HILGARD—ORGANOTAXIS. 429 
all, the traditional Elementary Doctrine (Weisungen etc., 
above p. VIII, 169, W. 116) affords a clue, — ex- 
cept sre the mind, because beyond observ 
ve seen, that the alternation of wate a ents: 
I, IV, Il, V., IIL, is a cyclotactic consequence of this di- 
rect ascension of the sensuous Cy yom lobate, branchial, cy- 
pacer utricular, jontinding rand o ich, if number ed af- 
ter in e succession of see rises. ager: 
trine [ibid] appears to me to furnish a al és this sue- 
cession, “ attraction of elements” proceeding from the 
tant to the fluxile, thence toward the lucent, thence tow a 
the motitant. And the same idea at once explains the radial 
alternation of cycles; alternation being a 
quineunx, and their oppositions, witucinieni incumbent an 
incubated, 
NuMBer oF VERTEBRE. 
Respectin 4 the number of superimposed triads of cycles 
composing the axial osseous fabric, we have seen not only the 
number, but the interpolations likewise, of cranial segments 
to be in the phyllotactic form ; hence, probably, their r respec- 
lve primordial cells were produced as a circinate cycle, in 
the vertical plane, in the embryonic cucullate h The 
number of somatic vertebr, including the ultimate coccygal 
cuseage ere Man), is 34,a high phyllotactic, organotactic 
tumber. The coceygal cartilage presents but the primordial 
Vortex of the vertebra from which the other elements would, 
organotactically, be derived; the coceygal cartilage remain- 
ing on this primordial costal stage, and bein ‘either the first 
othe last link of the ag eagpate fabric. This moniliform 
lypiform larvae, tg moet wotabs the totypes of co- 
pro 
htmae segmentation into a : 
tinous oe of the embryon 
— Sensuous anp Morar OrGanisM. 
our moral ‘sentiments cannot, in the common hysio- 
Msi Se pa made manif seg ividual to individual, 
een Ome are, synonymously, or symbolically. 
Xpressed. _ thereby, st mig as fib in both a physica’ an 
