INDEX 



between representation of inner and 



outer reality, 295 

 of sensible reality in ancient philosophy 



about being, 334-5 



Outlines of perception the plan of action, 

 5, 12, 13, 99, 198, 199, 216, 218, 

 239&amp;gt; 241, 243, 263, 316, 323 

 Oxygen, 120, 267, 269 



Paleontology, 25-6, 136, 146 



Paleozoic era, 107 



Parallelism, psycho -physiological, 190, 



37, 37 1,. 375,. 376 

 Paralysing instinct in hymenoptera, 147, 



153, 181, 184-5 

 Parasites, 112, 114, 115, 117-19, 



141-2 



Parasitism, 139 

 Passivity, 235-6 

 Past, subsistence of, in present, 5, 21-4, 



28, 114, 210-13 

 Peckham, 182 note 

 Pecten, illustrating identical structures 



in divergent lines of evolution, 66, 



67, 79 



Pedagogical and social nature of nega 

 tion, 303-13 



Pedagogy and the function of the intel 

 lect, 174 



Penetration, reciprocal, 170. See Inter- 

 penetration 



Perception and action, 5, 12, 13, 99, 

 198, 199, 218, 239, 240-41, 316- 



7, 323-4 



and becoming, 186, 320-23 



cinematographical character of, 218, 

 262, 264, 350 



cistinctness of, 239, 263 



and geometry, 216, 243 



in molluscs, 199 



and organization, 239 



prolonged in intellect, 170, 288 



reaction in, 278 



and recollection, 190, 191 



refracts reality, 216, 251, 380 



rhythm of, 316, 317 



and science, 177 

 Permanence an illusion, 316-17 

 Per on, 85 



Perrier, Ed., 274 note 

 Personality, absolute reality of, 283 



concentration of, 212, 213 



and matter, 283, 284 



the object of intuition, 282 



tension of, 210, 211, 2;2 

 Perthes, Boucher de, 144 

 Phaedrus, 164 note 

 Phagocytes and external finality, 44 

 Phagocytosis and growing old, 19 



Phantom ideas and problems, 187, 293, 



299, 312 

 Philosophical explanation contrasted 



with scientific explanation, 177 

 Philosophy and art, 186-7 

 and biology, 46, 204-6 

 and experience, 208-9 

 function of 31, 89, 99, 177, 183, 204- 



_7, 209, 282, 283, 391 

 history of, 251 

 incompletely conscious of itself, 219, 



220 



individual mind in, 201 

 and intellect, ix-xv 

 intellect and intuition in, 251 

 of intuition, 186-7, 202-4, 207-8, 293 

 method of, 202, 204, 205, 252 

 object of, 252 

 and the organism, 206-7 

 and physics, 205, 220 

 and psychology, 204, 206 

 and science, 185, 207-8, 220, 364, 391 

 See Ancient philosophy, Cosmology, 

 Finalism, Mechanistic philosophy, 

 Metaphysics, Modern philosophy, 

 Post-Kantian philosophy, Teleology 

 Phonograph illustrating &quot;unwinding&quot; 



cause, 77 



Phosphorescence, consciousness com 

 pared to, 276 



Photograph, illustrating the nature of 

 the intellectual view of reality, 32, 

 321-2 



Photography, instantaneous, illustrating 

 the mechanism of the intellect, 



350-5 1 . 



Physical existence, as contr -.steel with 

 logical, 292, 314, 346, 382 



laws, their precise fo rm artificial, 

 230, 231, 242, 254 



laws and the negative cosmic move 

 ment, 230 



operations the objer.t of intelligence, 

 185, 263 



order, imitation of, by the vital, 243 



science, 186-7 



Physico-chemistry and organic destruc 

 tion, 238 



and biology, 27, 3 i, 36, 37, 38, 58, 



76, 78, 103, 204, 375 

 Physics, ancient, &quot; logic spoiled,&quot; 337, 



339 

 of ancient philosophy, 332, 337, 339, 



375 

 of Aristotle, 240 note, 342 note, 349, 



35 



and deduction, -225 

 of Galileo, 377, 391 

 and individuality of bodies, 198, 219 



2 E 



