398 



INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



material, cannot be effected by 

 the supersensible, 222; nascent 

 and rudimentary, 287, 288; dis- 

 tinction, arbitrary, 288; reduced, 

 286, 287; vestigial, 292, 300, 303; 

 useless, 286 



Organelles, 139 



Organic activity, rigidly regulated 

 by metabolism, 228 



Organic functions, 203, 213, 215; 

 agent and subject of, not soul 

 alone, 203; not only functions 

 in man, 215 



Organic substances, 149, 150; lab- 

 oratory synthesis of, 149, 150; 

 not to confounded with living 

 or organized substances, 150 



Organisms, 154, 155, 163, 201, 202, 

 203, 246; a product of the law 

 of Complexity, 167; multicellu- 

 lar, 155; none subcellular, 154; 

 of some species, syntonic, 246; 

 participates as coefficient factor 

 in physiological and sensory 

 functions, 203 ; soul-informed, 

 203; unicellular, 154, 163 



Organization, 143, 150; elude art 

 of chemist, 150 



Order, 209; ideal, phenomenalists 

 confuse it with real order of 

 things, 209; real, of things, 209 



Ordivician, 111 



Orientation of forces, centrifugal 

 and centripetal, 179 



Origins, 71, 83, 161, 220, 221, 360; 

 biparental, 161 ; common, 81 — of 

 man and brute, 360; organic, 

 need not be unified in space but 

 should be in time, 71; of con- 

 cepts, 220, 221 



Omeau, river, 326; valley, 327 



Ornithorhynchus, 59, 287 



Ornithosaurs, 80 



Orthogenesis, 6, 7, 46 note, 53; 

 cannot explain adaptation, 53 



Osmia, 252 



Outcrop, 93 



Overthrust, 98, 107, 110; a triumph 

 of modem research, 107. 



Ovists, 160 



Oximes, 148 



Oxychromatin, 139 



Oysters, 79 



Palaeobotany, 117 



Palaeolithic, 327, 328, 330, 333, 343; 

 artists, 343 ; human remains, 330 ; 

 man, 328, 333 



Palaeontological argument, 66-127; 

 defects in, 75, 124; in abstract, 

 66-75; in concrete, 75-127; a 

 theoretical construction, 126 



Palaeontological evidence, 3, 8, 66, 

 74-80, 83, 89, 97, 105, 107, 124, 

 311, 312; imperfection of, 89; 

 rated as outweighing physical 

 evidence, 97, 107 



Palaeontological pedigrees, 3, 76, 

 78, 81, 82, 84, 126; definition of, 

 81; of horse, 76, 78, 81, 82, 126; 

 camel, 126, and elephant, 126 



Palaeontologists, 76, 86, 87, 88, 91, 

 119, 190, 310, 313, 321, 334, 344; 

 incompetent to decide questions 

 of specific origin or distinction, 

 87, 88, 89, 334 



Palaeontology, 3, 82, 83, 88, 92, 95, 

 96, 114, 119, 126, 195, 311, 312, 

 313, 344; facts of, 83, 195; igno- 

 rant concerning origin of man, 

 344; orthodox, 95, 96, 119 



Palaeotherium, 76 



Paleozoic, 73, 108, 117, 118, 124 

 note, 125, 335 



PaHngenesis, 277, 288 



Pan-Pacific Conferences, 344, 346 



Panspermia, 182 



Parallelism, 57, 58; vs. divergence, 

 57 



Paramoecium, 128, 161, 178; aure- 

 lia, 138 



Parasites, 46, 53 



Parasitism, 52 



Parathyroids, 292 



Parent cell, 156 



Parthenogenesis, 158, 159, 160, 162; 

 artificial, 159, 160 — not violation 

 of law of genetic continuity, 

 159; 160 



Pathology, 141 



Patient, 176, 177 



Pear-tree, 6, 88 



Pebrine, 44 



Pecking instinct of chicks, 256 



Pecten, 118 



Pedigrees, of genera, 84 



Pelopaeus, 260 



