374 



INDEX 



mathematical order, 218. See 

 Order 

 Archimedes, 333-4 

 Aristotle. See Ancient Philoso- 

 phy, Aristotle 

 Arrow, Flying, of Zeno, 308-9, 



310, 312-3 

 Art, 6-7, 29 note, 45, 89, 177 

 Artemia Salina, transformations 



of, 72, 73 

 Arthropods in evolution, 130-5, 



142 

 Articulate species, 133 

 Articulations of matter relative 

 to action, 156, 367 

 of motion, 310-1 

 of real time, 332-3 

 Artificial, how far scientific 

 knowledge is, 197, 218-9 

 instruments, 138, 139, 140-1 

 Artist, in illustration of the crea- 



tiveness of duration, 340-1 

 Ascending cosmic movement, 11, 



208, 275, 369 

 Ascent toward God, in Aristotle, 



323 

 Association of organisms, 260. 

 See Individuation 

 universal oscillation between 

 association and individua- 

 tion, 259, 260. See Socie- 

 ties 

 Astronomy and deduction, 213 

 and the inert order, 224 

 modern, in reference to ancient 

 science, 334-6 

 Atmosphere of spatiality bathing 



intelligence, 204 

 Atom, 240, 254, 255 

 as an intellectual view of mat- 

 ter, 203 250 

 and interpenetration, 207 

 Attack and defence in evolution, 



131-2 

 Attention, 2, 148^9, 154, 184, 209 

 discontinuity of, 2 

 in man and in lower animals, 

 184. See Tension and in- 

 stinct, Tension as inverted 

 extension, Tension of person- 

 ality, Sympathetic apprecia- 

 tion, etc., Relaxation and in- 

 tellect 

 Attraction and impulsion in 



Greek philosophy, 323, 324 

 Attribute and subject, 148 

 Automatic activity, 145 

 as instrument of voluntary, 252 

 order, 224, 231-4. See Negative 



movement, etc., Geometrical 

 order 

 Automatism, 127, 143-4, 174, 223- 

 4, 261, 264 



Background of instinct and intel- 

 ligence, consciousness as, 186 

 Backward-looking attitude of the 



intellect, 47, 48, 237 

 Baldwin, J. M., 27 note 

 Ballast of intelligence, 152, 230, 



239, 369-70 

 Bastian, 212 note 

 Bateson, 63 



Becoming, 164, 236, 248-9, 273, 

 299-304, 307-8, 313-4, 316, 337- 

 8, 342-3, 345, 363 

 in ancient philosophy, 313-4, 



317 

 in Descartes's philosophy, 346 

 in Eleatic philosophy, 313-4, 315 

 in general, or abstract becom- 

 ing, 304, 306-7 

 instantaneous and static views 



of, 272, 304-5 

 states of, falsely so called, 164, 



247-8, 273, 298-301, 307-8 

 in the successors of Kant, 363. 

 See Change, New, Duration, 

 Time, Views of reality 

 Bees, 101, 140, 142, 146, 166, 172 

 Beethoven, 224 

 Berthold, 34 note 

 Bethe, 176 note 



Bifurcations of tendency, 54. See 

 Divergent lines of evolution 

 Biology, 12, 25, 26, 31-2, 43, 168- 

 9, 174-5, 194-6 

 evolutionist, 168-9 

 and philosophy, 43, 194-6 

 and physico-chemistry, 26 

 Blaringhem, 85 



Bodies, 156, 188, 189, 300-1, 360. 

 See Inert matter as a relaxa- 

 tion of the unextended into 

 the extended 

 defined as bundles of qualities. 



349 



Bois-Reymond (Du), 38 



Boltzmann, 245 



Bombines, social instincts in, 171 



Bouvier, 142 note 



Bow, strain of, illustrating indi- 

 visibility of motion, 308-10 



Brain and consciousness, 5, 109, 

 110, 179-80, 183-4, 212 note, 

 252, 261-4, 270, 354. 356, 366. 

 See Nervous System 



