SPEECH. 193 



which this attribute confers upon the human intellect is to be 

 reL^ardecl as a distinction of degree only, or as a distinction of 

 kind: To answer this question we must first investigate the 

 rise of self-consciousness in the only place where its rise can 

 be observed, namely, in the psychogencsis of a child.* 



• Lest there should still be any ambiguity about the numerous terms which 

 I have found it necessary to coin, I will here supply a table of definitions. 



Lower recept = an automatic grouping of percepts. 



Higher recept = pre-concept ; or a degree of receptual ideation which does nut 



occur in any brute. 

 Lower concept = named recept, provided that the naminjj be due to reflcclive 



thought. 

 Higher concept = a named compound of concepts. 



The analogues of these terras are, in the matter of naming : — 



Receptual naming = denotation, which includes pre-couceptual naming. 

 Conceptual naming = denomination. 



And, in the matter of judging, the analogues are : — 



Receptual judgment = automatic, " practical," or unthinking inference. 



I're-conceptual judgment = the higher, though still unthinking, inferences of a 

 child prior to the rise of self-consciousness. 



Conceptual judgment = true ju'lgment, whether exhibited in denomination, 

 predication, or any act of inference for which self- 

 conscious thought may be requiiea. 



