﻿IMPLEMENTS 
  PECULIAR 
  TO 
  MAN. 
  145 
  

  

  must 
  always 
  have 
  had, 
  instincts 
  which 
  afford 
  

   all 
  that 
  is 
  required 
  as 
  a 
  starting-ground 
  for 
  

   advance 
  in 
  the 
  mechanical 
  arts. 
  Few 
  persons 
  

   have 
  reflected 
  on 
  how 
  much 
  is 
  involved 
  in 
  

   the 
  most 
  purely 
  instinctive 
  acts, 
  such 
  as 
  the 
  

   throwing 
  of 
  a 
  stone, 
  or 
  the 
  wielding 
  of 
  a 
  

   stick 
  as 
  a 
  weapon 
  of 
  offence. 
  Both 
  these 
  

   simple 
  acts 
  involve 
  the 
  great 
  principle 
  of 
  the 
  

   use 
  of 
  artificial 
  tools. 
  Even 
  in 
  the 
  most 
  

   rudimentary 
  form, 
  the 
  use 
  of 
  an 
  implement 
  

   fashioned 
  for 
  a 
  special 
  purpose 
  is 
  absolutely 
  

   peculiar 
  to 
  Man, 
  and 
  arises 
  necessarily 
  and 
  

   instinctively 
  out 
  of 
  the 
  structure 
  of 
  his 
  body. 
  

   The 
  bodies 
  of 
  the 
  lower 
  animals 
  are 
  so 
  

   constructed 
  that 
  such 
  implements 
  as 
  they 
  

   are 
  capable 
  of 
  directing 
  are 
  all 
  supplied 
  in 
  

   the 
  form 
  of 
  bodily 
  organs. 
  All 
  effects 
  which 
  

  

  L 
  

  

  