442 



INDEX, 



Bear, intelligence of, 51 ; understanding 



tones of human voice, 124 

 Beattie, Dr., on intelli-,'ence of a dog, 100 

 Bees, sign -making by, 90 

 Bell, Professor A. Graham, on teaching a 



dog to articulate, 128 ; on the ideation 



of deaf-mutes, 150 

 Belt on intelligence of ants, 52, 92 

 Benfrey on roots of Sanskrit, 267 

 Berkeley on ideas, 21, 22 

 Binet on analogies between perception 



and reason, 32, and sensation, 37, 46 

 Bingley on bees understanding tones of 



human voice, 124 

 Bleek, on origin of pronouns, 302 ; on 



the sentence-words of African Bushmen, 



316, 337, 33S ; on onomatopoeia, 339 ; 



on the clicks of Hottentots and African 



Bushmen, 373 

 Bonaparte, Prince Lucien, on possible 



number of articulate sounds, 373 

 Bopp on the origin of speech, 240 

 Bowen, Professor F., on psychology of 



judgment, 167 

 Boyd Dawkins, Professor, on discovery 



of axe by neolithic man, 214 

 Bramston, Miss, on intelligence of a dog, 



56 



Brazil, climate and native languages of, 

 262, 263 



Brown, Thomas, on generalization, 44 



Browning, A. H., on intelligence of a 

 dog, 99, 100 



Brutes, mind of, compared with human, 

 6-39 ; emotions of, 7 ; instincts of, 8 ; 

 volition of, 8 ; intellect of, 9 ; Mr. 

 Mivart on psychology of, 10, 177; as 

 machines, li ; rationality of, ii, 12 ; 

 soul of, 12 ; Bishop Butler on immor- 

 tality of, 12 ; instances of intelligence 

 of, 51-63 ; ideas of causality in, 58-60 ; 

 appreciation of principles by, 60, 61 ; 

 sign-making by, 88-102 ; understand- 

 ing of words by, 123-127 ; articulation 

 by, 128-138, 152 ; reasons why none 

 have become intellectual rivals of man, 

 154-157 ; self-consciousness in relation 

 to, 175-178; recognizing pictorial re- 

 presentations, 188, 189 ; conditions to 



genesis of self-consciousness manifested 

 by» 195-199; counting by, 56-58, 214, 

 215 ; psychology of, in relation to the 

 descent of man, 364-3S4 

 Buffon, on intelligence of brutes, 12, 117 ; 



his parrot, 201 

 Bunsen, on onomatopoeia, 282 ; on Egyp- 

 tian language, 297, 298 ; on the sub- 

 stantive verb, 309 

 Burton on sign-making by Indians, 105 

 Bushmen, clicks in the language of, 291 

 Butler, Bishop, on immortality of brutes, 

 12 



California, climate and native languages 



of, 261, 262 

 Caldwell on language of savages, 349 

 Carlyle on fundamental metaphor, 344 

 Carpenter, Commander Alfred, on mon- 

 keys using stones to open oysters, 



382 

 Casalis on poverty of savage languages 



in abstract terms, 351 

 Cat, intelligence of, 59, 98, 99 ; use of 



signs by, 158 

 Caterpillars, sign-making by, 95, 96 

 Causation, ideas of, in brutes, 58-60 ; 



origin of idea of, in man, 210 

 Cebus, intelligence of, 6q>^ 61 ; different 



tones uttered by, 96 

 Champollion on Eg}-ptian hieroglyphics, 



311 



Charlevoix on language of savages, 349 



Cheyenne language. See Languages 

 Child, psychogenesis of, 4, 5 ; emotions 

 and instincts of, 7, 8 ; intelligence of, 

 as regards classification, 26, 27, 41, 66, 

 67 ; instinctive and imitative articula- 

 tion by, 121, 122; understanding of 

 words by infantile, 123 ; spontaneous 

 invention of words by, 1 38- 1 43 ; in- 

 dicative stage of language in, 158, 218- 

 222, 324 ; denotation and connotation 

 of, 179, 191, 218-231, 283-285 ; recog- 

 nizing portraits, &c., 18S, 189; rise of 

 self-consciousness in, 200-212 j use of 



