3i6 



INDEX. 



Interruptions in nature, lo, I2 

 Introspection, and thought not 



identical, 182 

 Intuitions of first men possibly the 



clearest, 231 

 Invalid cockatoo, absurd tale about, 



136 



Invention higher than association, 

 160 



of arbitrary signs by children, 



161 



Inverted man and tree, 275 



Iron, bronze, and gunpowder men, 



217 

 Irrational actions of animals, 124 

 gestures, 121 



sounds articulate and inarticu- 

 late, 120 



"Is, "is a term v^^hich can be well 

 understood without being expressed, 

 180, 249 



, the concept, 250, 259 



Isolated children originating lan- 

 guages, 231 



Jackdaws, parrots, etc., 150 

 John Stuart Mill, 180, 191 

 Johnson, Captain, and shot monkey, 



134 



Jove and Minerva, 64 



Judgment, simplest element of thought, 



175, 217, 242, 254 

 Judgments about a negro, 176 



always imply existence, 179 



• explicit and implicit, 175, 217, 



242 



, monosyllabic ones, 206 



of children and adults, 192 



K 



Kama, Hebrew term, 251 



Kant, 40, 100, 239 



Kawi language, 246 



Khap, 287 



Kind, difference of, between recepts 



and concepts, 66 

 Kinds, different, of language, 121 

 Kleutgen's " Philosophic Scholas- 



tique," 57 

 Knocking at a door seen by cat, 84 

 *' Know," ambiguity of that term, 



154, 198 

 " Knowing and Being," work of Prof. 

 Veitch, 196 



Knowing psychical processes does not 

 alter their nature, 125 



Knowledge, conditions of, 183 



, known as such, 192 



, needs direct but not reflex con- 

 sciousness, 183 



of necessary truths, 29 



, our, of others' feelings, 22 



, receptual, not true knowledge, 



198 



, subjective, its supposed ejective 



origin, 210 



without advertence, 66 



Koum, Hebrew term, 251 



Kurd of the Zara tribe, 275 



Labourer of Sussex and intellect, 238 

 Lacey (a cowherd), his conversation, 



238 

 Lampong language, 246 

 Language and Bunsen, 251 



and Garnett, 252, 253, 280 



and Geiger, 99, 253, 278 



and Herder, 281 



and Latham, 275 



and Max Miiller, 235, 245, 



246, 248 



and primitive man, 33 



and Prof. Whitney, 285 



and ratiocination due to our 



imperfection, 243 



and reason, 120 



and Schelling, 242 



and Sweet, 235, 254 



and Waitz, 242 



, Aryan, 246 



, beginning of, 241, 243 



, categories of, 121 



, contrary opinions as to survivals, 



262 



, Coptic, 253 



, Dayak, 257 



, different groups of, 231 



, emotional and intellectual, 121 



, explicit and implicit, 127 



faculty of, and inherited organi- 

 zation, 141, 142 



, Feejee, 257 



, Grebo, 247 



, Greek, 253 



, Hebrew, 251 



, ideal, monosyllablic, 207 



, its simplest element, 243 



, Lampong, 246 



, Malay, 246 



