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Named recepts, 220
Names applied to dogs by parrots,
157, 184, 278

different, of animals may mo-
dify their recepts, 94, 124

220

do not precede thoughts, 272
more than words, 46, 53

not necessary to conception, 219,

of children for objects, 217
onomatopoetic ones, 161, 162
Naming of dogs by children, 188
Narrowness of speech produces me-
taphor, 233

Nascent intelligence first apprehends
general characters, 156
Natural differences of talent, 224

genesis and human mind, 215
imperfection of our being ne-
cessitates language and ratiocina-
tion, 243

selections and adumbration of
higher natures, 21

sign-making, 126, 127

Nature and analysis of the verb, 252
-, dynamic breaks in, 13
foreshadowings in, 22

inner, revealed by its acts, 49
its ultimate analysis shows vo-
lition, 235

not universally continuous, 10
of a sign, 7

Nature of abstraction, 64

319

of brutes and Catholicism, 32
of infants and savages judged
by analogy, 8

of man proved essentially dis-
tinct by ethics, 273

of psychical processes not altered
by becoming known, 125
Nature's instantaneous actions, 12
- phenomena and will, 235
Natures and origins, parallelism of,
231

essentially different must differ
in origin, 5

-

21

higher, superposed on lower,

may differ more than their
origins, 225

Necessary conditions and effects of
self-consciousness, 196

limit to evolution, 301

truths, our knowledge of, 29
Necessity of distinguishing between
direct and reflex cognition, 61, 62
of experience for imagination,

24, 61

of language and ratiocination,
due to our imperfection, 243

that direct should precede re-
flex thought, 183, 197, 203

that thought must precede ex-
pression, 254
Neglected children, 232
Negro and blackness, 226
—, judgments about, 176
Neolithic man, 217

Nervous structure and faculty of lan-
guage, 142

Nihil in intellectu quod, etc., 280

volitum quin præcognitum, 107
Nineteenth Century, article of Prof.
Max Müller in, 117

No evidence against breaks in na-
ture, 300

experience of origins, 299
origin can be imagined, 299
true perception without con-
sciousness, 203

Noble, Dr., 219

Noiré, M., 102, 107, 240, 291
Nominalism, 39, 97, 181, 183, 242,
256, 259, 277

39

and Max Müller, 101

and realism, 39, 181, 183
scholastic arguments against it,

Nominalist principles, 242, 256
Nominalists, 39, 97

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Objects, ideas of, not an amalgam, 45
what they imply, 45, 46

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inanimate, and savages, 211
named by children, 217
perceived, what the process is,

68
Obrecht, Martha, 166

Obstetric forceps, illustration from,
281

Obtaining help on the part of ani-
mals, 133

Occurrence once of an action makes

its recurrence probable, 27
Odium antitheologicum, 31
Officers' tales of monkeys, 134, 135
Offspring of gesture-language, 280
One-worded sentences, 207
Onomatopoeia, 161, 162, 239, 240, 277
Ontogeny and phylogeny, 263
Opening of oysters by monkeys, 292
Order of being inorganic and intellec-
tual might dispense with language
and reasoning, 243.

of expression does not follow
thought, 256

of words in gesture-language, 143
Orderly world, 89

Organic and true inference distin-
guished, 63

Organization, inherited, and deaf-

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Phenomena of nature and will, 235
pulverized no explanation, 285
Philology, comparative, 228

-, witness of, 241
Philosophie Scholastique
Kleutgen, 57

" of F.

Philosophy of a rustic, 239
Photographs, Galton ones, 44
Phraseology, Greek, Dayak, Chinese,
and Polynesian, 259
Phylogeny and ontogeny, 263
Physical energy lays foundation of
vital activity, 199

Physics, sensitivity, vitality, and
intellect, 199

Piano and cat, illustration from, 151
Picking up straws by chimpanzee, 81
Pictorial and written language, 121
Pig, the celebrated "Toby," 133
Pigs, imaginary, hunted after prayers,
78

Pithecoid men and Prof. Whitney,
285

Plants, Darwin's pleasure in exalting
them, 149

general ideas of, 49

insectivorous ones, 22, 49

Platting variously expressed, 246

Pleasure of Indians at meeting deaf-

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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
Principles, dynamical, 28

-, immaterial, and Mr. Wallace, 27
Printer's ink, etc., illustration from,
96
Printing-press in the sky as a mental
image, 165

Prius est esse quam significari, 39
Probability of discontinuity and ter-
minal phase of evolution, 14

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