INDEX 



unity of, 135-1395 power of, 

 possessed by mankind for thou- 

 sands of centuries, 136; com- 

 munity of, belongs to a later 

 rather than to an earlier stage of 

 progress, 145, 157. See Lan- 

 guage. 



Spencer, Herbert, his Study of So- 

 ciology, 165 ; on changes in com- 

 munities due to the mutual ac- 

 tions of individuals, 165 ; Outlines 

 of Cosmic Philosophy on sociology 

 of, 1 70, 1 72 ; on the great-man 

 theory as held by Carlyle, 173- 

 I 7S I 7&> 181 ; on ontology, 

 258 j farewell dinner given to, 

 268 ; immensity of his work, 

 269, 278 ; on care of the body, 

 293 ; on consciousness and molec- 

 ular motion, 305. 

 Spencerian evolutionists, 170. 

 Spencerian school, unwise use of the 



term, 163. 



Spitzbergen, in Eocene age, 16 ; 

 deciduous trees in, 17; in Plio- 

 cene age, 26 } perpetual snows of, 

 62. 



Spontaneous variations, analogy be- 

 tween geniuses and, 158, 162; 

 in species, 159, 160. 

 Sportsmanship esteemed and criti- 

 cised, 208. 

 Squirrels, Miocene, 22 ; intelligence 



of, 285. 

 Stephanas of Byzantium on Thrace, 



80. 



Stephen, Leslie, edits Clifford's Lec- 

 tures and Essays, 292. 

 Stone age, Old, 34 ; river-drift men 

 in, 3436 ; Cave-men in, 36 

 40 ; New, 41 j farmers and 

 shepherds in, 41. 



Stone implements, of the river-drift 

 men, 35 ; of the Cave-men, 37. 

 Stubbs, William, works of, 176. 

 Submergence, in Jurassic period, 1 5 ; 

 in Eocene period, 1 6 ; in Miocene, 

 20. 

 Sugdha, creadon of, by Ahura- 



Mazda, 68 ; known by the an- 

 cients as Sogdiana, 71. 



Swine, Pliocene, 27. 



Switzerland, in Silurian age, 1 5 ; in 

 Cretaceous period, 16 ; Miocene, 

 20 ; lake-villages of, 42. 



Symbols of faith, 237. 



Sympathies, human, widened by in- 

 dustrialism, 207. 



Syriac language closely related to 

 Hebrew and Assyrian, 146, 147. 



Table, as a group of states of con- 

 sciousness, 300 ; as the social ob- 

 ject, 301. 



Tahiti, numerals in the language of, 

 156. 



Tapirs, Miocene, 22 5 Pliocene, 27 j 

 representative of, in Eocene age, 

 320. 



Target shots as an illustration of 

 variations in species, 161. 



Tartar and Tatar, 150. 



Tartaric languages, spoken by no- 

 madic tribes in Asia, 89. 



Tears and grief, 254, 256. 



Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, quotation 

 from his In Memoriam, 225. 



Tertiary period in geology, relative 

 duration of, 3,7; aspect of na- 

 ture in, 6, 8 j northern Asia in, 



*5- 

 Tertullian, his Credo quia impouibile, 



237. 



Teutonic character of English lan- 

 guage, 100. 

 Teutonic language, the sixth grand 



division of the Aryan speech, 86 j 



divisions of, 86. 

 Teutons, their invasion of Europe, 



45, 86 ; as Aryans, 76 ; diffusion 



of, from the time of Caesar to the 



fifth century, 86. 

 Theological renaissance, 260. 

 Theology and inscrutable realities of 



religion, 225. 



Thessaly, brigandage in, 208. 

 Thomson, Sir William, on antiquity 



of life on the earth, 8. 



363 



