514 



INDEX. 



Corti, fibres of, ii. 61. 



Cosmisra, i. 39, 44, 95, 182, 263, 276 ; iL 

 425, 605. 



Coulomb's discovery of the laws of elec- 

 tric equilibrium, i. 203. 



Cousin, v., his notions of method, i. 118. 



Creation, doctrine of, opposed to the 

 doctrine of evolution, ii. 377, 474. 



Crusades, their civilizing influence, iL 

 215. 



Crystallization, i. 242. 



Custom, despotic yoke of, in early times, 

 ii. 265. 



Cuvier, i. 166, 244 : his classification, i. 

 449. 



Cyclical recurrence, strictly speaking, re- 

 quires infinite time, i. 313. 



DaitmaraS, their inability to count, ii. 



288. 



Darwin, Charles, i. 308, 462; his dis- 

 covery of natural selection, ii. 4 ; his 

 hypothesis of pangenesis, ii. 45 ; does 

 not allege ubiquitous progress, ii. 257 ; 

 his suggestion as to the origin of gre- 

 gariousness, ii. 341 ; his theory of the 

 beginnings of conscience, ii. 348. 



"Darwinism" rejected by Comtista, i. 

 248. 



Day, lengthening of, i. 393. 



Deanthropomorphization, i. 176 ; not a 

 fundamental but a derivative fact, ii. 

 246. 



Death from old age, ii. 7J. 



Deity, how far unknowable, ii. 413, 470 ; 

 how far to be regarded as quasi-psy- 

 chical, ii. 446 — 451. 



Demokritos, his guess that all the senses 

 ai-e modifications of touch, ii. 90. 



")emonstration, what it consists in, i. 62. 



J)erivation hypothesis, i. 442. 



Descartes, his test of truth, i. 99 ; his 

 conception of philosophy less sound 

 than Bacon's, i. 115; his hypothesis of 

 vortices, i. 127 ; his view of final 

 causes, ii. 384. 



Design, arg 'ment from, ii. 381. 



Desire, how it passes into voUtion, ii. 177. 



Devil-worship, ii. 458. 



Didelphia, ii. 50. 



Difference tnd No-difference, i. 89. 



Differentiation defined, i. 3.3(3 



Dilemma of matter and motion, how 

 practically resolved, i. 271, 273. 



Dinosaurus and birds, ii. 51. 



Distribution of organisms, i. 460, 



Dogs, races of, ii. 9. 



Dynamic paradox in the process of «?o» 



lution, i. 331, 398 ; ii. 283. 

 Dynamical and statical habits of thought, 



ii. 371, 473. 

 Dvsteleology, or imperfect adjusitment, 



'iL 403. 



Ear-piano, ii. 61. 



Early society, dilemma of, ii. 270. 



Earth, its primitive heat, i. 357 ; why U 

 has attained so great structural hetero- 

 geneity, i. 398 ; changes of its surface, 

 ii. 13 ; its age cannot be estimated 

 with our present resources, ii. 48. 



Echoes, fetishistic interpretation of, L 

 197. 



Effort, sense of, i. 156. 



Ego-altruistic feelings, ii. 352. 



Egoism and altruism, ii. 201, 207. 



Electricity a mode of motion, i. 292. 



Elevation and subsidence, ii. 39. 



Embryologic illustrations of the law ol 

 evolution, i. 338 ; evidence in favour of 

 derivation, i. 454. 



Embryos of dog, man, and bird, i. 454. 



Emerson, R. W., on the colours of ani- 

 mals, ii. 23. 



Emotion, rise of, ii. 155. 



Emotional states, order of their group- 

 ing, iL 117. 



Emotions and centrally-initiated sensa- 

 tions, ii. 116. 



Empiricism, i. 62. 



Encyclop^distes, their anarchical doc- 

 trines, ii. 478. 



Environment, social, ii. 197 ; hetero- 

 geneity of, ii. 213. 



Epicurean doctrine of pleasures, ii. 329. 



Equality and likeness, ii. 103. 



Equilibration, ii. 64. 



Equinoxes, precession of, i. 303. 



Error equivalent to wrong classifying, L 

 32. 



Ether, i. 6, 



Ethical sanctions recognized by scionoe, 

 ii. 455. 



Etymologies of Aryan words, i. 446, 



Eurojiean civilization in early times, ii. 

 271 ; not autochthonous, ii. 275 ; causes 

 of its progressiveness, ii. 277. 



Evolution, law of, its univer.sality, i. 274 ; 

 primary and secondary redistributions, 

 i. 329 ; conditions essential to, i. 329 i 

 why manifested chiefly in organic 

 bodies, i. 331 ; illustrated in functioD 

 as well as in structure, i. 349 ; passagt 

 from lower to higher orders of. ii. 292 , 

 discovery of, an extension of ecmy 



