INDEX. 



327 



Verbal expression not man's distinc- 

 tive character, 180 



Verbs of action and rest, 254 



Verbum mentale^ 98, 114, 163, 228, 

 241, 242 



oris^ 1 14, 



Very absurd tale about a cockatoo, 



136 



Views of Darwin as to man, 3 



Virtual predication, 177 



Vitality and motion, 21 1 



, sensitivity, intellect, chemistry, 



and physics, 199 

 Vocal gesticulation, 154, 156, 160, 184 



tones, breaking of, 286 



Voiceless mother-utterance, 138 

 Volition and phenomena of nature, 235 

 Volitions, actions, and primitive man, 



234 



W 



Wagging of dog's tail and articulation, 



152 



Waitz, 242 



Walking, spiritualization of, 251 

 Wallace and immaterial principles, 27 

 ■ and sensitivity, 10 



, Mr. A. R., and man, 3, 27 



, the Professor, 195 



Warp and woof of signs, 273 



Wasp finding honey, illustration from, 



128 

 Water-fowl, recepts of, 93 

 Watson's "Reasoning Power of 



Animals," 148 

 Waves, marine currents, and dogs, 75 

 Weather-cock, illustration from, 1 58 

 Weismann, Dr. A., an avowed preju- 

 dice of, 10 

 What counting implies, 81, 91 



man is, 226 



really are signs, 7, 65, 122 



the elements of thought are not, 



117 



they most desire to express is 



first expressed by the deaf and 

 dumb, 143 



Whitney, Prof., and pithecoid men, 



285 

 Wide sense may be given to term 



"idea," 41 

 Wilks, Dr., and associations of 



feelings, 155 

 Will, and phenomena of nature, 235 

 Willingness expressed by belief, 258 

 Without understanding, signs so 



made, 65, I26 

 Witness of philology, 241 

 Wolves dread man's smell, 76 



in general dreaded by sheep, 158 



Wonderfully foolish tale about a 



cockatoo, 136 

 Word "understand," ambiguous use 



of, 151 

 Words as sentences, 242, 243, 245, 280 



expressive of actions, 233 



for moon, 287 



, how understood by animals, 



148, 160 

 " Words, Logic, and Grammar " of 



Sweet, 235 

 Words may become parts of speech by 



position, 248 



, monosyllabic, 207 



, order of in gesture-language, 



*43 . ,. 

 , their general nature nominalists 



must admit they can perceive, 39 

 World, orderly, 89 

 Wright, Mr. Chauncey, 209 

 Written and pictorial language, 121 



signs, 121 



Wundt, 199, 203, 212 



Yeo-he-ho theory, 240 



Zara tribe of Kurds, 275 



Zero level of intellect, 1 5 



Zola, 279 



Zoological Gardens, ape at, 80, 284 



UN 



EKSITY 



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