CONTENTS v. 



for normal slowness of transformations The dynamics of organic growth 

 are identical or parallel with those of mercantile growth, i.e., depending 

 on activity, accumulation and exchange of services The dynamics of 

 food in Organisation and Growth A "good start in life" determined 

 by ancestral dynamics (symbiotics) Divergence in bio-economic speciali- 

 sation produces new species, but similar specialisation may produce 

 phenomena of convergence Accumulation of organic as of mercantile 

 capital depends on right use The waste of initial " capital " in the 

 species lion Photosynthetic plants add to the initial "capital" instead 

 of wasting it like predaceous animals In the last analysis everything 

 in Biology a matter of values Without a proper qualitative analysis 

 the phenomena of growth cannot be adequately dealt with Spencer 

 trying to explain protracted growth of crocodile in mechanical terms 

 admits their insufficiency and is compelled to bring in habits Practical 

 utilisation of ancestral dynamics in grafting Scion obtains rejuvenating 

 symbiotics from stock Valuable biological strains due to and dependent 

 upon symbiotics just as " full-bloodedness " also does Need of soil- 

 contact and of careful pruning in accordance therewith Limits of the 

 power of the principle of mutilation to call forth efforts The general 

 habits of a tree determine the extent to which it should be pruned 

 Important positive dynamics involved in intimacy of contact between 

 soil and root-system Instances of cross feeding plants and consequent 

 success (symbiogenesis) Nutrition determining symbiogenesis or, on the 

 other hand, disruption of co-operative conditions " Love-foods " and 

 exchange of surplus Contrast of this view with current views Fertili- 

 sation attended by manifold services Heredity and endowment also 

 primarily dependent on services Heredity as a resultant of symbiotics 

 and anti-biotics. 



CHAPTER III. 



GENETICS. 



Endowment like capital depending on work The evolution of the 

 Coelomata shows that positive ancestral dynamics are only very gradually 

 established Time alone can do nothing, but symbiogenetic efforts in time 

 can What the Coelomata inherited Professor J. A. Thomson's defini- 

 tions of heredity Whether heredity is to be a condition of progress or not 

 depends on habits of life Racial stronger than individual influences, 

 but individual efforts count Why evolution at first was slow Symbio- 

 genesis and Natural Selection Why some of the productions of the 

 world changed simultaneously and rapid progress was made compara- 

 tively late Equal truth in sociology Biological data of geological time 

 in the light of Bio- Economics Bad habits in the past have retarded 

 evolution Physiological infertility in nature connected with deep-seated 

 qualitative changes of a bio-economic character Mendelian inheritance- 



