I N I) E X 



Realism, 90, 91. 



Reason, 316, 317; pure and 



practical. 317. 

 Reason and authority, 423. 

 Redemption, dotjma of, 62. 

 Reflex movement, 262, 263. 

 Regeneration, organic, loi- 



105- 

 Reinke, as vitalist, 51; dualism 



of, 30; on the monera, 31 ; on 



the origin of life, 337; theory 



of dominants, 264; works 01, 



80, 81. 



Release of energy, 294. 



Religion, evolution of, 57-65, 

 420, 421, 424. 



Reproduction a monistic proc- 

 ess, 257; by division, 242; 

 nature of, 241. 



Respiration, 228-232. 



Resurrection, the, 64. 



Resurrection plants, 262. 



Rhizomonera, 206. 



Rhizopods, 129, 192, 193, 219; 

 movement in the, 270. 



Rhodocytes. 228. 



Rhumbler, L., on the cell-life, 

 132. 



Rhythmic beauty, 185. 



Richter, H. E., on life, 339. 



Rindtleisch, as vitalist, 51. 



Romanes, conversion of, 22, 23. 



Romanism, 63, 425, 426. 



Sacraments, 425, 426. 



Saposites, 234. 



Saprobiosis, 349, 350. 



Sarcode, 155. 



Savage, mind in the, 56, 57, 

 90. 333. 391. 405. 406, 424; 

 religion of the, 57 ; sense-life in 

 the, 406, 407; views of the, 



390- 

 Savages, higher, 394; life of the, 



392-394; lower, 398; middle, 



393- 

 Schiller, idealism of, 439, 440- 



442. 



Schizophyta, 201. 



Schleiden, 154. 



Schleiermacher, 72. 



Schopenhauer, as pessimist. 

 Ill, 112; on the categorical 

 imperative, 412; on suicide, 

 I 14. 



Schultze, Max, on the cell, 155. 



Schwann, 154. 



Science, confusion in, 77; nat- 

 ure of, 4; schools of, 4; 

 work of, 5, 6; value of, 407, 

 408. 



Science and tradition, conflict 

 of, 70, 71. 



Secretory movement, 271. 



Selection, theory of, 361, 363, 



Self-cleavage, 242. 



Self - consciousness, beginning 

 of, 323. 324. 



Semi-dogmatic sciences. 470. 



Senility, causes of, 106. 



Sensation and consciousness, 

 290, 291, 295. 



Sensation as attribute of sub- 

 stance, 447, 448; analysis of, 

 293; common to all bodies, 

 295, 296, 309; ev<ilution t)f, 

 450; in atoms, 83; in plants, 

 292, 304; nature of, 287-293; 

 neglected by physiologists, 

 289, 292 ; of matter, 302; uni- 

 versal, 449. 



Sensations in savage and civil- 

 ized man, 405, 406; organic, 

 302, 308. 



Sense-centres, 13. 329. 



Senses, finer development of 

 the, 406. 



Sensibility. 287, 2S8, 293. 



Sensitiveness. 293. 



Sensorium. the. 14. 



Sensualism. 4. 14. 15. 



Sentiment ami reason. 120. 



Sex sense, the, 245. 



Sexual beauty, 186. 



characters, secondary, 251. 



generation, 244-253. 



selection . 251. 



sense, the. 306, 307. 



Shame, feeling of. 423. 



Sight, evolution fif, ^\. 



483 



