324 



INDEX. 



Sensori-motor action, 146 

 Sensuous affections and ideas, re- 

 lations between, 93 



and intellectual elements exist 



side by side in concepts, 271 



attention, 209 



cognitions, 192 



craving, 279 



universals, 44, 59, 227, 270 



Sentence, conjunctive, expressed by 

 an alternative, 144 



Sentence-words, 242, 244, 245, 258, 

 260, 261, 267, 268, 270, 277, 280, 

 287 



Sentimental sign-making, 127 



Sheep dread wolves generally, 158 



Sheffield, meeting of British Associa- 

 tion at, 22 



Shot monkeys, tales about, 133, 135 



Sicard, Abbe, and deaf-mutes, 143 



Sieve, illustration from, 67 



Significance of attribute of existence, 

 177 



Sign-making, accidental, 122, 127 

 , acquisitional, 123, 127 



, associational, 127 



' , connotative, 126, 174, 185, 



186, 192 

 , conventional, 122, 126, 127 



, denominative, 126, 174, 187 



■ , denotative, 126, 174, 185, 192 



, emotional, 126, 127 



, explicit, 127 



, imitational, 127 



, implicit, 128 



, impulsional, 127 



, indicative, 173 



, intellectual, 126, 127 



, intentional, 126 



, natural, 126, 127 



or language, schemes of, 126, 



127 



, predicative, 126, 127, 174, 185 



, sentimental, 127 



, unintentional, 126 



, without understanding, 122, 



126 

 Signs, acquisitional ones, 123, 127 

 , arbitrary ones, invented by 



children, 161 

 , articulate, are the quickest and 



easiest ones, 244 

 — — , , said to be extended by 



parrots, 157, 185 



, emotional, 126, 127 



. , gesture ones, of monkeys, 



1337I35 



• , indicative ones, 1 73 



Signs, logic of, 71 



, manual ones, 261 



, their warp and woof, 273 



, what they must be, 7, 65, 122 



, written, 121 



Simple ideas, 55 



Simplest element of language, 243 



of thought a judgment, 



175, 2i>, 242, 254 

 Simultaneous existence and con- 

 tinuity, 12 

 Sin, besetting one of our day, 299 

 Sir John Lubbock and ants, 132 



and his dogs, 133 



W. Hamilton and signs, 92 



W. Hoste and shot monkey, 134 



Sleep-walkers, 63 

 Small balls in motion, 30 

 Smell of man dreaded by wolves, 76 

 Smith, Rev. S., and ignorant deaf- 

 mute, 164 

 Society islanders, 274, 275 

 wSocrates, illustration from, 180 

 Some particular images analogous to 



universals, 44 

 Souls, sensitive and rational, 73 

 Sound of a clock, 238 

 Sounds imitated by parrots, 1555 ^^^ 

 , irrational, articulate, and in- 

 articulate, 120 

 South Africa and children, 232 

 Spathic iron, dolomite, and crystals, 



21 

 Speaking and pointing, 260 

 Speech and intellect generally 

 parallel, 230 



and Max Mliller, 235 



and primitive man, 33 



, its effect on gesture, 140 



, narrowness produces metaphor, 



233 



, primitive, 243 



Speechless children may gesture in- 

 telligently, 138, 204 



Spencer, Herbert, 39, 42, 70 



Spider and house-fly, 87 



Spiders, development of, 263 



Spiritualization of walking, standing, 

 and eating, 251 



Spoken and gesture-language, 280 



language, its effect on gesture, 



140 



Spontaneity of the human intellect, 



272 

 Spontaneous generation, 10 



purposive manual expression, 



143 



Squirrel's cage, illustration from, 268 



