of language and ratiocination, that direct should precede re- that thought must precede ex- -, judgments about, 176 Nervous structure and faculty of lan- Nihil in intellectu quod, etc., 280 volitum quin præcognitum, 107 No evidence against breaks in na- experience of origins, 299 Noble, Dr., 219 Noiré, M., 102, 107, 240, 291 Nominalism, 39, 97, 181, 183, 242, 256, 259, 277 and Max Müller, 101 and realism, 39, 181, 183 scholastic arguments against it, 39 Obtaining help on the part of ani- Occurrence once of an action makes its recurrence probable, 27 of expression does not follow of words in gesture-language, 143 Organic and true inference distin- Organization, inherited, and deaf- mutes, 141 Origin, distinction as to, may be less Phenomena of nature and will, 235 Philology, comparative, 228 witness of, 241 "Philosophie Scholastique " of F. Philosophy of a rustic, 239 Phraseology, Greek, Dayak, Chinese, Physics, sensitivity, vitality, and Piano and cat, illustration from, 151 Pithecoid men and Prof. Whitney, Plants, Darwin's pleasure in exalting general ideas of, 49 insectivorous ones, 22, 49 Platting variously expressed, 246 Pleasure of Indians at meeting deaf- 234 man, 33 - and his concepts, 234 - and reason, 282 and the infant, 264, 265, man's intelligence, 235 speech, 243, 276 terms with double meanings, word-sentences, 242, 243 Principle of individuation, 73 of the screw and a monkey, 86 -, immaterial, and Mr. Wallace, 27 Prius est esse quam significari, 39 Y |