386 



INDEX 



Habit and consciousness an- 

 nulled, 143 

 form of knowledge a habit or 



bent of attention, 148 

 and heredity, 78, 93, 169, 170, 

 173. See Acquired characters, 

 inheritance of 

 Instinct as an Intelligent, 173-4 

 and invention in animls, 264 

 and invention in man, 265 

 tendency of freedom to self- 

 negation in, 127-8 

 Harmony between instinct and 

 life, and between intelligence 

 and the inert, 187, 194-5, 198 

 of the organic world is comple- 

 mentarity due to a common 

 original impulse 50, 51, 103, 

 116, 118 

 pre-established, 205, 206 

 in radical finalism, 127-8. See 

 Discord 

 Hartog, 60 note 



Hatchets, ancient flint, and hu- 

 man intellect, 137 

 Heliocentric radius-vector in 



Kepler's laws, 333-4 

 Hereditary transmission, 76-83, 

 87, 168-9, 170, 173, 225-6, 230 

 domestication of animals and, 



80-1 

 habit and, 79, 83, 169, 170, 173 

 Hesitation or choice, conscious- 

 ness as, 143, 144 

 Heteroblastla and identical struc- 

 tures on divergent lines of 

 evolution, 75 

 Heymons, 72 note 

 History as creative evolution, 6, 

 15, 21, 26, 29, 36, 37, 65-6, 103- 

 4, 105, 163, 264, 269 

 of philosophy, 238 

 Hive as an organism, 166 

 Homo faber, designation of hu- 

 man species, 139 

 Homogeneity of space, 156, 212 

 the sphere of intellect, 163 

 of time in Galileo, 332 

 Horse-fly illustrating the object 



of instinct, 146 

 Houssay, 109 note 

 Human and animal attention, 184 

 and animal brain, 184, 263-5 

 and animal consciousness, 139- 

 43, 180, 183, 184, 187, 188, 191, 

 212, 263-8 

 and animal instruments of ac- 

 tion, 139-43, 150 

 and animal intelligence, 138, 



Human (Continued) 



187, 188, 191, 192, 212 

 and animal invention, relation 



of, to habit, 264, 265 

 intellect and language, 157-8 

 intellect and manufacture, 137, 

 138 

 Humanity in evolution, 134, 137-9, 

 142, 147, 158, 181, 184, 185, 264- 

 71. See Culminating points, 

 etc. 

 goal of evolution, 266, 267 

 Huxley, 38 



Hydra and individuality, 13 

 5bj of Aristotle, 353 

 Hymenoptera, the culmination of 

 arthropod and instinctive 

 evolution, 134, 173-4 

 as entomologists, 146, 172-3 

 organization and instinct in, 140 

 paralyzing Instinct of, 146, 172, 



173-4 

 social instincts of, 101, 171 

 Hypostasis of the unity of na- 

 ture, God as, 196-7, 322, 356 

 Hypothetical propositions charac- 

 teristic of intellectual know- 

 ledge, 149-50 



Idea or form In ancient philoso- 

 phy, 49, 314, 316-7, 318, 329- 

 30 



In ancient philosophy, £($0S, 314-5 

 In ancient philosophy, Platonic, 



48 

 and image In Descartes, 280 

 Idealism, 232 



Idealists and realists alike as- 

 sume the possibility of an ab^ 

 sence of order, 220, 232 

 Identical structures in divergent 

 lines of evolution, 55, 60-1, 62, 

 69, 74-7, 86, 119 

 Illumination of action the func- 

 tion of perception, 5, 206, 307 

 Image and idea in Descartes, 280 

 distinguished from concept, 

 160-1, 280 

 Imitation of being in Greek phi- 

 losophy, 324, 327 

 of instinct by science, 168-*, 



173-4 

 of life in intellectual represen- 

 tation, 4, 33, 88-9, 101, 176, 

 208, 209, 213, 226, 259, 341, 

 365 

 of life by the unorganized, 33, 

 35, 36 



