INDEX.
A.
- Abstraction, abstract ideas, beginnings of, 443;
- Acting, relation of, to play, 36, 326;
- Activity, action. See Movement.
- Adjectives, first use of, 171, 427.
- Adornment, child’s instinct of, 318.
- Æsthetic aspect of child, 2;
- Affirmation, sign of, 417.
- After-images, child’s ideas of, 102, 465.
- Altruism, germs of, in child, 242.
- Amiel, H. F., 3.
- Andree, R., 337 note, 338, 345 note, 348 note, 352 note, 379, 381 note.
- Anger, early manifestations of, 232, 407, 432.
- Animal, child compared with, 5;
- ideas of child respecting, 123;
- dread of musical sounds by, 195;
- fear of uncaused movements by, 205, 220;
- child’s fear of, 207, 433;
- child’s ill-treatment of, 239;
- his sympathy with, 247, 460, 475, 485;
- recognition of portraits by, 309;
- care of body by, 318;
- child’s mode of drawing, 372;
- his liking for, 450.
- Animism, of nature-man, 104;
- traces of, in child-thought, 480.
- Anthropocentric ideas of child, 82, 98, 102, 427.
- Anthropomorphic ideas of children, 79.
- Anti-social tendencies of child, 230.
- Antithesis, child’s use of, 174, 429, 442.
- Argument. See Dialectic.
- Arms, child’s manner of drawing, 348;
- treatment of, in profile representation, 362.
- Art;
- art-impulse of child, 298;
- first responses to natural beauty, 300;
- pleasure of light and colour, 300;
- germ of æsthetic feeling for form, 303;
- feeling for flowers, 305;
- feeling for scenery, 306;
- rudimentary appreciation of art, 307;
- effects of music, 308;
- interpretation of pictures, 309;
- understanding of stories, 314;
- realism of child, 314;
- attitude towards dramatic spectacle, 315;
- feeling for comedy and tragedy, 316;
- beginnings of art-production, 318;
- love of adornment, 318;
- grace in action, 321;
- relation of art to play, 321, 326;
- germ of imitative art, 323;
- invention, 325;
- roots of artistic impulse, 327.
- Artfulness of children, 272.
- Articulation, first rudimentary, 135;
- Assertion, child’s manner of making, 457, 471.
- Assimilation. See Similarity.
- —— phonetic, 156.
- Association of ideas, in imaginative transformation of objects, 32;
- seen in extension of names, 164;
- first manifestations of, 405.
- Assonance, in early vocalisation, 137.
B.
- Baby, new-born, helpless condition of, 5, 400.
- Baby-worship, 17.
- Bagehot, Walter, 280.
- Baldwin, J. Mark, 11 note, 20, 40 note, 335 note, 484 note.
- Barnes, Earl, 125 note, 224, 368 note.
- Beard, drawing of, 358.
- Beauty. See Æsthetic Feeling and Art.
- Binet, A., 19, 82.
- Birth, child’s ideas of, 1, 107, 117.
- Black, instinctive dislike of, 202, 204, 215, 451, 497.
- Body, relation of, to self, 110, 113, 115, 457;
- treatment of, in early drawings, 344;
- representation of, in profile, 362;
- drawing of animal, 374;
- first examination of, 403.
- Bridgman, Laura, 169, 244.
- Bright objects, attraction of, 300, 403, 409.
- Brown, H. W., 22 note, 74, 95, 97, 105, 112, 121, 255, 275, 313.
- Burial, child’s ideas of, 121;
- Burnett, F. H., 43, 44, 237, 257.
- Burnham, W. H., 27 note, 30 note.
C.
- Canton, W., 39, 96, 102, 173 note, 186, 209.
- Catlin, G., 356.
- Causation, cause, first inquiries into, 78, 446, 457;
- Ceremonial observances of child, 281.
- Champneys, F. H., 196 note, 420 note.
- Child, modern interest in, 1;
- scientific inquiry into, 3;
- psychological investigation of, 7;
- relation of, to race, 8;
- concern of education with, 10;
- observation of, 10;
- qualifications for observing, 14;
- individuality of, 23.
- Coleridge, Hartley, 113.
- Colour, order of discrimination of, 19, 437;
- child’s delight in, 300;
- preferences for certain, 301;
- liking for contrast of, 302;
- first observation of, 422;
- recognition of affinities of, 465;
- recognition of opposition of, 481.
- Coloured hearing, 33.
- Comic, sense of the. See Fun.
- Commands, child’s first use of, 172, 430.
- Comparison, beginnings of, 71.
- Compayré, G., 37 note, 76, 169 note, 173 note, 208, 217, 249.
- Concretism, 163.
- Contrast, early use of. See Antithesis.
- Contrast of colours, early perception of, 481.
- Conversation, child’s first attempt at, 431.
- Cooke, E., 333 note, 334, 338, 339, 373, 374 note, 375 note, 388.
- Courage, attempt to inculcate, 470.
- Creation. See Origin of things.
- Cruelty, towards children, 226, 292;
- nature of children’s, 239.
- Crying, of child at birth, 400;
- Curiosity, as characteristic of child, 83;
- as counteractive of fear, 225;
- as motive to maltreatment of animals, 241.
- See Questioning.
- Custom, child’s respect for, 280.
D.
- Dark, child’s fear of, 211, 462.
- Destructiveness, as characteristic of child, 240.
- Darwin, C., 139, 141, 146, 233 note, 407 note, 411 note, 417 note.
- Deaf-mutes, gesture language of, 173, 175.
- Death, child’s ideas respecting, 120, 463;
- his feeling on witnessing, 237, 238, 496;
- dread of losing mother by, 245;
- his shrinking from, 478.
- Defiance. See Law.
- De Quincey, T., 251.
- Dialectic, child’s skill in, 275, 449, 460.
- Dickens, Charles, 53.
- Difference, dissimilarity, perception of, 67, 441.
- Disappearance, puzzle of, for the child, 84;
- child’s first ideas of, 444.
- Discipline, moral, lying as related to, 258;
- resistance to, 268;
- criticism of, 275, 286;
- child’s imitation of, 285;
- problem of, 290.
- Discrimination. See Difference.
- Disobedience, child’s attitude of. See Law.
- Distance, child’s inadequate ideas of, 99;
- first perception of, 414.
- Doll, place of, in child’s play, 42;
- treatment of, by child, 43;
- illusion of, 44, 492;
- fear of, 204, 410.
- Domenech, Abbé, 385 note.
- Dramatic representation, effects of, on child, 315.
- Drawings of children;
- general characteristics of, 331;
- crude beginnings of, 333;
- first attempts at human figure, 335;
- treatment of head, 335;
- facial features, 337;
- evolution of features, 340;
- treatment of the trunk, 344;
- of the arms, 348;
- of the hand, 351;
- of the legs, 354;
- of the foot, 355;
- introduction of profile elements, 356;
- mixed schemes of human figure, 367;
- representation of action, 369;
- treatment of accessories, 370;
- of animals, 372;
- of man on horseback, 377;
- of man in boat, house, etc., 380;
- of house, 381;
- résumé of facts, 382;
- defects of, 382;
- showing what is invisible, 383, 392;
- explanation of facts, 385;
- mental process involved in, 385;
- child’s observation as reflected in, 393;
- his ideas of objects as illustrated in, 394;
- rudiments of artistic value in, 396.
- Dreams, child’s first ideas of, 103;
- Dress, child’s dislike of new, 202, 319, 410;
- his treatment of, in drawings, 371.
- Droz, G., 21.
E.
- Ears, drawing of, 343, 361.
- Earth, the, child’s ideas of, 100, 482.
- Echo, childish interpretation of, 496.
- Education, importance of child-study for, 10.
- Egger, E., 40 note, 47, 107 note, 153.
- Egoism of child. See Morality.
- Egyptians, drawings of, 361, 366, 369.
- Emotion. See Feelings.
- Envy, as childish characteristic, 231.
- Erasmus, D., 87.
- Evolution, doctrine of, bearing of, on child-study, 5, 8;
- on children’s fear, 208;
- on their angry outbursts, 234;
- illustrated in child’s drawings, 382.
- Exaggeration, child’s tendency to, 255.
- Excuses, child’s invention of, 271.
- Experiment, carrying out of, on child, 17.
- Expression of feeling, through sounds, 136;
- Eyes, drawings of, 340;
- treatment of, in profile, 359, 360;
- treatment of animal, 373;
- learning to control movements of, 401, 402.
F.
- Fairies, child’s belief in, 59, 124, 454, 466.
- Fancy. See Imagination.
- Fatalism, traces of, in child-thought, 273.
- Fear, in children, the observation of, 193;
- startling effects of sounds, 194;
- feeling of bodily insecurity, 197;
- of visible objects, 198;
- of strange things, 199;
- of strange persons, 201, 410;
- of new clothes, 202, 410;
- of the sea, 202;
- of ugly dolls, 204, 410;
- of moving things, 205;
- of shadows, 206;
- of animals, 207, 433;
- of the dark, 211, 462;
- explanation of, 219;
- comparison of child’s with animal’s, 220;
- with savage’s, 220;
- with abnormal terror, 221;
- action of experience upon, 221;
- palliatives of, 223;
- of bath, 470;
- of lamp, 493.
- Feelings of child, problem of studying, 191;
- Flowers, child’s love of, 305.
- Folk-etymology, 188.
- Foot, child’s mode of drawing, 355;
- representation of, in profile, 364.
- Form, child’s observation of, 60, 393, 421, 465.
- Fry, I., 224, 253.
- Fun, child’s sense of, 316, 411, 434, 450.
G.
- Galton, F., 45, 404.
- Games. See Play.
- General ideas, generalisation, first rudiments of, 141, 161;
- Gesture, early use of, as signs, 138;
- Ghosts, germ of fear of, in child, 462.
- God;
- child’s ideas of his form, 126;
- of his dwelling-place, 126;
- of his creative activity, 127, 478;
- of his omniscience, 128;
- of his omnipresence, 129;
- of his goodness, 130;
- of his eternity, 131;
- of his triune being, 331.
- Goethe, J. W. von, 241 note, 315, 512.
- Goltz, B., 42, 53, 185 note, 186 note.
- Government. See Discipline.
- Grace of child, 321.
- Grammatical forms, child’s indifference to, 161, 440.
- Grasping, movement of, 412.
- Grave. See Burial.
- Greed of child, 231, 432.
- Grosse, E., 319, 327, 368.
- Growth, ascribed by child to lifeless things, 97, 449;
- child’s inquiries into, 80, 457;
- his ideas of, 104, 485;
- and subsequent shrinkage, 105.
- Guyau, J. M., 253.
H.
- Habit, influence of, seen in children’s drawings, 390, 392.
- Hair, drawing of, 343.
- Hale, Horatio, 145.
- Hall, G. Stanley, 34, 101, 122, 125, 135 note, 140, 188, 256, 262, 264 note, 338 note, 350 note.
- Hallucination, traces of, in child, 423, 500, 501, 511.
- Hands, child’s manner of drawing, 351;
- first use of, 400, 401;
- discrimination of right and left, 484.
- Happiness of child, problem of, 222.
- Harte, Bret, 65.
- Heaven, children’s ideas of, 122, 126, 479.
- Heavenly bodies, children’s ideas of, 99, 100, 482.
- Heine, H., 3.
- Hell, child’s fear of, 224.
- Helpfulness of child, 246.
- History, child’s treatment of, 503.
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 61.
- Hugo, Victor, 3, 213.
- Humane feelings, compassion for animals, etc. See Sympathy.
- Humorous aspect of child, 3.
- Hypnotic suggestion, hypnotism, 13, 254, 257, 261, 294.
I.
- ‘I,’ ‘me,’ first use of, 178, 428, 439, 444.
- Idealism, traces of, in child, 117.
- Ideas of children. See Imagination and Thought.
- Illusion, in transformation of objects by imagination, 31, 500;
- in play, 47;
- tendency to morbid, 62.
- Image. See Semblance.
- Imagination, age of, 25;
- differences in power of, among children, 26;
- transformation of objects of sense by, 29, 500;
- relation of, to play, 35;
- free projection of images of, 51;
- and Storyland, 54;
- connexion between, and thought, 70;
- as element in fear, 218;
- relation of, to lying, 254, 438;
- early development of, 405, 438.
- Imitation, imitative movement;
- Incantation, playing at, 501.
- Indignation, moral, manifestations of, in child, 248, 452, 474.
- Individuality of child, 23.
- Ingelow, Jean, 31, 118.
- Inheritance of fear, 208, 411.
- Inquisitiveness. See Curiosity.
- Insensibility of child, 236.
- Instinct, in articulation, 134;
- in fear, 198;
- in angry passion, 235;
- in truth-telling, 264;
- in respect for law, 279.
- Invention, artistic, 325;
J.
Janet, Pierre, 445.
K.
- Kipling, Rudyard, 12.
- Kratz, H. E., 82, 126.