INDEX. 



■m 



Faith, founded on reason, 132 



Faiths, many, both living and sav- 

 ing, 30 



Fancy, which sometimes sways, 

 &o., 81 



Father, when the, eats, the un- 

 begotten son is nourished, 26 



Favour, a cloak for luck, 269, 270 



Feed, to fuse and diffuse ideas, 31 



Feeling and consciousness, the at- 

 tempt to eliminate, 156, &c. 



Feel, none perfectly, and some not 

 at all, 308 



Feeling an acquired art, 304, &c. 



originally symbolic, 305, &c. 



to reality, as word to feeling, 



306 



not part of mind, 307 



Food, we must chew our fine, &c. , 31 



very thoughtful, 31 



and money, 129 



• our, digests us, 143 



Form, mind, made manifest in flesh 

 through action, 302 



and cunning functionally re- 

 lated, 302 



Fraudulent, suave, but singularly, 

 252 



Fugue, life like a, 315 



Fusion all, an outrage upon our 

 understandings, 31 



and feeding, 31 



Gas, potent as a, 31 



Genealogical order, 0. Darwin and 



Lamarck on, 225, 226 

 Generation, ordinary, and natural 



selection, 221, 222 

 Geoffroy, Isidore, an unconscious 

 teleologist, 9, 10 



on Lamarck, 276 



German and Irish colonies, 123 

 Gloves, why we box with, 141 

 Gnome, mused forth as a, 63 

 Go away, uncles and aunts, 312 

 God, but see and live, 30 



we are a part of, 124 



an invaluable conception, 153 



the ineffable contradiction in 



terms, 153 



■ Corrwptio optimi, &o., 316 



substratum, hypothesis, 316 



Goethe's "Wilhelm Meister," 188 

 Going, a sense of deadlocks, 43 

 Grove, Sir William, his conserva- 

 tion of energy, 151, &c. 



Growth, a coming together of ele- 

 ments, &c., 76 



, a kind of success, 126 



Gustibus, de, non est, &c., 81 



Habit, changed, involves changed 

 organism, 74 



Haeckel, C. Darwin to, 199 



his " History of Creation" and 



C. Darwin's my's, 239, &c. 



Harmonics, from every proposi- 

 tion, 3 



" when the note of life is 



struck," &c., 79 



of life in death, 169 



Hartmann, "Von. declfu"es neo-Dar- 



winism a mechanical conception, 



IS7 

 Helm, unguided by the, 145 

 Hering, Professor E., reduced life 



from an equation, &c., 3 



should run his own theory, 



18, 19 



adopted by Dr. Creighton, 68 



Hermaphroditically, nature hates, 



&c., 44 

 Hobbes, and automatism, 158 

 Horace, " non omnis moriar," 77 

 Hour, hand of clock, and organic 



modification, 265 

 Husband and wife one flesh, 41 

 Huxley, Professor, foisted C. Dar- 

 win upon us, 94 



prophet of jwotoplasm, 133 



on animal automatism, 157 



Romanes, G. J. , on, 15& 



Hypothesis, substratum, and God, 

 316 



Ideas, like plants and animals, i 



the balance of power among 



our, was upset, 24 



can be changed in almost any 



direction, 27 



and words, 27 



, cross fertilisation of, essen- 

 tial, 44 



unlike objects, 305 



solidified, and organism, 316 



Imperfect answer, satisfactory, 



187 

 Imjtortant, unimportant, 186 

 Incoherency, barrenness, 32, 33 

 Individual, the, formerly seen as 

 one and race as many, 23 



