INDEX. 



309 



Conceptual ideation, 205 



not a mere result of physi- 

 cal conditions, 152 



judgments, 192 



power and children, mistake 



about, 190 



Conclave of ants, 130 



Concluding remarks, 295 



Concrete ideas, 55, 59 



Condition of early man, 33 



Conditions antecedent to evocation 

 of consciousness, 199 



of knowledge, 183 



of structure and faculty of lan- 

 guage, 142 



Conjunctive sentence expressed by 

 an alternative or contrast, 144 



Connotative terms, 126, 174 



or signs, 174, 185, 186, 



187 



Consciousness, 37, 62 



and reason, 193 



, conditions antecedent to its 



evolution, 199 



, direct, not reflex, indispensable 



to knowledge, 183 



does not necessitate use of the 



first person, 204 



inscrutable in origin, 212 



Consentience, 62, 203 



Consequences of upholding man's 

 rationality, 32 



Continuity, illustrations concerning, 

 12 



• not universal in nature, 10 



Contradictory opinions about sur- 

 vivals in language, 262 



Contrast may express a conjunctive 

 sentence, 144 



Conventional acts, 121, 122, 126- 

 128 



Conversation held with a cockatoo, 



136 



in gesture of different Indians, 



139 



with a cowherd, 238 



Coptic, 253 



Copula, fallacy as to, 1 79, 249 



implied, 221, 222 



may be latent, yet essentially 



present, 145 



Counting crow, so said, 79 



of the chimpanzee " Sally," 80 



, what it implies, 81, 91 



Cousin, 39 



Cowherd's conversation, 238 

 Craving feeling for completion of a 

 harmony, 77 



Craving, feeling of, 279 

 Credulity, instances of, 133, 134, 153 

 Cries, instinctive, 283 

 Crow, counting, as atf rmei, 79 

 Crystals, dolomite, and spathic iron, 

 21 



Day, our own, its besetting sin, 299 

 Danger, idea of, and animals, 76 



signals, 290 



Darwin, Mr., his grandchild, 239 

 Darwin's dog looking up into a tree, 



75 

 hypothesis as to speech origin, 



284, 288 



pleasure in exalting plants, 149 



views as to man, 3 



Dayak language, 257 

 De Harlez, Mgr., 33 

 Deaf and dumb first express what they 



most desire to express, 143 

 Deaf-mute and Mr. Romanes, 223 

 , ignorant one's idea of the Bible, 



165 



who must have reflected, 223 



Deaf-mutes, 96 



and idea of being, 145 



and Indians, 138, 139 



and inherited organization, 141 



and the Abbe Sicard, 143 



, innate intellectuality of, 143, 



^45» 232 



, their abnormal condition, 164 



, uneducated, their status, 164 



Decay of social conditions, 230 

 Defect of our nature necessitates 



language and ratiocination, 243 

 Defects of savages exaggerated, 274 

 Definition of a sense-perception, 41 



of an idea, 41 



Degradation of art and science, 299 

 Degraded concepts are not recepts, 



117 

 Degrees of self-consciousness, 202 

 Delusion of explaining feeUngs by 



motions, 30 

 Denominational science, 31 

 Denominative terms, 126, 174, 185, 



187, 192 

 Denotative terms, 126, 174, 18$ 

 Descartes, 23, 37-39 

 Desire, secret, to exalt animals, 149 

 Despising, the unreasonably, terms 



not ours, 165 

 Detection, abstract idea of, 142 



