INDEX 



421 



and instinct, 177, 178, 183, 184, 



204-5 _ 



and intelligence, 185, 186, 204, 205-6 

 Kepler s influence on modern, 352 

 and matter, 205, 218, 219 

 modern. See Modern science 

 object of, 206, 232, 238, 239, 264, 



285, 288, 313-14, 3*3, 347- 351, 



354, 367 



and perception, 177 

 and philosophy, 185, 207, 220, 364, 



391 



physical, See Physics 

 and reality. See Reality and science 

 and time, 9-13, 21, 354 

 unity of, 206, 207, 241, 242, 339, 



340, 364, 367, 368, 374, 376, 380, 



3.83 

 Scientific concepts, 357-8 



explanation and philosophical ex 

 planation, 177 

 formulae, 356 

 geometry, 170, 223 

 knowledge, 204, 207, 208, 209, 218, 



219, 230 



Sclerosis and ageing, 20 

 Scolia, paralysing instinct in, 181 

 Scope of action indefinitely extended by 



intelligent instruments, 148 

 of Galileo s physics, 377, 391 

 Scott, 67 note 



Sea-urchin and individuality, 14 

 Seailles, 30 note 

 Secondary instincts, 146, 177 

 Sectioning of becoming in the philosophy 



of Ideas, 335 

 of matter by perception, 218, 262, 



264 



Sedgwick, 274 note 



Seeing and willing, coincidence of, in in 

 tuition, 250 

 Selection, natural, 57, 60, 63, 65, 66, 



68, 69, 72, 101, 178, 179 

 Self, coincidence of, with, 210 

 existence of, mean* change, i ff. 

 knowledge of, I ff. 

 Senescence, 16-24, 28, 45 

 Sensation and space, 213 

 Sense-perception. See Perception 

 Sensible flux, 334, 335, 339, 341, 342, 



345, 362, 364 



intuition and ultra-intellectual, 381 

 object, apogee of, 362, 364, 369 

 reality, 331, 334, 339, 345, 346, 37 2 

 Sensibility, forms of, 381 

 Sensitive plant, in illustration of mobility 



in plants, 114 



Sensori-motor system. Ste Nervous 

 system 



Sensuous manifold, 216, 233, 245, 248, 



249 

 Sentiment, poetic, in illustration of in- 



dividuation, 272, 273 

 Serkovski, 273 note 



Serpula, in illustration of identical evolu 

 tion in divergent lines, 101 

 Sexual cells, 15, 27, 28, 85-6 

 Sexuality parallel in plants and animals, 



62-3, 125-6 



Shaler, N.S., 140 note, 194 note 

 Sheath, calcareous, in illustration of 



animal tendency to mobility, 137-8 

 Signs, function of, 166, 167, 168 



the instrument of science, 347-8 

 Sigwart, 303 note 

 Silurian epoch, failure of certain species 



to evolve since, 107 

 Similarity among individuals of same 



species the type of generality, 236- 



8, 241, 243 



and mechanical causality, 47, 48 

 Simultaneity, to measure time is merely 



to count simultaneities, 9, 355, 356, 



360 

 Sinuousness of evolution, 75, 103, 107, 



224 

 Sitaris, unconscious knowledge of, 153, 



154 



Situation and magnitude, problems of, 

 223 



Sketching movements, function of con 

 sciousness, 219 



Sleep, 135-7, 142, 191 



Snapshot, in illustration of intellectual 



representation of motion, 321, 323, 



330, 332, 364. See View of reality, 



Cinematographical character, etc. 



form defined as a, of transition, 318 



334, 335, 339, 3 6 4 

 Social instinct, 106, 147, 166, 181 

 life, 145, 147, 166, 279 

 and pedagogical character of negation, 



33-!3 



Societies, 106, 138, 166, 181, 273 

 Society and the individual, 274, 279 

 Solar energy stored by plants, released 



by animals, 259, 267 

 systems, 254-7, 260 note, 270, 285 

 systems, life in other, 270 

 Solid, concepts analogous to solids, ix 

 intellect as a solid nucleus, 203, 204 

 the material of construction and the 

 object of the intellect, 161, 162 

 169, 170, 174, 264 



Solidarity between brain and conscious 

 ness, 190, 276 



of the parts of matter, 214, 219, 254 

 185 



