INDEX. 



319 



Mr. Romanes's hypothesis as to 



speech origin, 286 



terj-a incognita, 57 



Mr. Tylor and born mutes, 146 

 and language of gesture, 



139, 146 

 Miiller, Friedrich, 99 



, the physiologist, 83 



Muscular effort and idea of cause, 



211 

 Museon, le, 33 

 Musical instruments, illustration from, 



211 

 silent instruments do not sound 



when collected, 211 

 Mutes, deaf, and idea of being, 145 

 > , and Indians can converse 



by gesture, 139 

 , , and inherited structure, 



141 

 " My work," expression meaning dif- 

 ferent things, 248 



N 



Named recepts, 220 



Names applied to dogs by parrots, 



157, 184, 278 

 , different, of animals may mo- 

 dify their recepts, 94, 124 



do not precede thoughts, 272 



more than words, 46, 53 



not necessary to conception, 219, 



220 



of children for objects, 217 



, onomatopoetic ones, 161, 162 



Naming of dogs by children, 188 

 Narrowness of speech produces me- 

 taphor, 233 

 Nascent intelligence first apprehends 



general characters, 156 

 Natural differences of talent, 224 

 genesis and human mind, 215 



imperfection of our being ne- 

 cessitates language and ratiocina- 

 tion, 243 



selections and adumbration of 



higher natures, 21 



sign-making, 126, 127 



Nature and analysis of the verb, 252 



, dynamic breaks in, 13 



■ , foreshadowings in, 22 



• , inner, revealed by its acts, 49 



, its ultimate analysis shows vo- 

 lition, 235 



not universally continuous, 10 



■ of a sign, 7 



Nature of abstraction, 64 



of brutes and Catholicism, 32 



of infants and savages judged 



by analogy, 8 



— - of man proved essentially dis- 

 tinct by ethics, 273 



of psychical processes not altered 



by becoming known, 125 

 Nature's instantaneous actions, 12 



phenomena and will, 235 



Natures and origins, parallelism of, 

 231 



essentially different must differ 



in origin, 5 



, higher, superposed on lower, 



21 



may differ more than their 



origins, 225 



Necessary conditions and effects of 



self^consciousness, 196 



limit to evolution, 301 



truths, our knowledge of, 29 



Necessity of distinguishing between 



direct and reflex cognition, 61, 62 



of experience for imagination, 



24, 61 



of language and ratiocination, 



due to our imperfection, 243 



that direct should precede re* 



flex thought, 183, 197, 203 



that thought must precede ex* 



pression, 254 



Neglected children, 232 



Negro and blackness, 226 



, judgments about, 176 



Neolithic man, 217 



Nervous structure and faculty of Ian* 

 guage, 142 



Nihil in intellcdu quod, etc., 280 



volitum qtiin pracognitum, 107 



Nineteenth Centiuy, article of Prof. 

 Max Miiller in, 117 



No evidence against breaks in na- 

 ture, 300 



experience of origins, 299 



origin can be imagined, 299 



true perception without con-- 



sciousness, 203 



Noble, Dr., 2I9 

 Noire, M., 102, 107, 240, 291 

 Nominalism, 39, 97, 181, 183, 242, 

 256, 259, 277 



and Max Miiller, loi 



and realism, 39, 181, 183 



, scholastic arguments against if, 



. 39 



Nominalist principles, 242, 256 



Nominalists, 39, 97 



