FACTS AND FACTORS OF DEVELOPMENT 55 



body fluids, as Loeb has shown in other cases. 

 Reflexes which appear later are the random 

 movements of the volmitary muscles of limbs 

 and body, which are called forth by nerve im- 

 pulses. Tropisms are manifested only by or- 

 ganisms capable of considerable free movement 

 and hence are absent in the foetus though 

 present in many free hving larvae. Some in- 

 stincts are present irmnediately after birth, 

 such as the instinct of sucking or crying, 

 though these are so simple when compared 

 with some instincts which develop later that 

 they might be classed as reflexes ; it is doubtful 

 whether any of the activities before birth could 

 properly be designated as instincts. Reflexes, 

 tropisms and instincts have had a phylogenetic 

 as well as an ontogenetic origin, and conse- 

 quently we might expect that they would in 

 general make for the preservation of the 

 species, and as a matter of fact we usually find 

 that they are remarkably adapted to this end. 

 For instance the instincts of the human infant 

 to grasp objects, to suck things which it can 

 get into its mouth, to cry when in pain, are 

 complicated reflexes which have survived in 



