384 



INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



from its specific agent and recep- 

 tive subject, 222; not communi- 

 cated to organism, 223; subject 

 in soul alone, 223 



Conduction path, 265 



Condyles, occipital, 272 



Conformity, 105, 107, 110; "de- 

 ceptive," 105, 110; normal sig- 

 nificance of, 105; "upside-down," 

 107 



Conjugation, 157, 161 



Consciousness, 198, 203, 204, 205, 

 206, 208, 211, 235, 238, 240, 248, 

 262; and unconsciousness, 198; 

 attests existence superficially 

 variable but radically unchange- 

 able subject of mental life, 206; 

 attests persistence of our per- 

 sonal identity, 211; dependence 

 of all science upon, 204; ety- 

 mology of, 205, 206; its testi- 

 mony to the reality of the ego, 

 205; organic and spiritual, 199; 

 phenomenal, 198; sentient, 235, 

 238, 240, 248; testimony of, 208 



Constructions, complex and sys- 

 tematic, not producible by acci- 

 dent, 53, 154 



Consolation, 358, 361; destroyed, 

 361; eliminated, 358 



Contamination of media, 135 



Contiguity, 241, 242; association 

 of, 241; law of, 241, 242 



Continents, 113, 114; permanence 

 of, 114 



Continuity, 350; destructive as 

 metaphysics, 350; leads to mate- 

 rialistic monism, 350; principles 

 of, 350; nuclear, 137 



Control, 236, 251-253; intelligent, 

 253 ; psychic, 251 ; rational and 

 moral, 236; sensory, 251-253 



Consequences — ^socialism, anarchy, 

 despair, 360 



Convergence, 10, 36, 58, 59, 61, 

 63, 77, 78, 79, 80, 277, 283, 284, 

 287; kinds of 77 



Corpuscular, 174 



Correlation, 90, 91, 93, 99, 101, 111; 

 Cuvier's Law of, 90, 91 ; strati- 

 graphic, 93, 96, 99, 101, 111 



Cortical, 294, 315; area, 274; sur- 

 face, 315 



Cosmic scale, 350; Cosmogony, 181, 

 185 



Cosmopolitan species, 73 



Cosmozoa, 182 



Cranial box, 272 



Cranial capacity, 274, 315, 317, 322. 

 325, 332, 341; absolute, 332; 

 human, 341 ; large, 341 ; of man 

 and ape compared, 274; relative, 

 317, 332 



Cranial vault, more spacious in 

 Spy No. 2, 327 



Cranium, 118, 271, 321, 325, 328, 

 329, 331, 333, 337, 341; dolicho- 

 cephalic, 325, 331 ; flat on top, 

 broad in back, 341 ; modem, 333 ; 

 human, 328; of ape, 271; of 

 man, 271; not subsequent to 

 barbarism, 337; Spy, 331 



Creation, 67, 72, 186, 187; defined, 

 187; new, 67, 72; simultaneous 

 or recessive, 72 



Creationism, 55 



Creator, 72, 249, 298, 350 



Credulous persons misled, 353 



Cretaceous, 100, 104, 108, 109, 111, 

 118; shales, 109 



Crete, 337 



Cretinism, 294 



Cries, 246 ; emotional, 246 ; instinc- 

 tive, 246 



Crinoids, 119 



Crossing, 4, 5, 19-21, 25-28, 88; in- 

 terspecific, 19-21, 26, 27; inter- 

 varietal, 19, 20, 27, 28; does not 

 produce "new species," 25-28 



Crossover, 17, 26, 42 



Crust, terrestrial, 113 



Crustaceans, 117 



Cryptorhetic system, 292-294 



Cr>'^stalloids, 144 



Crystals, 153 



Crystal units, 144, 165 



Ctenomys, 305 



Cultures, 135, 309, 317; sterilized 

 and aerated, 135 



Curved femur, acquired adapta- 

 tion, 328 



Cycads, 118 



Cycas, 118 



Cysts, 134 



Cytodes, 138, 179, 207 



Cytologist, 136, 141 



