INDEX. 



323 



Reflex consciousness, 202 

 not indispensable for know- 

 ledge, 183, 197 



influence of speech on gesture, 



140 



mental action, 197 



thought must follow direct, 183, 



197, 203 



Relation between ideas and sensuous 

 affections, 94 



, historical, of word and sen- 

 tence, 242 



of intellect to religion, 26 



of tone and gesture to words, 



162 



Religion and intellect, their relations, 



26 

 Remarks, concluding ones, 295 

 Renaissance and nominalism, 39 

 Representation of evolution of man 



from brute, 288 

 Requirements, as to body, of a 



rational animal, 83 

 Retrogression in mankind, 230 

 Revelation not needed to teach us 



our immortality, 24 

 Rev. S. Smith, and ignorant deaf- 

 mute, 164 

 Rhytina, 108, 1 13 

 Richepin, 299 



Ripeness, abstract idea of, 142 

 Risu cognoscere matreni^ 138 

 Rites, funereal, of bees, 134 

 Romance languages and " is," 249 

 Romanes, Mr., and deaf-mute, 223 



, , and his child, 217, 218, 



224, 260 

 , , and tale about a cockatoo, 



136 . 



, , his hypothesis as to speech 



origin, 286 



, , his terra incognita^ 57 



Roots of Sanskrit, 232, 233, 236 

 Rubicon of mind, 262, 301 

 Rude condition of early man, 33 

 Rustic, philosophy of, 239 



St. Helena, flora of, 108, 113 



Thomas Aquinas, 39. 57 



Sally, the chimpanzee at the Zoological 



Gardens, 80, 284 

 Salutation, material acts of, differ 



formally, 219 

 Sandwith, Dr., 275 

 Sanskrit roots, 232, 233, 236 



Sanskrit term '* As-mi," 251 



Saturn, 266 



Savages and figurative language, 234 



and Herbert Spencer, 231 



and inanimate objects, 211 



and infants, their natures judged 



by analogy, 8 



and primitive man, 33 



as sowing gunpowder and nails, 



.85 



, degraded, condition of, 231 



, tales about untrustworthy, 274 



Sayce, Prof., 246-248 



Schelling, 242 



Schemes of language and sign-mak- 

 ing, 126, 127 



Scholastic arguments against nomi- 

 nalism, 39 



Scholastics, 37, 57 



Science as popular, 30 



, denominational, 31 



par excellence^ 29 



shows us our immortality, 24 



-, what it is, 28 



Scientific imagination, 29 



Scott, Dr., and idiotic children, 137 



Scotus and nominalism, 39 



Screw, principle of, discovered by a 

 monkey, 86 



Secret desire to exalt animals, 149 



Self, idea of, not made up of ideas of 

 other people, 211 



, , not so gifted as supposed, 



205 



Self-consciousness, 37, 193, 194, 196, 



197 



, outward, 202, 203 



, states of, 202 



Self-evident truths and science, 29 

 Semiotic code of common humanity, 



138 



value said to be acquired, 283 



Senception, 62, 88, 186, 192 

 Sencepts, 59, 62, 119, 192 

 Sensationalism, 299 

 Sense, traditional, of the 



" reason," 23 

 Sense-perception, 96, 232 

 Sensitive and rational souls, 73 

 Sensitivity and mechanism, 1 1 

 . and non-sensitivity, 



between, 10 



and thought, 204 



in exercise is not thought, 203 



, intellect, chemistry, and physics, 



199 



must precede thought, 203 



of plants, 1 1 



wor<l 



break 



