INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



397 



Neanderthaloid, 328, 333, 341, 343; 



characteristics occur in modem 

 skulls, .333; race, 343; skulls, 

 modem features occur in, 333 



Nebular, hypothesis, 181 



Negroes, 334 



Neo-Darwinism, 10 



Neo-Kantian, 203, 219; phenom- 

 enalist, 203 



Neo-Lamarkism, 10, 12, 15 



Neolithic, 332 



Neontologists, 76 



Neotoma, 307 



Neo-vitalism, 171, 201, 202; postu- 

 lates a unique force, an agent 

 "sui generis," 171 



Neo-vitalists, 58, 200, 201; regard 

 vital principle as force **sui gen- 

 eris," a unique agent, 200, 201 



Nephridia, 280 



Neptune, 184 



Nerve plasm, 265 



Neurograms, 213, 214, 222; ex- 

 tended, 222; imprinted on neur- 

 ons, 213, 214; objects capable of 

 stimulating an extended organ, 

 222; objects of, endowed with 

 concrete properties, 222; pro- 

 portioned to stimuli, 222; physi- 

 cal basis of imagery, 214, 222 



Neurons, 213, 222, 350; sensory 

 and central, 213; utility of sen- 

 sory, 222 



New names for fossil duplicates of 

 modern species, 119, 120 



New Stone Age, prehistoric, 337 



Nihilism, philosophical, 350 



Nitrogen snow, 183 note; reddish 

 light of, 184 note 



Non-cosmopolitan species, 283 



Non-enents, 309 



Non-opposability of human hal- 

 lux, 50 



Non-phenomenon or substance, 

 209 



Non-specialist, when disqualified 

 and when not, 189-191 



Non-viable, 25 



Novelty, emergent, 350 



Nuclear components, self-perpetu- 

 ating, 139 



Nuclear reorganization, 155, 160, 

 161, 162; a restorative process, 



155, 161 ; means of rejuvenation, 

 161; none in somatogenic re- 

 production, 160; periodic, 162; 

 primitive, 162 



Nuclear sap, 139 



Nucleus, 137, 138, 161; cellular, 

 138; daughter, 161; distributed, 

 138; germinal, 161; parent, 161 



Nucula, 118 



Nutrition, a reflexive activity, 175 



Object, 217, 223, 224; concurrence 

 of, extrinsic, 217; indicated 

 spiritual nature of mind, 224; 

 (material) abstract, made of 

 representation, 224; of abstract 

 thought, incapable of making 

 impressions or leaving records 

 on material receptors, 223 



Occipital foramen, 272 



Occiput, broad, 332 



Ocean beds, elevation of, 114, U5 



Ocean bottoms, 113-115 



Ocean floor, 115 



Octopus, 64 



(Enothera, 16, 17, 27, 28; gigas, 

 17; Lamarkiana, 27, 28 



(Esophagus, invertebrate, 293 



Old Stone Age, 332, 337, 339, 340; 

 class of, 332; prehistoric, 337 



Oligocene, 309, 317 



Onion-coat, 99, 102, 103, 109; a 

 convenient device, 109; Alpine, 

 109; hypothesis of, 102, 103— 

 "transcendental form of," 102; 

 lithological and biological, 102; 

 mineral envelopes, 102; theory, 

 99 



Ontogeny, 39, 79, 275, 285 



Oolites, 79 



Opisthonephros, 280, 282 



Opposability of simian hallux, 50 



Opposition, 218, 219, 234, 235; be- 

 tween imagery and thought, 218, 

 219; between psycho-organic 

 and spiritual activity, 234, 235; 

 entails distinction, 235 



Orang-utan, 33, 271 



Orders, 37 



Organ, 222, 226, 276, 286, 287, 288, 

 292, 298, 300, 303; embryonic, 

 276; functionless, 286, 287, 292; 

 incapable of reflection, 226; 



