INDEX 



351 



56-7, 89-90; the position of the 

 cell m, 64-S, 83, 84; cell differen- 

 tiation and the divergence of plant 

 and animal forms, 75-7; creative 

 Holism the motive force behind 

 Evolution, 98-99, 102, 105, 107-8, 



129-35, 137-9, 141-3, 178, 216, 

 220-3, 230, 273, 320, 321 «., 323, 

 325, 326, 328; the lower unit the 

 basis of the next higher unit, 

 153-4, 169, 17s, 178; life and mind 

 the two great saltus in, 154, 271; 

 its persistent trend not accidental, 

 178, 341, 342; Neo-Darwinian the- 

 ories, 188, 190-92, 194-203; the 

 Germ-cell theory, 188, 190, 194, 

 197-205; Mendelism, 194, 195-6; 

 the Mutation theory, 194, 196-7; 

 experimental Evolution and its 

 limitations, 194, 195-6, 200, 217; 

 HoUstic Selection in, 211, 212-15, 

 220; its negative aspect, 215-16, 

 221-2; interaction of internal and 

 external factors in, 218-20; the 

 place of mind in, 226, 228, 229-35, 

 248-9, 251; the psychic and the 

 organic in, 230-32, 234, 235-8, 240- 

 41, 243-4, 249-53, 273-4; its ad- 

 vance towards individualit}'' and 

 Personality, 232-3, 275, 276, 282, 

 320; Naturalism and, 329-30; 

 Monadology and, 332-4; Pluralism 

 and, 334-S; purposive view of, 

 justifies no inference of a Su- 

 preme Mind, 342 



Evolution in the Light of Modern 

 Knowkdge (Bower), 207 «. 



Experience: interaction of matter, 

 life, and mind confirmed by, 2, 3, 

 iSS-6, 157; its plasticity and the 

 rigidity of our concepts, 17, 21, 

 23; the Space-Time continuum of 

 events in, 27-8, 33, 34; the Sub- 

 ject-Object relation in, 32-3, 94, 



238, 239, 277; Bergson on, 92-3; 

 the duality of the mind and, 238, 



239, 240, 245, 246-51; scientific 

 interpretation of, 247-8, 250; in- 

 fluence of past on present, 254; 

 Personality as the Subject of, 277, 

 292 



Females, emotional sensitiveness of, 

 impUed by the principle of Sexual 

 Selection, 13, 14, 222-3 



Ferments, action of, in protoplasm, 



47, 68 



Ferns, gametophytes of, 74-5; mod- 

 ifications and variations in, 207 n. 



Fibro-vascular system of plants, 76, 

 78 



Fields, value of the concept of, 17, 

 18, no, 111-14, 328, 339; appHed 

 to concepts, 17-19; things and 

 their fields, 17, 112, 113-14, 327-8; 

 the Space-Time continuum the 

 field of the material universe, 31-2, 

 34, 114, 327; the field of matter 

 dependent on its internal struc- 

 ture, 44, no, 112-13; colloidal 

 surfaces as fields, 47; wholes and 

 their fields, no, 112, 113-16, 335, 

 339, 340; organisms and their 

 fields, 1 13-16; the field of the 

 germ-cell, 191, 204, 206-8, 219; 

 the field of mind, 228, 253-9; the 

 field of Nature, 340-41, 342, 343; 

 group fields, 339-40 



Force, doubtful vahdity of concept 

 of, 160; laws of, and the princi- 

 ples of mind and body, 163-70 



Freedom: of the organic whole, 

 137-9, 306, 307, 309; of the Per- 

 sonality, 139, 274, 275, 276, 304, 

 305, 309-12, 314, 315; of the mind, 

 250, 258-9; the rule of the uni- 

 verse, 307-8; not Umited to the 

 will, 307, 309, 310 



Function and structure, their rela- 

 tion in wholes, 104, 106, 107, 112, 

 122-4 



Future, the, an operative factor in 

 the activity of the mind, 258-9 



Galileo, 25 



Gametes, the, 74 



Gametophyte generation, the, 74 



Gases, result of internal equilibrium 

 in the atoms and molecules, 44, 45 



General Theory of Relativity (Ein- 

 stein), 23, 24 



Generahsation, the error of, 15, 20 



Genes, 53, 200; struggle for existence 

 assumed among, 201-2 



Genetics, 563; theories of Variation, 

 53, 194-205, 220 



(Geological age measured by Radio- 

 activity, 42 



Germ-cell theory of Variation, 188, 

 190, 191, 194, 197-205, 220; the 

 field of the germ-cell, 191, 204, 



