INDEX 



397 



Cartesianism, 3615, j /j 

 Cartesians, 379. See Spinoza, Leibniz 

 Carving, the, of matter by intellect, 164 

 Categorical propositions, characteristic of 



instinctive knowledge, 157-8 

 Categories, conceptual, x, xiv, 51, 155, 

 156-7, 174, 200, 206-8, 219, 232-3, 

 271-3, 280, 379, 382. See Concept 

 deduction of, and genesis of the intel 

 lect, 207, 219, 379. See Genesis of 

 matter and of the intellect 

 innate, 155, 156-7 

 misfit for the vital, x, xiv, 51, 174, 



206-10, 232-3, 271-3 

 in reference to the adaptation to each 

 other of the matter and form of 

 knowledge, 382 



Cats, in illustration of the law of corre 

 lation, 70 

 Causal relation in Aristotle, 342 



between consciousness and movement, 



117 



in Greek philosophy, 341-4 

 Causality, mechanical, a category which 

 does not apply to life, x, xiv, 187 



in the philosophy of Ideas, 341-2 

 Causation and adaptation, 107, 108 



final, involves mechanical, 47 

 Cause and effect as mathematical func 

 tions of each other, 21, 22 



efficient, 247, 292, 342 



efficient, in Aristotle s philosophy, 342 



efficient, in Leibniz s philosophy, 373 



final, 42, 47, 247, 342 



final, in Aristotle s philosophy, 342 



by impulsion, release and unwinding, 



77 

 mechanical, as containing effect, 15, 



246, 283 



in the vital order, 100, 173 

 Cave, Plato s allegory of the, 202 

 Cell, 17, 25, 34-5, 171, 175, 176, 274, 



283 



as artificial construct, 171 

 in the &quot; colonial theory,&quot; 274 

 division, 17, 25, 34-5 

 instinct in the, 175, 176 

 in relation to the soul, 283 

 Cellulose envelope in reference to vege 

 table immobility and torpor, 114, 



&quot;7, 137. 



Cerebral activity and consciousness, 5, 

 115, 116, 190-91, 193-5, 224 note, 

 265, 266, 275, 279, 283, 285, 370, 



37 1 , 375&amp;gt; 376, 3 8 7 

 mechanism, 5, 265, 266, 276, 279, 



387 



Cerebro- spinal system, 130-31. See 

 Nervous system 



Certainty of induction, 227, 228 

 Chance analogous to disorder, 246, 247. 



See Affection 



in evolution, 91-2, no, 121, 133, 

 179, 1 80, 265, 268, 269, 280, 281, 

 344-5. See Indetermination 

 Change, i, 8, 18, 90-91, 113, 261, 291, 

 310, 316-21, 324-5, 330-31, 334, 

 344. 346-7. 362-3, 3 6 4 

 in ancient philosophy, 330-31, 334, 



344, 346-7, 362-3, 364 

 in Eleatic philosophy, 331 

 known only from within, 324-5 

 Ch;ios, 245. See Disorder 

 Character, moral, 5, 105 

 Charrin, 85-6, 86 note 

 Chemistry, 31, 36-8, 58, 76, 78-9, 103, 



204-5, 238, 269, 275 

 Child, intelligence in, 155-6 



adolescence of, in illustration of evo 

 lutionary becoming, 328-30 

 Chipped stone, in paleontology, 146 

 Chlorophyllian function, 113-15, 120, 



123, 259, 260, 267 

 Choice, 116, 131-2, 151-3, 189, 190, 



266, 275-8, 291, 292, 387 

 and consciousness, 116, 189, 275-8 

 Chrysalis, 120 note 

 Cinematograph, 322-3, 358-9 

 Cinematographical character of ancient 



philosophy, 332-3 

 of intellectual knowledge, 322, 323, 



329-35, 343-4, 350-5 i, 367 

 of language, 322-3, 329-31 

 of modern science, 347-9, 355-6, 



360-2, 365, 366, 367 

 Circle of the given, broken by action, 



203, 261 



logical and physical, 292 



vicious, in intellectualist philosophy, 



204, 207-8, 336-7 



vicious, in the intuitional method ia 



only apparent, 202, 203 

 Circularity of God s thought in Aris 

 totle s philosophy, 342 

 of each special evolution, 134-5 

 Circulation, protoplasmic, imitated, 34-5 



in plants and animals, 114 

 Circumstances in the determination of 

 evolution, 107, 135-6, 140, 145, 

 149, 158-9, 176, 177, 180, 203, 

 204, 265, 270, 271 

 in relation to special instincts, 145, 



177, 20 3, 2 4 

 Classes of words corresponding to the 



three kinds of representation, 319- 



20 



Clausius, 256 

 Clearness characteristic of intellect, 169 



