicc^ 



. 32 , 



Artistic faculties, origin of, 27 

 Aryan languages, 246 

 "As many men as many bipeds," 



256 

 As-mi, the Sanskrit term, 251 

 Asserted funereal rites of bees, 134 



parallelism between animals and 



infants, 16 

 Assertion not apposition, 256, 257 

 Associated and expectant feelings, 63 

 Association, British, at Sheffield, 22 

 Associational sign-making, 127 



