35^ 



INDEX 



206-8, 219; possible reciprocal in- 

 fluence of body-cells and germ- 

 cells, 203, 204-s, 206, 219 



Glutathione, 72 



God: as the medium of the inter- 

 action of body and mind, 270, 272 



Gold, transmutation of Mercury 

 into, 42-3 



Gravitation: Relativity and, 25, 28- 

 31, 185; Einstein's closed cage il- 

 lustration, 28-9; acceleration and, 

 equivalent expressions, 28-9, 30; 

 as the curved structure of the real 

 Space-Time world, 30-31; New- 

 ton's Law of, 184-S 



Grew: study of plant cells, 62 



Guelincx, 272 



Habit and hereditary modifications 

 leading to variations, 203, 204, 

 206-8 



Haemoglobin, 58 



Haldane, Professor, 140, 177 



Hegel, 88 



Helium atom, the, 40, 42 ; Helium 

 nuclei, 40, 42 ; emission of Helium 

 used as a geological clock, 42 ; 

 transmutation of elements by ex- 

 pulsion of Helium atoms, 42, 53 



Heredity, 63 ; the organism and its 

 field, 114-16; Variation infinitesi- 

 mal compared to, 141 ; inheritance 

 of acquired characters, 194, 201 j 

 inheritance of modifications, 194, 

 201, 202-3; inheritance^ of muta- 

 tions, 194, 196-7, 206; Mendelism, 

 195-6; the germ-cell theory and, 

 198, 199, 200; inheritance of ac- 

 quired experience, 205 n. ; educa- 

 bility and, in the human, 252, 274; 

 the hereditary past in Personahty, 

 255, 273, 274; Holism and, 255, 



273, 274, 332 

 Hobhouse, Professor L. T., 247 

 Holism, 98, 107, 116-17, 148, 180; 

 co-operation and co-ordination in 

 cell activities, 77-84, 96-7, 191, 

 214-15, 230, 320; the fundamental 

 whole-making tendency of the uni- 

 verse, 82, 84, 97-8, 99, 100, 107, 

 108, 143, 179, 181, 307-8, 319-21, 

 326, 329, 335, 337-8, 344-5; its 

 progressive phases, 96-7, 105, 

 106-7, 180, 335; ideal wholes, 98, 

 ios-6, 107, 144, 222, 241, 243, 

 259, 294, 30s, 311, 312, 313, 314- 



16, 329, 344-5; the motive power 

 of creative Evolution, 98, 99, 102, 

 105, 107-8, 129-31, 137, 142, 143-4, 

 215, 321 w., 323, 325; the source 

 of all Values, 107, 144, 221, 241, 

 243, 259, 305, 335, 344-5 ; creative- 

 ness of, 107-8, 128-36, 142-4, 178, 

 181, 221, 222, 273, 304, 305; value 

 of the concept of, 108-10, 148, 259, 

 260; bridges the gaps between 

 matter, life, and mind, 108-9, 121, 

 158, 174-6, 178, 179, 320-21; Sci- 

 ence and, 109-10, 142, 148, 221, 

 248, 321-5; suggested substitution 

 of notion of Holism for that of 

 Ufe, no, 160-61; as a concept, a 

 factor, and a theory, 116-17, 158; 

 functions and categories of, 120- 

 44; and the idea of causality, 

 126-7, I3S-6, 137, 138, 305, 306-7, 

 308; Freedom and, 137-9, 274, 304, 

 305, 306, 308-14; inner co-ordina- 

 tion and self-regulation by, 140- 

 42, 143, 214-15, 230-31, 232, 233, 

 234, 240, 242, 319-20; structural 

 character of, 143-4, '^S2>i i7S» 

 180-81; Mechanism and, 147-81, 

 292, 329; Personahty the supreme 

 expression of, 151-2, 153, 263-4, 

 267, 273, 283, 284, 292, 293, 295, 

 304, 308, 316, 320, 329; and life 

 and its action on the body, 172-9; 

 overbalance of equilibrium in all 

 structures towards, 178-9, 214; 

 Darwinism and, 184-223 ; Varia- 

 tion as explained by, 191, 206, 

 209-15, 332, 342-3; Holistic Selec- 

 tion, 211, 212-15, 220; repressive 

 aspect of, 215-16; spiritual aims 

 of, 216, 222, 337-8, 344-5; mind 

 as an organ and expression of, 222, 

 226-60, 264, 292, 320, 325; indi- 

 viduaUty and universality, two 

 tendencies of, 232, 233-5, 238, 

 240-41, 242, 243, 245-6, 319; de- 

 velopment of attention and con- 

 sciousness, 237; the Subject-Object 

 relation in, 238, 239, 240, 293, 295; 

 holistic aspects of subconscious 

 mind, 254-5, 257, 279-80; the 

 senses and, 255-6, 284; purpose 

 and, 258-9; body and spirit re- 

 united in, 266-7; and body-and- 

 mind relation in Personality, 

 267-73, 277, 279; itself the real 

 actor in Personality, 271-6, 283, 



