;2o 



INDEX, 



Nominalists must admit they can 

 perceive general nature of words, 



39 

 Non-necessity of enunciation of co- 

 pula, 222 

 Not-good-for-eating, idea of, 48 

 Not-suitable-for-nutrition, etc., ideas 



of, 49 

 Nothing can be imagined which has 

 not been experienced, 27 



can be said intelligently without 



concepts, 205 

 Notions, 56, 59 



, general, of plants, 49 



implied in idea of an object, 45 



Number, idea of, what it implies, 81, 

 91 



Objectifying ideas, power of, 182 



Objective concepts, 89 



impossibility and rational brutes, 



215 



Objects, ideas of, not an amalgam, 45 



, , what they imply, 45, 46 



, inanimate, and savages, 211 



named by children, 217 



perceived, what the process is, 



68 

 Obrecht, Martha, 166 

 Obstetric forceps, illustration from, 



281 

 Obtaining help on the part of ani- 

 mals, 133 

 Occurrence once of an action makes 



its recurrence probable, 27 

 Odium antitheologiciim^ 31 

 Officers' tales of monkeys, 134, 135 

 Offspring of gesture-language, 280 

 One-worded sentences, 207 

 Onomatopoeia, 161, 162, 239, 240, 277 

 Ontogeny and phylogeny, 263 

 Opening of oysters by monkeys, 292 

 Order of being inorganic and intellec- 

 tual might dispense with language 

 and reasoning, 243 



of expression does not follow 



thought, 256 



of words in gesture-language, 143 



Orderly world, 89 



Organic and true inference distin- 

 guished, 63 

 ■ Organization, inherited, and deaf- 

 mutes, 141 

 Origin, distinction as to, may be less 

 than as to nature, 225 



Origin of consciousness inscrutable, 

 212 



of intellect and expression 



simultaneous, 236 



of mathematical, musical, and 



artistic faculties, 27 



of speech, Darwin's hypothesis, 



283, 288 



, hypotheses of German 



philologists, 283 



, Mr. Romanes's hypo- 

 thesis, 286 



of subjective knowledge, sup- 

 posed ejective, 21 



Origins and natures, parallelism of, 

 231 



cannot be imagined, 14, 26, 299 



not experienced, 299 



of things different in essential 



nature may be different, 5 



, unimaginable, 26 



" Ot," as a proposition, 206, 263 

 Other people, idea of does not con- 

 stitute idea of self, 211 



people's terms unreasonably 



despised by us, 165 



Our day, its besetting sin, 299 



immortality knowable indepen- 

 dently of revelation, 24 



imperfection necessitates lan- 

 guage and ratiocination, 243 



knowledge of the feelings of 



others, 22 



— — lower mental power shared by 

 animals, 216 



position, 5, 202, 242 



Outward self-consciousness, 202, 203 

 Oysters ©ijened by monkeys, 292 



Palseolithic man, 216, 217, 292 

 Pantomime as in ballets, 218, 260 

 Parable of the prodigal son, 144 

 Parallelism asserted between animals 

 and infants, 16 



between speech and intellect, 



230 



of origins and natures, 231 



Parrot and sight of coachman, bottle, 

 etc., 155, 161 



calling dogs, 157, 159, 184, 278 



up to its knees in dough, 133 



Parrot's actions explained, 154, 161 

 Parrots imitating sounds, 155 



said to extend meaning of 



articulate signs, 157, 185 



