INDEX 



347 



above, downwards, 20 ; an imme 

 diate cause, 21 ; his relation to 

 laws of evolution, 22 ; presup 

 poses Nature, 24 ; his place, the 

 main problem, 36 ; primeval, 43 ; 

 signs of his intelligence, 44 ; a 

 member of the one organic sys 

 tem, 45 ; an animal, 57 ; a pro 

 ducer, 71 ; his heritage among 

 the animals, 262 ; his rational 

 life, 257-336 ; his superiority to 

 environment, 271 ; intellectual, 

 moral, and religious characteris 

 tics, 286 ; his destiny, 333. 



Mechanical theory of life, unten 

 able, 27. 



Mechanism contrasted with Mind, 

 44. 



Mechanism of Thought, 131. 



Memory, as distinct from idea, 

 252. 



Mill, J. S., kindness to animals, 21 ; 

 satisfaction for man, 66 ; internal 

 culture, 67 ; names, 249 ; on pre 

 valence of scepticism, 324 ; value 

 of Christianity, 326 ; the mystery 

 of life, 330. 



Mind and Brain, 62 ; and heredity, 

 104 ; and body, distinctiveness 

 of, 272. 



Morgan, Lloyd, primary object of 

 sensible stimuli, 42. 



Movement, common to all life, 41 ; 

 dependent on sensibility, 42. 



Miinsterberg s contribution to Ex 

 perimental Psychology, 131. 



NAGELI, holds that no life known 

 to us is of spontaneous genera 

 tion, 3. 



Nature, a unit, 1 ; includes man, 



and all man s devices, 8 ; intricacy 



of methods, 9. 

 Neolithic age, 12. 

 Newton on the vastness of the 



Universe, 330. 

 Nucleus of cell, structure of, 33. 



OBSERVATION, External, 51 ; know 

 ledge of difference, 51 ; distinct 

 from sensibility, 125. 



Observation, Internal, 128. 



Organic functions, their relations to 

 consciousness, 134. 



Organic life constructed on one 

 system, 45. 



Organism and Intellect co-operate, 

 51. 



Origin of Species, 35. 



Over-competition in the history of 

 life, 6. 



PAL^EOLOTHIC AGE, 12. 



Pangenesis, 95. 



Parthenogenesis, 91. 



Personality, Our, distinct from or 

 ganic functions, 141. 



Personal life, 53. 



Philosophy, as related to Science, 

 17 ; its relation to Biology, 22. 



Physical life, as it may be antago 

 nistic to rational, 55. 



Physiological functions, distinct 

 from the activity of Mind, 39 ; 

 limits of, 61 ; contrast with 

 rational activity, 129. 



Plato on the good soul, 290; the 

 true self, 314 ; on the future 

 state, 334. 



Propagation by division, 34. 



Protoplasm, 29 ; manufacture of, 

 34. 



