322 



INDEX. 



^ 



Processes and states, mental, 35 

 Prodigal son, parable of, 144 

 Prof. Lankester and Darwinism, 4 



Tyndall and things "mentally 



visualized," 28 



Veitch, 196 



Whitney and language, 285 



Profound dififerences may underlie 



acts externally similar, 219 

 Progeny of Adam, 33 

 Progress from childhood to maturity, 



223 

 , leap of, supposed to occur in 



mental development, 209 

 Progressiveness of man, 18 

 Pronouns and adverbs, 245 

 Propositions all imply existence, 179 

 as implying existence, 177 



expressed by monosyllables, 



206, 207, 242, 243-245 



, their meaning, 178 



Protozoa, 22 



Psychical principle, 73, 225 



■ processes not altered by becom- 

 ing known, 125 



Psychogenesis, 240 



Psychological status of uneducated 

 deaf-mutes, 164 



Pulverizing phenomena to explain 

 them, 285 



Purposive, spontaneous manual lan- 

 guage, 143 



** Quack-quack " as a term, 161, 239 



Quatrefages, M., 201 



Queen-bee laying eggs, 129 



Question begged, 21 



" Questiones Philosophicse " of F. 



Maurus, S.J., 57 

 Questions answered by a cockatoo, 



Quickest signs are articulate ones, 



244 

 Quod gratis asseritur gratis negatur, 14 



R 



kace transition, 282 

 *' Rain," as a sentence, 255 

 Rapidity of thought, 255 

 Ratiocination, 23 



and language due to our imper- 

 fection, 243 

 not a comparison of ratios, 70 



Rational and sensitive souls, 73 



brutes and objective impossi- 

 bility, 215 



cockatoo, as asserted, 136 



dumb animals would invent a 



gesture-language, 163 



gestures, 121 



Rationality of man, consequences of 



maintaining it, 32 

 Realism and nominalism in conflict, 



39 



j fogs of, 104 



Reality in ideal existence, 178 

 Really intentional acts, what they 



are, 122 

 Reason and consciousness, 193 



and divers tongues, 228 



and language, 120 



and primitive man, 282 



and the infant, 214, 222 



and the survival of the fittest, 



112, 118 



, not authority, appealed to, 39, 



161, 294 



not ratiocination, 70, 71 



, true and traditional sense of the 



word, 23, 24 

 Reasoning and language are necessary 



to an inferior order of intellect 



such as ours, 243 



and reckoning, 109, 1 14 



not in brutes, 42 



Recepts, 52, 58, 59, 62, 66, 73, 88, 



9i-93» 96, 97, "7, 124, 184, 199, 



220, 227 

 are not degraded concepts, 117 



distinguished as higher and 



lower, 189 



— , logic of, 38, 60, 88, 91-93, 



200 j 20 1 



named, 220 



of water-fowl, 93 



Receptual ideation, 217, 226 



knowledge not true knowledge, 



198 



naming, 192, 



self-consciousness, 203 



Reckoning and reason, 109, 1 14 



Recognition, 69 



Recognitions of past perceptions, 163, 



176, 182, 184, 227, 271 

 Reduction of terms, 272 

 Reflection in a deaf-mute, 223 

 Reflex action, 146 



acts, not the only intellectual 



ones, 125 



and direct cognitions must be 



distinguished, 61, 62 



