Page:Bergson - Matter and Memory (1911).djvu/357

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INDEX
335
Extension, 326; and artificial space, 244; concrete, not bound up with inert space, 244; idea of, 237.
Extensity, and inextension, 235; concrete, and homogeneous space, 278; concrete, not within space, 289; perceived, space conceived, 245; perception of and sight, 286; visual and tactile, 65.
Exteriority, notion of, 42.


Faraday, and centres of force, 31; and the atom, 265.
Force, centres of, 31, 265; in natural science, 257; metaphysical sense of the word, 257.
Fouillée, 112 note.
Freedom and necessity, 279, 325 ff., 330 ff.; degrees of, 296; two opposing points of view concerning, 243.
Freud, 157 note.
Future, no grasp of without outlook over past, 69.


General idea, essence of the, 210.
Generality, 202.
Genus, general idea of, 209.
Goldscheider, 125.
Granville, Mortimer, 101 note.
Grashey, 125, 151 note.
Graves, 153 note.


Habit, 89; interpreted by memory, the study of psychologists, 95.
Habit-memory, 90; acts, not represents, the past, 93; advantageous, 94; comparatively rare, 94; inhibits spontaneous memory, 97; sets up a machine, 95.
Habits, amassed in the body, 92; formed in action, influence speculation, xvi.
Hallucinations, negative, 151; veridical, 73.
Hamilton, 121 note.
Hearing, intelligent, starts from the idea, 145; mental, 149.
Heterogeneity, qualitative, 76.
Höffding, 107 note.
Human experience, dawn of, 241.


Idea, and sound, in speech, 154.
Ideas, association of, laws of the, 212.
Ideas, general, 201, 321; always in movement, 210; first experienced, then represented, 208; the essence of, 210.
Idealism, and materialism, 236; and realism, vii; and realism, have a common postulate, 17, 283; English, 282, 287, 289; makes science an accident, 16; the reef on which it is wrecked, 301.
Idealist, the, starts from perception, 14.
Idealists and realists, xvi.
Image, a privileged, 64; formed in the object, 35; none without an object, 38; present and representing, 28; representation and thing, vii; visual or auditory, 99.
Image-centre, a kind of keyboard, 165.
Image-centres, 132.
Images, and the body, 1; belong to two systems, 12; never any thing but things, 159; not created by cerebral vibrations, 10; preserved for use, 70; recognition of, 86; the delimiting and fixing of, 233.
Imagination, is not memory, 173.
Indetermination, of the will, 35; requires preservation of images perceived, 69; the true principle, 21.
Inextended, the, and the extended, 325.
Inextension, and extensity, 235.
Insanity, a disturbance of the sensor-imotor relations, 228; and present reality, 227.
Intellectual equilibrium, how upset, 225.
Intellectual process, two radically distinct conceptions of, 127.
Interpretation, general problem of, 145.
Intuition, actual and remembered, 70; and contact with the real, 241; pure, gives an undivided continuity, 239.


James, William, 121 note, 286 note, 289 note.
Janet, Paul, 286 note.
Janet, Pierre, xv note, 151 note, 229 note, 230 note; study of neuroses, xv.


Kant, 289 note; and diversity of phenomena, 244; and speculative reason, 241; and the impersonal understanding, 306; on space and time, 281.
Kantian criticism, ix.
Kelvin, and the atom, 265.
Keyboard, the internal, 165.
Knowledge, relativity of, 241; useful and true, 243.
Külpe, 125.
Kussmaul, 111 note, 141, 156 note.


Lange, 122 note.