394 



CREATIVE EVOLUTION 



vital, has evolved divergently, 141. 



See Divergent lines of evolution 

 Adaptation, 54, 58, 60-6 1, 63, 74, 107, 



135-6, 138, 203, 269, 285, 322-3 

 and causation, 107, 108 

 mutual, between materiality and in 

 tellectuality, 197, 218 

 and progress, 107 

 Adequate and inadequate in Spinoza, 



390 

 Adjectives, substantives and verbs, 319- 



20, 331-2 



Aesthetics and philosophy, 186-7 

 Affection, Role of, in the idea of 



chance, 247 

 in tiie idea of nought, 297-9, 35&amp;gt; 39 



3 11 , 3 1 i, 34 



in negation, 30^-^, 



Affirmation and negation, 301-2, 309 



Age an.l individuality, 16 



Albuminoid substances, 128-9 



Alciope, 10 i 



Alexandrian philosophy, 340, 341 



Algae in illustration of probable con 

 sciousness in vegetable forms, 118, 

 229 



Alimentation, 120, 123, 260 



Allegory of the Cave, 202 



Alternations of increase and decrease of 

 mutability of the universe, 257-8 



Alveolar froth, 35-6 



Ambiguity of the idea of &quot;generality&quot; 



in philosophy, 243-4, 338-9 

 of primitive organisms, 104, 118, 119, : 

 136-7 



Ammophila hirsuta, paralysing instinct 

 in, 182 



Amoeba, in illustration of imitation of 



the living by the unorganized, 35-8 



in illustration of the ambiguity of 



primitive organisms, 104 

 in illustration of the mobility char 

 acteristic of animals, 114 

 in illustration of the &quot;explosive&quot; ex 

 penditure of energy characteristic of 

 animals, 125-6, 266 



Anagenesis, 36 



Anarchy, idea of, 246, 247. See Dis 

 order 



Anatomy, comparative, and transform- 

 ism, 26 



Ancient philosophy, Achilles and tortoise, 



3 2 7-9 



Alexandrian philosophy, 340, 341 

 Allegory of the Cave, 202 

 Anima (De), 340 note 

 Apogee of sensible object, 362, 364, 



3 6 9 

 Archimedes, 352-3 



Aristotle, 141-2, 183-5, 2 39 4&amp;gt; 33 2 3&amp;gt; 

 339, 34 , 342, 346-5 2 , 3 6 7, 3 6 9- 

 374, 37:% 3 8 9- 39i 



Arrow of Zeno, 325-9 



ascent toward Clod, in Aristotle, 341 



Astronomy, ancient and modern, 



353-.S 



attraction and impulsion in, 341-2 

 becoming in, 330-31, 334 

 bow and indivisibility of motion, 325-6 

 Caelo (De), of Aristotle, 340 ;/v, 342 



note 



and Cartesian geometry, 352-3 

 causality in, 341, 3.] 3-4 

 change in, 330-31, 334, 346-7, 362-4 

 cinematographical nature of, &quot;32-3 

 circularity of God s thought, 341-2 

 concentric spheres, 346-7 

 concept^, 344-5, 377 

 &quot; con \ ers;on and &quot;procession&quot; in, 



34 



.tion of ideas into sensible flux. 



3U-6i 319- 34 -2, 34,-, 346-7, 



3 6 2-4i 372-3 



3 at reality, 34 1-2, 345 

 diminution, derivation ot becoming 



by. See Degradation of Ideas, etc. 

 duration, 3 74-- r:c,te, 341--, &amp;gt;45~7 

 Kleatic philosophy, 324-5, 331-2 

 Enneads of 1 lotinus, 222 note 

 essence and accident, 374 

 essence or form, 331-2 

 ( ternal, 3 ;5-6, 34.1 -4 

 K-ernity, 334-5, 337-S- 34*&amp;lt; 34 6 7 

 extension, 222 r.jtc. 335-6, 341-2, 



345 

 form or idea, 331-7, 340, 345, 348-9, 



372-3 

 geometry, Cartesian, and ancient 



philosophy, 352-3 

 God of Aristotle, 207-8, 340-2, 369, 



37 2 -3 377 

 L XT?, 374 



Idea, 331-40, 3-2-3 

 and indivisibility of motion, 324-5, 



328-9 



intelligible reality in, 344 

 intelligibles of Plotinus, 374 

 \6yos of Plotinus, 222 r.cte 

 matter in Aristotle s philosophy, 334, 



345 



and modern astronomy, 353-4, 354&quot;5 

 and modern geometry, 352-3 

 and modern philosophy, 238-9, 241-2, 



244, 297, 364, 365, 369-71, 385, 



39 

 and modern icience, 347-8, 355, 361 



2, 3 r H, 377 

 motion in, 324-5, 329-30 



