INDEX 



387 



Imitation (.Continued) 



of motion by intelligence, 305, 

 307-8, 312, 313, 329. See Imi- 

 tation of the real, etc. 



of the physical order by the 

 vital, 230 



of the real by intelligence, 258, 

 270, 307 

 Immobility of extension, 155 



and plants, 108-13, 118, 119, 130 



of primitive and torpid ani- 

 mals, 130-1 



relative and apparent; mobility 

 real, 155 

 Impatience, duration as, 10, 339- 



40 

 Impelling cause, 73 

 Impetus, vital, divergence of, 26- 

 7, 51-5, 97-105, 110, 118-9, 126- 

 7, 131, 134-6, 257, 258, 266, 

 270 



vital, limitedness of, 126, 141, 

 148-9, 254 



vital, loaded with matter, 239 



vital, as necessity for creation, 

 252, 261 



vital, transmission of, through 

 organisms, 25, 27, 79, 85, 87,, 

 88, 230, 231, 250, 251 



vital. See Impulse of life 

 Implement, the animal, Is natur- 

 al: the human, artificial, 139- 

 43 



artificial, 137-40, 150-1 



constructing, function of intel- 

 ligence, 159, 182-3 



life known to intelligence only 

 as, 162 



matter known to intelligence 

 only as, 161, 198 



natural, 141, 145, 150 



organized, 141, 145, 150 



unorganized, 137-9, 141, 150-1 

 Implicit knowledge, 148 

 Impotence of Intellect and per- 

 ception to grasp life, 176-8 

 Imprisonment of consciousness, 



180-3, 264-6 

 Impulse of life, divergence of, 26, 

 27, 51-5, 97-105, 110, 118-9, 

 126-7, 131, 134-6, 257, 258, 266, 

 270 



limitedness of, 126, 141, 148-9, 

 254 



loaded with matter, 239 



tendency to mobility, 131, 132 



as necessity for creation, 252, 

 261 



negates itself, 247, 248 



Impulse (Continued) 

 . prolonged in evolution, 246 

 prolonged in our will, 239 

 transmitted through genera- 

 tions of organisms, 25, 26, 79, 

 85, 87, 230, 231 

 unity of, 202, 250, 270 

 Impulsion and attraction in 

 Greek philosophy, 323-4 

 release and unwinding, the 



three kinds of cause, 73 

 given to mind by matter, 202 

 Inadequacy of act to representa- 

 tion, consciousness as, 143 

 Inadequate and adequate in 



Spinoza, 353 

 Inanition, illustrating primacy of 



nervous system, 124 note 

 Incoherence, 236. See Absence 

 of order, Chance, Chaos 

 in nature, 104 

 Incommensurability of free act 

 with conceptual idea, 47, 201 

 of instinct and intelligence, 167- 

 8, 175 

 Incompatibility of developed ten- 

 dencies, 104, 168 

 Independent variable, time as, 20, 



335-6 

 Indetermination, 86, 114, 126, 252, 

 253, 326. See Accident in 

 evolution 

 Indeterminism in Descartes, 345 

 Individual, viewed by intelligence 

 as aggregate of molecules 

 and of facts, 250-1 

 and division of labor, 140 

 in evolutionist biology, 169, 171, 



246 note 

 and genus, 226-9 

 mind In philosophy, 191 

 aesthetic intuition only attains 



the, 177 

 and society, 260, 265 

 transmits the vital impetus, 

 260, 259, 270 

 Individuality never absolute, x, 

 12, 13, 16, 19, 42, 260 

 and age, 15-23, 27, 43 

 corporeal, physics tends to 

 deny, 188, 189, 208. See In- 

 terpenetratlon, Obliteration 

 of outlines, Solidarity of the 

 parts of matter 

 and generality, 226-8 

 the many and the one in the 



idea of, x, 258 

 as plan of possible Influence, 11 

 Individuation never absolute, x, 



