406 



CREATIVE EVOLUTION 



ideal limit of induction and deduction, 

 226-30, 382. See Space, Descend 

 ing movement of existence 



modern, compared with ancient. 38, 

 169, 352-3 



natural, 205, 222-4 



perception impregnated with, 216, 



243 



reasoning in, contrasted with reason 

 ing concerning life, 7, 8 

 scientific, 170, 223 

 Germ, accidental predisposition of, in 



Neo-Darwinism, 178, 179, 180 

 Germ-plasm, continuity of, 28, 39, 83-8 

 Giard, 88 



Glucogen in organic function, 128-9 

 Glucose in organic function, 128, 130 

 God, as activity, 2f&amp;gt;2 



of Aristotle, 207, 340, 343, 369, 373, 



37-7 



ascent toward, in Aristotle s p.iil- 

 osophv, 34 .--41 



circularity ot God s thought, in 

 Aristotle s philosophy, 342, 343 



in Descartes s philosophy, 36;, ; /&amp;gt; 



as efficient cause in Aristotle s phil 

 osophy, 342 



as hypostasis of the unity of nature, 

 207, 340, 37- 



in Leibniz s philosophy, 371, 372, 



376-7 



as eternal matter, 207-8 

 as pure form, 207-8, 340 

 in Spinoza s philosophy, 370, ;-- 

 Greek philosophy. See Ancient phil 

 osophy 

 Green parts of plants, 113-15, 120, 123, 



259, 260, 267 

 Growing old, 16 

 Growth, creation is, 254, 291 

 and novelty, 243 

 of the powers of life, 139, 141-2 

 reality is, 252 

 of the universe, 362, 364 

 Gue&amp;gt;in, P., 63 note 



Guinea-pig, in illustration of hereditary 

 transmission, 84, 85 



Habit and consciousness annulled, 151 

 form of knowledge a habit or bent of 



attention, i 56 



and heredity, 83, 88, 178, 179, 182. 

 See Acquired characters, inheri 

 tance of 



instinct as an intelligent, 183-4 

 and invention in animals, 278 

 and invention in man, 279 

 tendency of freedom to self-negation 

 in, 133-4 



Harmony between instinct and life, and 

 between intelligence and the inert, 

 196, 205, 209 



of the organic world is complemen 

 tarity ciue to a common original 

 impulse, 53, 54, 108, 109, 122, 

 124 



pre-established, 217, 218 

 in radical finalism, 133-4. See Discord 

 I lartog, 63 n.te 



Hatchets, ancient flint, and human in 

 tellect, 144 

 Heliocentric radius-vector in Kepler s 



laws, 352-3 

 Hereditary transmission, So-8S, 92, 178, 



179,^82, 238, 243 

 di me tic.ition of animals and, 84-5 

 habit and, 83, S8, 1/8, 170, i S 2 



n or ch i&amp;lt; , . ness as, 



151, IS 2. 



and identic, 1 structures on 

 divergent lines of evolution, 7! 



7 r.:te 



as creative evolution, 7, 16. 22, 

 28, 31. 38. 39, 69, 105, i 10, 172. 

 278,283 



f.f philosophy, 25 i 

 Hive as an organism, 175 

 Hcrr.o f.ibcr, designation of human 



species, 146 



Homogeneity tit space, 165, 224 

 the sphere of intellect, 172 

 fit time in Galileo, 3 &amp;gt;o 

 Horse-lly illu-lratin ; the olject of in 

 stinct, 158 

 Housay, i i 5 &amp;gt;::re 

 Human and animal attention, 194 

 and animal brain, 103, 194, 2 77&quot;9 

 and animal consciousness, 146-50, 

 190, 193, 194, 19&quot;, 198, 202, 224, 

 277-82 

 and animal instruments of action, 



146-50, 158 

 and animal intelligence, 145, 197, 



198, 202, 224 

 and animal invention, relation of, to 



habit, 278, 279 

 intellect and language, 166 

 intellect and manufacture, 144, 145 

 Humanity in evolution, 141, 144-6, 150, 

 154, 166, 191, 194, 195,278-86. 

 See Culminating points, etc. 

 goal of evolution, 280, 281 

 Huxley, 40 



Hydra and individuality, 14 

 OX?? of Aristotle, 373 

 Hymenoptera, the culmination of arthro 

 pod and instinctive evolution, 140, 

 141, 184-5 



