314 



INDEX. 



Huxley, Prof., on our knowledge of 



others' feelings, 22 

 Ilymenoptera, 17 

 Hypotheses, mechanical ones, useful. 



Hypothesis, Darwin's, as to speech 

 origin, 283, 288 



, mechanical, regarded as abso- 

 lute truth, 30 



, Mr. Romanes's, as to speech 



origin, 286 



of German philologists as to 



speech origin, 283 



of Noire, 102, 107, 240, 291 



I 



" I " as signified in various languages, 

 246 



as this one, 245 



, importance of the term exagger- 

 ated, 205 

 " Idea " as a term used in abroad and 



narrow sense, 41 

 Idea of an object not an amalgam, 45 

 —— of being, 70, 145, 176, 249, 271 

 - — - of being and deaf-mutes, 145 

 < of being and substantive verb, 



249 



-« of ''being" latent in every con- 

 cept, 271 



' of cause and muscular effort, 



211 



of equality, 96 



of number, what it implies, 81 



of self not composed of ideas of 



other people, 211 



• of self not so exceptionally gifted 



as supposed, 205 



of the Bible by ignorant deaf- 

 mute, 165 



Ideal existence real, 178 



language monosyllabic, 207 



Idealism, 37, 194, 195 



Ideas, 38, 41 



, abstract, of ripeness, appear- 

 ance, detection, direction, and sur- 

 prise, 142 



—— and feelings, differences between, 



45. 46 



and sensuous affections, rela- 

 tions between, 94 



as classified by Mr. Romanes, 59 



as classified by us, 59 



called simple, particular, com- 



jiound, complex, and mixed, 55, 

 56 



Ideas, definition of, 41 



, general, of plants, 49 



of brutes, 41 



of camel and triangle, illustra- 

 tion from, 43 



of good-for-eating, suitable-for- 



nutrition, etc., 48, 49 



of object, conceptions implied 



in them, 45 



, power of objectifying them, 182 



Ideation, conceptual, 205 

 Identification "of thought and lan- 

 guage, 102 

 Identity, meaning of, 105, 114 

 Idiotic children and Dr. Scott, 137 

 Ignorant deaf-mute's idea of the Bible, 



165 

 Ignoratia elenchi, 283 

 " llda," a childish term, 217, 218 

 Illustration from a cat and a piano, 



a marsupial maminal, 69 



an accoucheur, 281 



a sieve, 67 



a thunder-clap, 63 . 



a triangle, 43, 54, 128 



a weather-cock, 158 



bolting a door, 68 



chcfzw^ dinner, 200 



fox and farm-yard, 50 



hour-hand of a clock, 12 



ideas of camel and triangle, 



43 

 Jove and Minerva's birth, 



64 



match and candle, 200 



musical instruments, 21 1 



printer's ink, 96 



Socrates, 180 



squirrel's cage, 268 



steam-engine, 96 



telegraph-post, 220 



toast, 5 



wasp and honey, 128 



Illustrations as to continuity, 12 

 Imaginary pigs hunted after prayers. 



Imagination of anything unexperi- 

 enced, impossible, 26, 61 



, scientific, 29 



Imaginations, the easiest, tend to be 

 adopted, 30 



Imitation, meaningless, instinctive 

 and intentional, 159 



of sounds by parrots, 155 



Imitational acts, 124, 127 



Immaterial intelligence would not 

 need language or reasoning, 243 



