402 



INDEX 



Science (Continued) 

 cinematographical character of 

 modern, 329, 330, 336-7, 340- 

 1, 342, 345-8 

 conventionality of a certain as- 

 pect of, 206-7 

 and deduction, 212-3 

 and discontinuity, 161-2 

 function of, 92, 167-8, 173-4, 

 176-7, 193-4, 195-6, 198-9, 328- 

 9, 346-7 

 Galileo's influence on modern, 



333-4, 335 

 and instinct, 169, 170, 173-4, 



175, 193-5 

 and intelligence, 176, 177, 193-6 

 Kepler's influence on modern, 



334 

 and matter, 194-5, 206-7, 208 

 modern. See Modern science 

 object of, 195-6, 220, 221, 251, 

 270-1, 273, 296-8, 306-7, 328-9, 

 332-3, 335-6, 347-8 

 and perception, 168 

 and philosophy, 175-6, 196-7, 



208-9, 344, 370 

 physical. See Physics 

 and reality. See Reality and 



science 

 and time, 8-13, 20, 335-8 

 unity of, 195-6, 197, 228-9, 230, 

 321-2, 323, 344-5, 347-8, 349, 

 354, 355-6, 359-60, 362-3 

 Scientific concepts, 338-40 



explanation and philosophical 



explanation, 168 

 formulae, 337 

 geometry, 161, 211 

 knowledge, 193-4, 196-7, 198, 

 199, 207, 208, 218 

 Sclerosis and aging, 19 

 Scolia, paralyzing instinct in, 172 

 Scope of action indefinitely ex- 

 tended by intelligent Instru- 

 ments, 141 

 of Galileo's physics, 357, 370 

 Scott, 63 note 



Sea-urchin and individuality, 13 

 Seailles, 29 note 

 Secondary instincts, 139, 168 

 Sectioning of becoming in the 

 philosophy of Ideas, 317-8 

 of matter by perception, 206-7, 

 249, 251 

 Sedgwick, 260 note 

 Seeing and willing, coincidence 



of, In intuition, 237 

 Selection, natural, 54, 56-7, 59- 

 60, 61-2, 63, 64, 68, 95-6, 169, 

 170 



Self, coincidence of, with, 199 

 existence of, means change, 1 



ft. 

 knowledge of, 1 ff. 



Senescence, 15-23, 26-7, 42-3 



Sensation and space, 202 



Sense-perception. See Percep- 

 tion 



Sensible flux, 316-7, 318, 321, 322, 

 327, 343, 345 

 intuition and ultra-intellectual, 



360-1 

 object, apogee of, 342-3, 344-5, 



349 

 reality, 314, 317, 319, 327, 328, 

 352 



Sensibility, forms of, 361 



Sensitive plant, in illustration of 

 mobility in plants, 109 



Sensori-motor system. See Ner- 

 vous system 



Sensuous manifold, 205, 221, 232, 

 235, 236 



Sentiment, poetic, in illustration 

 of individuation, 258, 259 



Serkovski, 259 note 



Serpula, in illustration of identi- 

 cal evolution in divergent 

 lines, 96 



Sexual cells, 14, 26, 27, 79-81 



Sexuality parallel in plants and 

 animals, 58-60, 119-21 



Shaler, N. S., 133 note, 184 note 



Sheath, calcareous, in illustration 

 of animal tendency to mo- 

 bility, 130-1 



Signs, function of, 158, 159, 160 

 the instrument of science, 329- 

 30 



Sigwart, 287 note 



Silurian epoch, failure of certain 

 species to evolve since, 102 



Similarity among individuals of 

 same species the type of gen- 

 erality, 224-6, 228-9, 230-1 

 and mechanical causality, 44, 

 45 



Simultaneity, to measure time is 

 merely to count simultanei- 

 ties, 9, 336, 337, 341 



Sinuousness of evolution, 71, 98, 

 * 102, 212-3 



Sitaris, unconscious knowledge 

 of, 146, 147 



Situation and magnitude, prob- 

 lems of, 211 



Sketching movements, function 

 of consciousness, 207-8 



Sleep, 129-31, 135, 181 



Snapshot, in illustration of intel- 

 lectual representation of mo- 



