31? 



INDEX. 



Expression, order of, does not bind 

 thought, 256 



Expressions meant must be enter- 

 tained, 254 



, monosyllabic, 207 



of children, 206 



of propositions by monosyllables, 



206, 207, 245 



Extension, alleged, of articulate signs 

 by parrots, 157, 185 



Externally similar acts may differ 

 profoundly, 219 



Exuberance of synonyms, 274 



Facial contortions and intellect, 



267 

 Faculties, innate, 232 

 , mathematical, musical, and 



artistic, origin of, 27 

 Faculty of conception generally, not 



constituted by nervous structure, 



142 



of language and nervous in- 

 herited structure, 141, 142 



Fallacy as to copula, 1 79, 249 

 Families of languages, 231 

 Farm-yard and fox, illustration from, 



Farrar, Archdeacon, 235, 237, 240 

 Father Maurus's " Questiones Philo- 



sophicse, 57 

 *' Father-of-thee, age-of-him," 257 

 Fear of thunder by dog, 85 

 Feejee language, 257 

 Feeling of craving, 279 



' of ?nalaise, 74 



without knowledge, 66 



Feelings analogous to universals, 57, 



158 



and ideas, differences between, 



45 » 46 



, expectant ones, from associa- 

 tion, 63 



' explained by motions, a delu- 

 sion, 30 



, logic of, 71 



of association, and Dr. Wilks, 



155 



of others, how known, 22 



Fichte, 40 



Figurative language and savages, 



234, 272 

 Figures of speech due to its poverty, 



.234 

 First expressed by deaf and dumb 



what they most desire to express, 



.143 



First men had possibly clearest in- 

 tuitions, 231 



person, use of, not necessary for 



consciousness, 204 



Fittest, survival of, and reason, 108- 

 112 



Flight of thought, 173 



, utility of, 173 



Flora of St. Helena, loS, 113 



Fly and spider, 87 



Fogs of Realism, 104 



Following the line of least resistance, 

 30 



Forbes, Mr., and a monkey, 133 



Forceps, obstetric, illustration from, 

 281 



Foreshado wings in nature, 22 



Formal and material activities, 67, 



85 



and material classifying, etc., 



64 



Formally or really intentional acts, 

 122 



Foundation of higher natures laid in 

 lower, 21 



Foundations of intellect and self-con- 

 sciousness, 198, 199 



Fox and farm-yard, illustration from, 



50 

 Freedom of Catholics as regards the 



nature of brutes, 32 



of thought, 33 



Free-will and nature's phenomena, 



235 

 Friedrich Miiller, 99 

 Fundamental metaphor, 271 



relations between physical, 



chemical, and vital powers, 199 



Funereal rites of bees, 134 



Galton, Mr. F., 44, iii 



photographs, 44 



Garnett, Mr., 252, 253, 280 



Geiger, Herr, 99, 253, 278 



General characters first apprehended 



by nascent intelligence, 156 

 nature of words, nominalists 



must admit they can perceive, 39 



ideas, 56, 59 



, or notions, of plants, 49 



parallelism between speech and 



intellect, 230 

 Generation, spontaneous, 10 



