GENERAL INDEX'. Acts of a primitive society, 272. A-diti, boundless, 185 note. Adjectives, at first formed like sub- can be used as substantives, 442. are they abstract or concrete terms? treated by Mill as concrete, 463, abstract terms derived from, 464. afterwards attributives, 526. Aesthetics, or subjective evolution, Agassiz's divisions of the animal Agglutination, or adaptation, 223. Agglutinative period of Aryan speech, 1 I have been relieved of the trouble of making this index by the same kind hand that helped me in preparing those of my former books. 305. AnG, root for painting, 303. Angle, none without two converging Animal and man, language the spe- to man, transition from, 504. Animals, teaching of, by men, 10. intelligence of, useless arguments are automatic machines, 15. Schopenhauer on, 177. sounds of, uncertainty in imitating, 192. Aristotle and the tricoloured rain- Aristotle's definition of an enuncia- ten categories, 424. categories, objections to, 430. artificial metaphors, 488. oldest division of metaphors, 491. Arithmetics, the science of time, 598. Articulate words, difficulty of render- Aryan roots, number of, 210. As, the termination, 237. AS, to be, to breathe, 221, 384. Associated, things generally, 512. Atharvana-veda, nine divisions of the, 339. Atman, self, 221, 611. Attention, the dawn of thought, 4. F. H. Bradley on, 4 note. constant and essential, render cer- accidental, 595. essential, i. e. nominal, 595. Augment, less perfect reduplication, 243. Bahvrikya, twenty-one divisions of the, 339. Bain, Professor, 590. Bateman, Darwinism tested by lan- guage, 172 note, 201 note. - on Aphasia, 154, 155. ohne Anschauungen sind leer, 143. ideas and words, 42. a nihilist, egoist, and idealist, 73. denies the existence of general and Locke, mean percept by idea, on notions or universal ideas, 260. on attributes, 448. on abstraction, 453. - his idea meant picture, 453. forswore the use of words, 617. Bha, forming names of animals, 232. Bitter is biting, 305, 602. Black, brown, yellow, and white men tors, 115. not descended from one pair, 157. Black, bleak, 304. Blackhorn, same as whitehorn, 62. Blue, livid colour of a bruise, 304. Boller, Die Declination der Finnischen Bopp, 208, 209, 213, 227, 233. Bowels of compassion, 507. and pooh-pooh theory, 181, 206. Bradley, F. H., on attention, 4 note. Brain of animals and men, arguments of gorilla, size of, 6. of Australians, 6. - affection of left side of anterior cannot think, though perhaps a - which separate different kinds, 98, which change Chaos into a Kosmos, Broca, Dr., on the brain, 202. use of words, 258. Buddhists forbade all speculation on the beginning of things, 101. Caesius, bluish, bluish-grey, 304, 483- Call separated from kaλeiv, 203. Carbonic acid and water, will they Care and cura, separation of, 203. Castrum, casa, cassis, 370. Category of objectivity, 288. of causality, 288. the first, substance, 426, 441. the eighth the most difficult, 428. Causality, 601. Kant's view of, 148. Schopenhauer on Kant's view of, Helmholtz on, 150. Causation, same with Mill as order Cause and effect, Hume on, 140. to effect, transition from, 511. Charta, from SKAR, 556. Child, a, and early framers of lan- guage, difference between, 522. Chinese, 180, 193, 192, 194, 308, 437. roots in, 241. Xλwpós, helvus, yellow, 304. Xpu-aós, not from Hebrew chârûz, Xp@ua, colour, Xpús, skin, 303. Cicero, Latin of, 253. on metaphors, 493. Clamor concomitans and significans, Comte, 144. Renan on, 144 note. Huxley on, 145 note. Conceivable, meaning of, 159. and inconceivable, H. Spencer's H. Spencer's later view, 587. Concept, 19. Conception, 19-20. the, becomes the type of the com- Concepts (Begriffe), 2. can they exist by themselves? 229. origin of, the fundamental ques- Concepts or Roots, 475. the 121 original, 404, 551. further reduction of, 406. - by themselves are nothing, 563. the quality grown together with name, the name of an object, 467. Condillac and his school, 21. all science is a well-made lan- DÂ, Sanskrit root, 183, 184, 188, its three stems, 184 note, 191. DÂ, to purify, 185. DÂ and DÂS, 360. DÂ, to root, to bind, 413. DAM, to shape, to control, 387. DABH and DARH, roots, to tie into DAMH, DARBH, tying together, 387. Darwin, 89, 94, 99, 105, III, 118, - - 123, 153, 157, 163, 173, 182, not the discoverer of evolution, differs from the Darwinians, 104. on agnosticism, 107. and Kant, 152. on the Descent of Man, 160. followers of, 118, 120, 154, 179, - against language as a specific differ- - did he retract his theory? 298. theory of evolution, 89, 579. different beginnings, 111. Dâ-trám, da-tram, 184. Day, separated from dies, 203. Deaf and dumb people, 63. Delaware, name for horse, 53. knew only a few colours, 303. - traced to conceptual roots, 221. survivals of a time when gesture Demonstrative roots or elements, 241. Dentals corrupted into linguals, 350. Descent of Man, Darwin on the, 160. Deserve' a name, to, 532. DHÂ, used in Greek for the differ- Dhâtu, a feeder or root, 335. a dualist, 277. his Concursus divinus, 278. his argument put in modern dress Dialectic, more special sense of, 353. stage, primitive, 361. Diamond and combustible, words for, first framed, 538. Diderot, 284. Ding an sich, Kant's, 24, 569. Diomedes, the grammarian, 189 note. |