INDEX. 



3^7 



Language, metaphorical, 233, 234 

 of children, 206, 221, 222, 245, 



263 



of Chinese and children, 245 



of gesture, and Colonel Mallery, 



138 



of gesture, and Mr. Tylor, 139 



— — of gesture, expressing abstract 



ideas, 145 



of gesture, its innate intellec- 

 tuality, 143 



of gesture, its syntax, 142 



of gesture would be invented 



by dumb, rational animals, 163 



of signs, 232 



, or sign-making, schemes of, 



126, 127 



, originated by isolated children, 



231 



, pictorial and written, 121 



, Polynesian, 258, 259 



, rubicon of mind, 262 



, Sanskrit, 232, 233, 236, 251 



, South African (Bushman and 



Hottentot), 247 



, spoken, its effect on gesture, 



140 



, the minimum of it, when ex- 

 pressive, the best, 243 



Languages, Romance, and term " is," 

 249 



Lankester, Prof., and Darwinism, 4 



Larnay (Poitiers), convent at, 166 



Latent idea of being in every con- 

 cept, 271 



presence of the copula, 145 



universals, 271 



Latham, Dr., 275 



Laughter, 19, 153 



Laura Bridgman, 166 



Lausanne, an afflicted child at, 166 



Laying foundation of intellectual ac- 

 tion by sensation, 198, 199 



Le Museon, 33 



Leap of progress supposed in mental 

 development, 209 



Leibnitz, 99, 112 



Lemurs, 22 



Leroy and counting crow, 79 



and wolves, 76 



*'Les Animaux Perfectibles," 149 



Letters of and to Prof. Max Miiller, 

 99-116 



Lewes, and exaggeration m anecdotes 

 of animals, 149 



Lightning-like rapidity of thought, 



Limit to evolution, 301 



Line of least resistance followed, 30 ' 



, straight, not made up of crooked 



lines, 211 



Lingua Jranca, 232 



Local presence and existence, 251 



Locke, 36, 38, 39, 97 



Logic of concepts, 38, 90 



of events, 221 



of feelings, 71, 165 



of recepts, 38, 60, 65, 91, 200, 



201 



of signs, 71 



Logos, the, 95, 100, 105, 118 



Lord's Prayer, as expressed by deaf- 

 mutes, 145 



Love of the marvellous, and savages, 

 274 



Lower concepts, 96 



mental powers (our) shared by 



animals, 216 



recepts and concepts, 189, 192 



Lubbock, Sir John, and ants, 132 



, , and his dogs, 133 



Ludicrous, the emotion of, 19 



M 



Machine, Babbage's calculating, 175 



, its making and using, 267 



Making and using machines, 267 



Malaise^ feeling of, 22 



Malay language, 246 



Mallery, Colonel, and language of 



gesture, 138, 145 

 *' Mama pleased to Dodo," 208 

 Man, abnormal, may be lower than 



brutes, 8 

 , Alfred Wallace's views con- 

 cerning him, 3, 27 



and Aristotle, 31, 32 



, Darwin's views concerning 



him, 3 

 evolved from brute, representa- 

 tion of, 288 



, primitive, 33 



, , and his concepts, 234 



, , his intelligence, 235 



, Prof. Lankester's views con- 

 cerning him, 4 



, what he is, 226 



Man's asserted bestiality, 4 



decay and retrogression, 2'^o 



development and time, 237 



distinction lies in mental not 



verbal affirmation, 180 



nature proved essentially dis- 

 tinct by ethics, 273 



