INDEX. 



321 



Particular ideas, 55, 59 



images, some, analogous to uni- 



versals, 44 

 Peeping ants, 131 

 Perceiving an object, what it is, 68 

 Perception involves consciousness, 



203 

 Percepts and perception, 57, 59, 62, 



68, 119, 186, 192 

 Person, third, use of, 246, 294 

 Petitio principii, 291 

 Phantasmata, 75, 90, 176, 224, 280 



of a dog, 75, 90 



Phenomena of nature and will, 235 



pulverized no explanation, 285 



Philology, comparative, 228 



, witness of, 241 



*' Philosophic Scholastique " of F. 



Kleutgen, 57 

 Philosophy of a rustic, 239 

 Photographs, Galton ones, 44 

 Phraseology, Greek, Dayak, Chinese, 



and Polynesian, 259 

 Phylogeny and ontogeny, 263 

 Physical energy lays foundation of 



vital activity, 199 

 Physics, sensitivity, vitality, and 



intellect, 199 

 Piano and cat, illustration from, 151 

 Picking up straws by chimpanzee, 81 

 Pictorial and written language, 121 

 Pig, the celebrated "Toby," 133 

 Pigs, imaginary, hunted after prayers, 



78 



Pithecoid men and Prof. Whitney, 

 285 



Plants, Darwin's pleasure in exalting 

 them, 149 

 ■, general ideas of, 49 



, insectivorous ones, 22, 49 



Platting variously expressed, 246 



Pleasure of Indians at meeting deaf- 

 mutes, 138, 139 



Pocket-book, 248 



Poems of Richepin, 299 



Pointing and speaking, 260 



by apes, 82, 135 



of dogs, 132 



Poisoning the wells, 31 



Polynesian languages, 258, 259 



Polyonymy, no, 116 



Polysynthesis, 262 



Popular science, 30 



Position of author, statement of, 5, 

 202, 242 



of words may modify their value, 



248 



Possible existence real, 178 



Possibly clearest intuitions of first 



men, 231 

 Potential presence of intellect, 214, 

 222 



rationality, 214, 222 



Potentiality forms the most important 



of biological distinctions, 222 

 Poverty of language occasions meta- 

 phor, 233, 234 

 Power, conceptual, and children, 

 mistake about, 190 



of abstraction not in brutes, 42 



of forming habits, 60 



of objectifying ideas, 182 



Powers of thinking and introspection 



not identical, 182 

 , unimaginable, may be pos- 

 sessed by animals, 61 

 Preconcepts, 190 

 Preconceptual ideation, 217, 226 



judgments, 192 



Predication, virtual, 177 

 Predicative sign-making, 126, 127, 



174 



Prehistoric man, 33 



Prehuman animals might have articu- 

 lated, 33 



Prejudice, a, of Dr. Weismann, 10 



Prejudices, 129, 130, 149, 253, 263, 

 298, 300 



Preposterous tale about a cockatoo, 



Presence of intellect potentially, 214, 



222 

 Preyer, Prof., 204, 218 

 Priam and body-begging, 134 

 Primitive articulation, 147 



man, 33 



-= and his concepts, 234 



and reason, 282 



and the infant, 264, 265, 



270 



man's intelligence, 235 



speech, 243, 276 



terms with double meanings, 



234 



word-sentences, 242, 243 



Principle of individuation, 73 



of the screw and a monkey, 86 



Principles, dynamical, 28 



, immaterial, and Mr, Wallace, 27 



Printer's ink, etc., illustration from, 



96 

 Printing-press in the sky as a mental 



image, 165 

 Prius est esse quant significari, 39 

 Probability of discontinuity and ter- 

 minal phase of evolution, 14 

 Y 



