396 



CREATIVE EVOLUTION 



and the inert order, 236-7 



modern, in reference to ancient science, 



353-5 



Atmosphere of spatiality bathing intel 

 ligence, 216 

 Atom, 253, 267, 269 



as an intellectual view of matter, 214, 



263 



and interpenetration, 219 

 Attack and defence in evolution, 138 

 Attention, 2, 156-7, 162, 194-5, 221 

 discontinuity of, 2 



in man and in lower animals, 194-5. 

 See Tension and instinct, Tension 

 as inverted extension, Tension of 

 personality, Sympathetic apprecia 

 tion, etc., Relaxation and intellect 

 Attraction and impulsion in Greek 



philosophy, 341, 342 

 Attribute and subject, 155 

 Automatic activity, 152 



as instrument of voluntary, 265 

 order, 236-7, 244-6. See Negative 

 movement, etc., Geometrical un:er 

 Automatism, 133-4, I5 1 , J 5 2 183-4, 

 235A 275, 278, 279 



Background of instinct and intelligence, 



consciousness as, i 96 

 Backward-looking attitude of the in 

 tellect, 50, 2^0 

 Baldwin, J. M., 28 r.:te 

 Ballast of intelligence, 160, 243, 252, 



390-91 



Bastian, 224 note 

 Bateson, 66 



Becoming, 172, 173, 250, 261, 262, 

 288, 315-20, 324-5, 330-31, 334, 

 356--, 361-2, 365, 383 

 in ancient philosophy, 330-31, 334 

 in Dcscartcs s philosophy, 365 

 in Eleatic philosophy, 330-31, 331-2 

 in general, or abstract becoming, 320- 



21, 3 2 3-4 

 instantaneous and static views of, 288, 



321-2, 322-3 

 states of, falsely so called, 172, 261, 



288, 314-17, 324-5 

 in the successors of Kant, 383. Set 

 Change, New, Duration, Tim?, 

 Views of reality 



Bees, 106, 147, 149, 153, 175, 176, 181 

 Beethoven, 244 

 Berthold, 36 note 

 Bethe, 185-6 note 

 Bifurcations of tendency, 57. See 



Divergent lines of evolution 

 Biology, 13, 26, 27, 33-4, 46, 178, 183- 

 4, 204-7, 375 



evolutionist, 177 

 and philosophy, 46, 204-7 

 and physico-chemistry, 27 

 Blaringhem, 90-91 



Bodies, 165, 198, 199, 315-18, 381. 

 See Matter as a relaxation of the 

 unextended into the extended 

 defined as bundles of qualities, 368 

 Bois-Reymond (Du), 40 

 Boltzmann, 258 



Bombines, social instincts in, 181 

 Bouvier, 149 n.te 

 Bow, strain of, illustrating indivisibility 



of motion, 325-6 



Brain and consciousness, 5, 115, 116, 



189-90, 193-5, 224 note i 265, 266, 



275-9, 283, 285, 375, 376, 387. 



See Xervous System 



in man and lower animals, 193-4, 



94-5. 277-9 



Brandt, 70 note 



Breast- plate, in reference to animal 



mobility, 137, 138. See Carapace, 



Cellulose e:i \ elope 

 Brown-Sequard, 84-6 

 Bulb, medullary, in the development of 



the nervous system, 116, 266 

 Busquet, 274 note 

 Biitschli, 35 note 

 liuttel-Reepen, iSi note 

 Butterflies, in illustration of variation 



from evolutionary type, 77 



Caelo (De), of Aristotle, 339 note, 342 &amp;gt;;ote 

 Calcareous sheath, in reference to animal 



m.-bility, 137 

 Calkins, 17 note 

 Canal, in illustration of the relation of 



function and structure, 99 

 Canalization, in illustration of the func 

 tion of animal organisms, 99, 100, 



i 16, 133, 285, 270 

 Canvas, embroidering &quot;something&quot; on 



the, of &quot; nothing,&quot; 3 i 3 

 Caprice, an attribute not of freedom, but 



of mechanism, 50 

 Carapace, in reference to animal mobility, 



136-7, 137 



Carbohydrates, in reference to the func 

 tion of the animal organism, 127-8, 



128-9 

 Carbon, in reference to the function of 



organisms, 113, 119, 120, 123,267, 



26) 

 Carbonic acid, in reference to the function 



of organisms, 267, 269 

 Carnot, 256, 259, 270 

 Cartesian geometry, compared with 



ancient, 352-3 



