3o8 



INDEX. 



Cannon-ball, 248 



Captain Johnson and shot monkey, 



134 

 Carlyle and metaphor, 272 

 Cartesianism, 39 

 Cat and his friend the dog, 159 



and knocking at doors, 84 



■ ' ■ ■ and piano, illustration from, 



• with bone fixed in mouth, 261 



Categories of language, 121, 126, 127, 



241 

 Catholicism and nature of brutes, 32 

 Cats getting help, 133 



jumping on chairs, 133 



Causation, apprehension of by dog. 



Cause for disbelief in cause, 211 



, idea of, and muscular effort, 211 



Chambers and exaggeration in anec- 

 dotes of animals, 149 

 Charlevoix, 274 

 Chattering of apes, 286 

 Chauncey Wright, Mr. , 209 

 Chef and dinner, illustration from, 



200 

 Chemical action lays a foundation for 



vital activity, 199 

 Chemistry, physics, vitality, sensi- 

 tivity, and intellect, 199 

 Child-language and Chinese, 245 

 Child saying " Ego " spontaneously, 



146 

 Children and apes, 17 



and conceptual power, mistake 



about, 190 



■ have most abstract ideas, 270 



, idiotic, and Dr. Scott, 137 



■ invent arbitrary signs, 161 



, isolated, originating languages, 



231 



, language of, 206, 221, 222, 245, 



263 



, though speechless, may gesture 



intelligently, 138, 204 

 Children's names for objects, 217 

 Child's pantomime, 218 



• recognition of dogs, 188 



Chimpanzee "Sally," her tricks, 80 



uses no metaphor, 273 



Chinese and child-language, 245 

 Civilization and early man, 33 

 Clamor concomilans, 103, 107 

 Classifications of ideas and sensuous 



cognitive affections, 59 

 Clearer possible intuition of first 



men, 231 

 Clicks of Africans, 247, 286, 287 



Climates favourable for isolated chil- 

 dren, 232 



Clock, sound of, 238 



Clock's hand, illustration from, 12 



Cloud of materialism, 31 



Coachman and parrot, 155, 161 



Cockatoo, absurd tale concerning one, 

 136 



Code, semiotic, of our common hu- 

 manity, 138 



Cognition, unconscious and intellec- 

 tual, 65 



Cognitions, direct and reflex, must be 

 distinguished, 61, 62 



Cognitive sensuous affections, 59 



Collected silent instruments do not 

 sound, 211 



Collective ideas, 40 



Collie-dog and Miss Benson, 78 



Colonel Mallery and gesture-lan- 

 guage, 138, 145 



Common sense and children, 298 



Comparative philology, 228, 229 



Completion of feeling of harmony 

 craved, 77 



Complex ideas, 56 



Compound ideas, 56 



Concept "is," 259 



of the sun, 69, 254 



Conception is not taking or putting 

 together, 68 



Conceptions concerning previous ap- 

 prehension, 192 



, ethical, and man's distinctness 



of kind, 273 



Concepts, 56, 58, 59, 66, 73, 88, 93, 



95» 97» 145, 175. 177-179, 189, 

 190, 236, 254, 271 



, all, imply existence, real or 



ideal, 179 



and percepts of children and 



adults, 192 



called forth by any objects, 205 



contain intellectual and sensuous 



elements side by side, 271 



, higher ones, 190 



in Sanskrit roots, 236 



, innate faculty of their external 



expression, 232 



, logic of, 38, 90, 92 



, lower ones, 189, 220 



not to be degraded to recepts, 



, objective and subjective, 89 



of being, etc., as expressed by 



deaf-mutes, 145 



of primitive man, 234 



without names, 219, 220 



