CREATIVE EVOLUTION 



Menopause in illustration of crisis of 



evolution, 20 

 Mental life, unity of, 282 

 Metamorphoses of larvae, 147, 154, 



175 

 Metaphysics and duration, 291 



and epistomology, 187, 189, 195, 208, 



220 



Galileo s influence on, 22, 241 



instinctive, 202, 283, 284, 29} 



and intellect, 200 



and matter, 205 



natural, 22, ^4} 



and science, 185, 205, 209, 22O, 364, 



.i~4i 39 1 

 systematic, 201, 222, 204, 206, 251, 



283, 284, 36-, 39; 

 MetchnikofY, 19 r^te 

 Method of philosophy, 202 

 Microbes, illustrating divergence of 



tendency, 12} 

 Microbial colon ;e&amp;lt;, ?.-; 

 Mind, individual, in philosophy, 201 

 and intellect, 51, 217 

 knowledge as relative to certain re 

 quirements of the mind, 160, 21, 

 24; 

 and matter, i 99, 212, 213, 214, 217, 



278, 2S-, 284, 370, 386-90 

 See Psychic, Psycho-physiological 

 parallelism, Psychology and Phil 

 osophy, yi X ? 

 Minot, S , i S n,(e 



Mobility, tendency toward, characterises 

 animals, 115, 116, 119, 136-9, 

 142, 190 



and conscious. -.ess, 114, 117, 122, 2^5 

 and intellect, i(&amp;gt;}, i~o, 172, 316, 



344. 545, 355 



of in; ns, 167, 168 



life as tendency toward, 134, 138, 



!39 



in plants, 1 18, 142 

 See Motion 

 Mb bius, 6 } note 

 Model necessary to the constructive work 



of intellect, 173, 186 

 Modern astronomy compared with 



ancient science, 353, 3^4 

 geometry compared with ancient 



science, 33, 169, 352 

 idealism, 244 

 philosophy compared with ancient, 



238-41, 244, 346, 364, 365, 369- 



71, 3-4, 377 

 philosophy : parallelism of body and 



mind in, 190, 370, 371, 375, 376 

 science : cinematographical character 



of, 347, 348, 355, 3 6o &amp;gt; 3 6 . 3 6 5 7 



science compared with ancient, 347- 



.55. 3 r I -4 : 377 

 science, Galileo s influence on, 3552, 



353 



science, Kepler s influence on, 352 

 science, magnitudes the object of, 351, 



354 

 science, time an independent variable 



in, 21, 354 

 Molecules, 264 

 Molluscs, illustrating animal tendency to 



mobility, 136-8 

 perception in, 199 

 vision in, 63, 79, 81, 88, 91, 92 

 Monads of Leibniz, 371-4 

 Monera, 133 

 Monism, 576 

 Moral sciences, weakness of deduction 



in, 224 

 Morat, 130 note 



i, L., 84 note, 85 

 Motion, abstract, 321 

 articulations of, 327-8 

 an animal characteristic, 2^5 

 and the cinematograph, 321-2 

 continuity of, 327 

 in Descartes, 366 



evolutionary, extensive nnd qualita 

 tive, } 19, 320, 328, 329 

 in general (i.e. abstract), 321 

 indivisibility of, 323, 328, 355, 



35.6-7 



and instinct, 147, 350-^1 

 and intellect, 75, 16}, 164, i6S, 172, 

 2SS, 289, 314, 335, 339, 347, 350, 



357, 364 



organization of, 327-8 

 track: laid by motion along its course, 



325-8, 355i 06 

 .S- ;- Mobility, Movement 

 Motive principle of evolution : con 

 sciousness, 191-2 

 Motor mechanisms, cerebral, 265, 266, 



277, -79 



Moulin-Ouignon, quarry of, 144 

 Moussu, 86 

 Movement and animal life, 114, 138, 



139 



ascemiing, 12, 106, 109, 1 10, 195, 

 220, 222, 391. See Vital im 

 petus 

 consciousness and, 117, 124, 152, 



219 



descending, 12, 213-15, 219-21, 224, 

 259, 265, 270, 285, 291, 358, 382, 



39 1 

 goal of, the object of the intellect, 



163, 315-16, 318, 319, 320 

 intellect unable to grasp, 330 



