326 



INDEX. 



Thought must precede meant signs 



and expressions, 254 

 , reflex, must follow direct 



thought, 183, 197, 203 

 Thoughts not bound to follow the 



order of expression, 256 

 Three-card trick, 147 

 Threlkeld, 274 

 Thunder, dog's fear of, 85 

 Thunder-clap, illustration from, 63 

 Tidal waves and dogs, 75 

 Time, expression by gesture of that 



abstract idea, 145 



, greatly drawn upon, 287 



needed for man's development, 



237 

 " To know," ambiguity of the term, 



154 

 Toast, illustration from, 5 

 Toby the learned pig, 133 

 Tone and gesture, 137 

 Tongues, divers, and reason, 228 

 Traditional sense of the word 



" reason," 23 

 Tramway, ants, and Mr. Belt, 76 

 Transition, asserted, in the race, 282 



in the individual, 214 



Traps and wolves, 76 

 *'Tree," the term, 276 

 Trellis- work in hives, 129 

 Triangle, illustration from, 43, 54, 128 

 Tribes, uncultured, and metaphor, 234 

 Tricks of the chimpanzee " Sally," 80 

 True and organic inference distin- 

 guished, 63 

 — — nature of abstraction, 64 



sense of the word "reason," 23 



universals, 44, 59 



"Trumpeter," the term, 270 

 Truth, absolute, and mechanical 

 hypothesis, 30 



stated as true, 192 



Truths, absolute and necessary, 29 

 Tylor, Mr., and born mutes, 146 

 , , and language of gesture, 



139 

 Tyndall, Prof., 28 



U 



Ultimate analysis of nature shows 

 volition, 235 



Ultra-Nominalists and general nature 

 of words, 39 



Umbrella, syllogism about, 255 



Unconscious and intellectual cogni- 

 tion, 65 



Uncultured tribes and metaphor, 234 



*' Understand," ambiguous use of the 

 word, 151, 160 



Understanding of deaf-mutes by 

 Indians, 139 



of words by animals, 148 



, signs made without, 65, 126 



Uneducated deaf-mutes, their psy- 

 chological status, 164 



Unimaginable nature of all origins, 26 



Unintentional, accidental making 

 facts known, 192 



sign-making, 126 



Universal continuity in nature does 

 not exist, lo 



truths, 29 



Universalia sensiis, 57 



Universals, 270, 271 



, extent of, 271 



, feelings analogous to, 57, 158 



, sensuous, 44, 59, 227, 270 



, and true ones, 44, 59 



Unreasonable depreciation of terms 

 not ours, 165 



Untrustworthiness of tales about 

 savages, 274 



Urmenschen, 284 



Use of first person not necessary for 

 consciousness, 204 



of third person, 246 



, traditional, of the term "rea- 

 son," 23 



Using and making machines, 267 



Utility of mechanical hypotheses, 29 



of thought, 173 



Utterance, voiceless, 138 



V 



Valid conclusion as to essential nature 

 of intellect, not to be drawn from 

 persons intellectually deficient, 164 



Value of implication of existence, 177 



of words modified by position, 



248 



, semiotic, said to be acquired, 



283 



Vase of flowers and ants, 131 



Vegetative vitality and sensitivity, 

 199 



Veitch, Prof., 196 



Venus's looking-glass, 49 



Verb-substantive, and Greek, Egyp- 

 tian, and Coptic, 253 



, and idea of being, 249 



, the, its nature and analysis, 



252 



