INDEX 



353 



299; self-realisation the aim of,5 

 294, 314-16; will and, 295; thef 

 ideal of Purity and, 303-4, 312,^1 

 314-15; moral discipline in scheme 

 of, 313, 314; the holistic uni- 

 verse, 319-45; unverifiable, 321, 

 322, 324-5; Spiritualism and, 332, 

 333, 334-6; Monadology and, 

 332-4, 335; Pluralism and, 334, 

 335-6; the Supreme Whole in, 338, 

 341-2, 343. 



Hohstic Selection, 211, 212-15, 220 



Hooke, Robert, 62 



Hormones, functions of, 205 



Hybridisation, 217 



Hydrogen atom, the, 40, 41-2 



Ideal Man, the, 312-13 



IdeaUsm, a denial of creative Evolu- 

 tion, 330-1, 332, 334, 335, 337, 343 



Ideals, Holistic, 98, 105-6, 107, 144, 

 222, 241, 243, 259, 294, 305, 311, 

 312, 313, 314-16, 329, 344-5 



Immortality, early Christian contro- 

 versy on, 158 



Individual, the, and the race, differ- 

 entiation of development of, 198-9, 

 201-3, 204 



Individuality: fundamental in Na- 

 ture, 83; mind and the holistic 

 process of individuation, 139, 140, 

 232-4, 238-40; consummated in 

 the human Personality, 233, 241, 

 245-6, 274-5, 276, 277, 278-9, 

 284-5, 289; in its higher develop- 

 naents, 240-46; the individual and 

 his social environment, 245, 251, 

 252, .339, 342; the individualist 

 mind and the universal mind, 

 245-6; memory as the basic bond 

 of individuaUty, 254; the study 

 of the individual Personality in 

 biography, 284-9 



Inert elements, and internal equilib- 

 rium of the atom, 43, 44 



Inorganic, the: vanishing fixity of 

 inorganic elements, 23-4; its con- 

 version into organic at colloidal 

 surfaces, 47, 58; chemical com- 

 bination and structure in inorganic 

 chemistry, 47-8; the cell the real 

 distinction between organic and, 

 64 



Instinct: in Bergson's philosophy, 

 94; and the development of mind, 

 237 



Intellect, the: in Bergson's philos- 

 ophy, 93-4, 95, iii; effect of its 

 selectiveness, in, 112; develop- 

 ment of, 294-5 



"Intro-action" of body and mind, 

 270 



Intuition, in Bergson's philosophy, 



94 

 Inverse Square, Newton's law of 



Gravitation, 185 

 Iodine, its effect on the thyroid 



gland, 279 

 Isomerism, 38 



Judgment, synthetic, 259-60 



Kammerer, 207 n. 



Kant: his conception of Space and 

 Time, 32, 33, 94; on the creative 

 action of the mind, 32-3 ; and the 

 Newtonian system, 185; his realm 

 of Ends, 259; his "synthetic unity 

 of apperception," 259-60, 271; 

 man a legislative being, 296; the 

 concept of Necessity, 308; no in- 

 ference of God justified from the 

 facts of Nature, 342 



Keats, 336 



Lamarck, reaction towards, 188 

 Language, a social instrument, 245, 



251 

 League of Nations, the, 344 

 Leibniz: pre-established harmony of, 

 34, 89, 269-70, 272, 333, 334; his 

 reply to Descartes, 164, 167; Hol- 

 ism and the Monadology of, 332-4, 

 335, 339 

 Life: apparent separateness of life, 

 mind, and matter not founded in 

 fact, 2, 3, 21, 50; new concept of, 

 needed, 3, 4, 5;. mechanistic view 

 of, 4, 12, 109, no, 155, 179-80; 

 thought and, 4, 157; vagueness of 

 present concept of, 5, 16, 109, 120, 

 158-9; its development from mat- 

 ter, 7-8, lo-ii, 174-6; life and 

 mind true operative factors in 

 Evolution, 15-16, 324-5, 332; 

 chemical structure of its mecha- 

 nism, 48 ; in the cell, on its way to 

 mind, 66, 77; electrical energy of 

 sun and the origin of, 71, 72; 

 character of wholeness in, 77-84, 

 97; overflow of life, mind, and 

 matter into each other's domain, 



