382 



INDEX 



Expectation (Continued) 

 233, 235, 274, 281, 292 

 in conception of disorder, 221, 



222, 226, 233, 234, 235, 274 

 in conception of void or naught, 

 282, 292 

 Experience, 138, 147, 177, 197, 204, 



229, 321, 354, 359, 363, 368 

 Explosion, illustrating cause by 



release, 73 

 Explosive character of animal 

 energy, 116, 119, 120, 246 

 of organization, 92 

 Explosives, manufacture of, by 

 plants and use by animals, 

 246, 254 

 Extension, 149, 154, 161, 202, 203, 

 207, 211, 223, 236, 245, 318-20, 

 324, 327, 351, 352 

 continuity of, 154 

 discontinuity of, relative to ac- 

 tion, 154, 162 

 as the distance between what 

 is and what ought to be, 318 

 divisibility of, 154, 162 

 the most general property of 



matter, 154, 250, 251 

 the inverse movement to ten- 

 sion, 245 

 of knowledge, 150 

 in Leibniz's philosophy, 351, 



352 

 of matter in space, 204, 211 

 in the philosophy of Ideas, 318- 



9, 323-4, 327 

 and relaxation, 202, 207, 209, 



211, 212, 218, 223, 245 

 in Spinoza's philosophy, 350 

 in the Transcendental Aes- 

 thetic, 203 

 unity of, 158-9 



as weakening of the essence of 

 being, in Plotlnus, 210 note 

 Extensive, evolutionary and 

 qualitative motion, 302-3, 311, 

 312 

 External conditions in evolution, 

 128, 133, 137, 141-2, 150-1, 167, 

 168, 170, 192, 193, 252, 256, 257 

 finality,. 41 

 Externality of concepts, 160, 168, 

 174, 177, 199, 251, 305, 311-4 

 the most general property of 

 matter, 154, 250, 251 

 Externalized action in distinction 

 from internalized, 147, 165. 

 See Somnambulism, etc., 

 Automatic activity, etc. 

 Eye of mollusc and vertebrate 



compared, 60, 75, 77, 84, 86, 

 87-8 



Fabre, 172 note 



Fabrication. See Construction 



Fallacies, two fundamental, 272, 

 273 



Fallacy of thinking being by not- 

 being, 276, 277, 284, 297-8 

 of thinking the full by the emp- 

 ty, 273-5 

 of thinking motion by the 

 motionless, 272, 273, 297-8, 

 307-8, 309-14 



Fallibility of instinct, 172-3 



Falling back of matter upon con- 

 sciousness, 264 

 bodies, comparison of Aristotle 



and Galileo, 228, 331-2, 334 

 weight, figure of material 

 world, 245, 246 



Familiar, the, is the object of in- 

 tellect, 163, 164, 199, 270 



Faraday, 203 



Fasting, in reference to primacy 

 of nervous system over the 

 other physiological systems, 

 124 



Fauna, menace of torpor in 

 primitive, 130 



Feeling in the conception of 

 chance, 207 

 and instinct, 143, 174-5 



Fencing-master, illustrating he- 

 reditary transmission, 79 



Ferments, certain characteristics 

 of, 106 



Fertilization of orchids by 

 insects, by Darwin, 170 

 note 



Fichte's conception of the intel- 

 lect, 189-90, 357 



Filings, iron, in illustration of 

 the relation of structure to 

 function, 94, 95 



Film, cinematographic, figure of 

 abstract motion, 304-6 



Final cause, 40, 45, 234, 325 

 conception of, involves con- 

 ception of mechanical cause, 

 44 

 God as, in Aristotle, 322-3 



Finalism, 39-53, 58, 74, 88-97, 101- 

 6, 126-8 



Finality, 41, 164, 177-8, 185, 223, 



224, 266 



external and internal, 41 

 misfit for the vital, 177, 223-4, 



225, 266 



