INDEX. 



311 



E 



Early man, condition of, 33 



Ease of imagining what is wanted, 



284, 285, 298 

 Easiest imaginations tend to be 



adopted, 30 



signs are articulate ones, 244 



Effect of spoken language on gesture, 



140 

 Efforts, muscular, and idea of cause, 



211 

 " Ego " said spontaneously by child, 



146 

 Egyptians and the substantive verb, 



253 



Ejective origin of subjective know- 

 ledge, 210 



Ejects, 210 



Element of thought, the simplest,, a 

 judgment, 175, 217, 242, 243 



Elements of thought, what they are 

 not, 117 



Elephant blowing to bring an object 

 nearer, 75 



Elevation of terms, 272 



Embodied intellect, 199 



Emotion of the ludicrous, 19 



Emotional language, I2i, 156 



signs, 126, 127 



English labourers and intellect, 237, 

 238 



Enrichment of material for gesture, 

 expression, 140 



Enunciation of copula not essential, 

 222 



Equality, idea of, 96 



, , expressed by gesture, 145 



Essence of moral judgments different 

 from all others, 273 



Essential characters of a sign, 7 



presence of copula when not 



expressed, 145 



Essentially different natures must 

 differ in origin, 5 



distinct nature of man shown by 



ethics, 273 



Ethical propositions, 273 



Ethics demonstrate man's distinction 

 of nature, 273 



Events, logic of, 221 



Every concept and proposition im- 

 plies existence, 179 



includes idea of "being," 



271 



Evocation of consciousness, 1 99 



Evolution judged by analogy discon- 

 tinuous ultimately, 14 



Evolution of language by dumb ra- 

 tional animals, 163 



of man from brute, representa- 

 tion of, 28S 



Exaggeration of defects of savages, 

 274 



of importance of term " I," 205 



Exaggerations in anecdotes of animals, 



149 

 Exalting plants, Darwin's pleasure 



in, 149 

 Examples of monosyllabic proposi- 

 tions, 206, 207, 245 

 Exercise of sensitivity must precede 



and is not thought, 203 

 Exigencies of expression, 264 

 " Exist " and *' existence " as terms,. 



250, 251 

 Existence and local presence, 25,1 



as implied in propositions, 177 



, idea of, expressed by gesture^ 



145, 



of names not necessary for con- 

 ception, 218, 22O) 



, possible and ideal, is real, 178 



Existences, simultaneous, and con- 

 tinuity, 1.2 



Expectant feelings from association, 



63 . ■ . . . 



Experience necessary for imagination,, 



26, 61 

 Explanation of feelings by motions,. 



delusive, 30. 

 of parrot's actions, 154, 161 



of phenomena by pulverizing 



them, 285 



Explicit judgments, 174,217 



language, 127 



Expression and intellect simultaneous. 



in origin, 236 



'< arises out of," ambiguous, 43 



by gesture of the idea time, 145 



first given by deaf and dumb to 



what they most want to express, 



143 

 in Hebrew for existence, 251 



must be preceded by thought, 



254 



" my work " meaning different 



things, 247 



of a conjunctive sentence by 



alternative or contrast, 144 



of abstract ideas by deaf-mutes, 



145 



of concepts, innate faculty of, 232 



of copula not essential, 222 



of willingness by term "belief," 



258 



