and shapes. On the other hand, this is no warrant for detaching voluntary speech from the organic bodiliness in which it is embedded, because this bodiliness is, not simply a hindrance, but, on the contrary, an enrichment of man’s expressive apparatus. By itself alone, verbal speech offers for the most part only signs that remain extrinsic to the signified, whereas the expressive languages of the body and of all other natural utterances have the advantage of being intrinsically analogous to what
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