CONTENTS 



PAGE 



it as the work of a Creator not unwilling to spend 

 millions of years fashioning an eagle's pinion — 

 Organic Evolution, "an onward, advancing mel- 

 ody." . . . Descriptive nationalism characteristic 

 of scientific method of modern times — Our great- 

 est conception, the idea of God — Alfred Russel 

 Wallace's "spiritual influxes" to account for the 

 "Big Lifts" in evolution, as the emergence of 

 man — The biologist uses only verifiable resident 

 factors — The wider conception of Creative De- 

 sign — Philosophy and religion must show us how 

 created nature is never out of the thought of God. 



XI This Creative Human Soul by 



Michael Pupin . . . .181 



Mystery of the soul will remain. . . . Cosmos for 

 chaos — Knowledge for which Tennyson yearned — 

 Paderewski's ethereal touch — The power mani- 

 fested in man's soul — The soul is the creative co- 

 ordinator. . . . Creative power not man's high- 

 est — The soul that coordinates with God — Man's 

 chief problem — Place of church and state in the 

 process — The author's message from science. . . . 

 What is sound.'' — Analogy of the clapper and the 

 bell — Bell to ear: ear to soul — Soul is where the 

 message of the bell is deciphered — Kreisler's violin 

 a bell — Kreisler's message from heaven. . . . What 

 is light? — The ancients knew the meaning of 

 light — Light is an electro-magnetic phenomenon — 

 The magnitude of this discovery — Each atom in 

 the sun a busy radio station — When the telephone 

 bell rings — Dots and dashes in a ray of sunlight — 

 The roses respond — This terrestrial cosmic bell — 

 What sun and stars signal us — The young star 

 says. . . . Creative coordination not a metaphysi- 

 cal abstraction — Analogies in nature — How sun- 

 sets create sensations — Somewhere the signals from 

 the external world are given direction and order, 

 and become an intimate part of our consciousness 

 — The soul entity cannot be explained by any 

 known physical law — Consciousness a psychic 

 reality — Science asks: How does soul differ from 

 body; and, can research define soul? — Soul ac- 

 counts for our sensitive selves — Reasons from 

 faith in the creative power of soul — Outside New- 

 ton's laws of dynamics. . . . Enquiry as to the 

 values included in the human soul — The spiritual 

 element towers above all others — Man worships — 

 Justification for worship — Contemplation of the 

 creative human soul inspires faith in God — Value 

 of spiritual realities exceeds that of physical reali- 



