INDEX. 



313 



Generic and general terms not really 



distinct, 270 

 - — ideas, 52, 58, 59, 95 

 Germ of the sign-making faculty, 



128 

 German philologists' hypothesis as to 



speech origin, 283 

 Gesture and spoken language, 280 



and tone, 137 



, conceptual, 260 



, effect of on, and effect on from, 



v spoken language, 140 



expressive of idea " time," 145 



not due to speech, 147 



Gestures, indicative, of an infant, 



220 



of speechless children, intelli- 

 gent, 138, 204 



, rational and irrational, 121 



to express abstract ideas, 145 



Gesture-conversation of Indians of 



different tribes, 139 

 Gesture-language and aphasia, 138 



and Colonel Mallery, 138 



and Ml*. Tylor, 139 



, its innate intellectuality, 143 



, its syntax, 142 



would be invented by dumb 



rational animals, 163 



Gesture-signs by monkeys, 133-135 



, how meaning put into ? 284 



Gesture-told tale about apple-tree, 

 140 



about melons, 139 



Ghost not needed to show existence, 



253 



God becoming conscious of Himself 

 in man, 196 



imagined as thought enthroned 



somewhere, 166 



, intellectual brutes, and objec- 

 tive contradiction, 215 



" God made nothing," 144 



Good-for-eating, idea of, 48 



Gorilla and emotional language, 156 



(Grammatical structure of sentences, 

 160 



Grandchild of Mr. Darwin, 239 



Grebo language, 247 



Greek verb substantive, 253 



Green, Professor, 195 



Grotesque mental images, 165 



Groups of experiences, 59 



of languages, 231 



" Grouse " as a proposition, 207 



Growth of consciousness, ambiguous 

 term, 247 



Gunpowder men, 217 



H 



Habits, power of forming them, 60 



Hsecceity, 95 



Hales, Dr., 231 



Hamilton, Sir William, and signs, 92 



Hand of a clock, illustration from, 12 



Harlez, Mgr. de, 33 



Harmony, craving for feeling of 

 completion of, 77 



Hat taken off, and its significance, 

 219 



"He" as that one, 245 



*' He jackety whitey," 257 



Hearth-brush and monkey, 86 



Hebrew and expression for being, 251 



Hegel, 39, 83, 196 



Helena, St., flora of, 113, 118 



Help obtained by animals, 133 



Herbert Spencer and savages, 231 



Herder and language, 281 



Higher concepts, 190, 192 



inorganic intelligence could dis- 

 pense with signs and reasoning, 243 



natures superposed on lower, 



21 



recepts, 189, 190, 192 



" His-age-thy-father," 257, 258 



"Hiss" as an onomatopoetic word, 

 161 



Historical relation of word and sen- 

 tence, 242 



Hobbes, 39, 109, 180 



Hollows and thirsty dogs, 75 



Homo alahis, 287, 290 



sapiens, Z^J, 287 



Homonymy, 110, n6 



Hoste, Sir William, and shot monkey, 



134 



Hottentots, clicks of, 247, 286, 287 



House-fly and spider, 87 



Houzeau's exaggeration about j>ar- 



rots, 154 

 Huber and queen-bee, 129 

 Human imperfection necessitates 



language and ratiocination, 243 



instincts, 20, 25 



intellect, its spontaneity, 272 



mind and natural genesis, 215 



nature proved distinct by ethics, 



273 



progress, 18 



speech and intellect generally 



parallel, 230 

 Humanity, its semiotic code, 138 

 Hume, 40, 92 

 Hunting of imaginary pigs after 



prayers, 78 



