Index.

Absolute, the. Adaptation, value of.

Analysis, conceptual, contrasted with intuition. Appearances.

Art, and philosophy. Atomism.

Automatism. Automaton, of daily life. Being, as becoming.

Brain, work of. Causality, psychological. Change.

Common-sense.

Concepts, analysis by and functions of, as symbols, creation of, as general frames, practical reach of, inferior to intuition, further discussed.

Consciousness. Conservation, law of.

Constants, search for, represented.

Continuity, qualitative. Criticism, of language. Deduction, impotence of. Degradation, law of.

Determinism, physical. Discontinuity, apparent. Disorder.

Du Bois-Reymond.

Duration, real, perpetually new, and thought, and time, pure. Dynamic connection, schemes.

Ego, encrustations of the. Eleatic dialectic.

Embryology, evidence of. Evil, a reality.

Evolution, drama of, biological, value and meaning of, not indispensable, distinguished from development, as dynamic continuity, as activity, further discussed.

Existence, as change. Experience.

Fact.

Freedom.

Free-will.

Genesis, law of. Good, a reality, a path. Habit, as obstacle.

Heredity. Heterogeneity.

Homogeneity, absence of. Huxley.

Images.

Immediacy.

Immediate, the.

Inert, the.

Instinct, is sympathy, contrasted with intelligence.

Intellectualism, distrusted.

Intelligence, product of evolution, and instinct, broad meaning of. Intuition, as starting-point, intransmissible without language, aesthetic,

triumph of, and duration, and analysis.

Intuitional effort, content.

Kant, his point of departure, conclusions of, escape from. Knowledge, absolute, utilitarian nature of, new theory of. Language, dangers of.

Laplace.

Law, concept of.

Liberty, personal importance of.

Life, tendencies of, is finality, is progress, further discussed. Limit-concepts.

Materialism.

Mechanism, psychological, failure of.

Memory, problem of, perception complicated by, importance of, racial, planes of, memory of solids.

Metaphor, justification of. Method, philosophical.

Mill, Stuart.

Motor-schemes, mechanisms. Mysticism.

Non-morality. Nothingness. Number.

Ontogenesis. Palaeontology, evidence of. Parallelism.

Paralogism.

Perception, an art, affected by memory, further explained, fulfilment of guesswork, utilitarian signification, subjectivity of, pure and ordinary, further discussed, relation to matter, perception of immediacy.

Philosophy, duty of, function of. Phylogenesis.

Planes, of consciousness. Progress, and reality.

Quality, and inner world. Quantity, and quality.

Rationalism. Ravaisson. Realism.

Reality, contact with, a flux, recognition of, absolute, elusive nature of, personal, essentially qualitative, pure, inner, contrasting views about, further discussed.

Reason.

Relation, between mind and matter. Religion, its place in philosophy.

Renan. Romanticism. Schemes, dynamic.

Science, prisoner of symbolism, cult of, impotence of. Sense, good, and common-sense.

Space.

Spencer, criticism of, success and weakness of. Spiritualism.

Symbolism. Sympathy. Taine.

Thought, methods of common.

Time, required by Mr Bergson's philosophy, in space, and common- sense, and duration.

Torpor.

Transformism, errors of. Utility, as goal of perception. Variation.

Zeno of Elea.

Zone, of feeling.