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قراءة كتاب Creative Evolution
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CREATIVE EVOLUTION
BY HENRI BERGSON
MEMBER OF THE INSTITUTE PROFESSOR AT THE COLLEGE DE FRANCE
AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION BY
ARTHUR MITCHELL, Ph.D.
NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 1911
Copyright, 1911,
by
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
CAMELOT PRESS, 18-20 OAK STREET, NEW YORK
TRANSLATOR'S NOTE
In the writing of this English translation of Professor Bergson's most important work, I was helped by the friendly interest of Professor William James, to whom I owe the illumination of much that was dark to me as well as the happy rendering of certain words and phrases for which an English equivalent was difficult to find. His sympathetic appreciation of Professor Bergson's thought is well known, and he has expressed his admiration for it in one of the chapters of A Pluralistic Universe. It was his intention, had he lived to see the completion of this translation, himself to introduce it to English readers in a prefatory note.
I wish to thank my friend, Dr. George Clarke Cox, for many valuable suggestions.
I have endeavored to follow the text as closely as possible, and at the same time to preserve the living union of diction and thought. Professor Bergson has himself carefully revised the whole work. We both of us wish to acknowledge the great assistance of Miss Millicent Murby. She has kindly studied the translation phrase by phrase, weighing each word, and her revision has resulted in many improvements.
But above all we must express our acknowledgment to Mr. H. Wildon Carr, the Honorary Secretary of the Aristotelian Society of London, and the writer of several studies of "Evolution Creatrice."[1] We asked him to be kind enough to revise the proofs of our work. He has done much more than revise them: they have come from his hands with his personal mark in many places. We cannot express all that the present work owes to him.
ARTHUR MITCHELL
Harvard University
CONTENTS
Introduction
CHAPTER I
PAGE | ||
The Evolution of Life—Mechanism and Teleology | ||
Of duration in general—Unorganized bodies and abstract time—Organized bodies and real duration—Individuality and the process of growing old | 1 | |
Of transformism and the different ways of interpreting it—Radical mechanism and real duration: the relation of biology to physics and chemistry—Radical finalism and real duration: the relation of biology to philosophy | 23 | |
The quest of a criterion—Examination of the various theories with regard to a particular example—Darwin and insensible variation—De Vries and sudden variation—Eimer and orthogenesis—Neo-Lamarckism and the hereditability of acquired characters | 59 | |
Result of the inquiry—The vital impetus | 87 |
CHAPTER II
The Divergent Directions of the Evolution of Life—Torpor, Intelligence, Instinct | ||
General idea of the evolutionary process—Growth—Divergent and complementary tendencies—The meaning of progress and of adaptation | 98 | |
The relation of the animal to the plant—General tendency of animal life—The development of animal life | 105 | |
The main directions of the evolution of life: torpor, intelligence, instinct | 135 | |
The nature of the intellect | 151 | |
The nature of instinct | 165 | |
Life and consciousness—The apparent place of man in nature | 176 |
CHAPTER III
On the Meaning of Life—The Order of Nature and the Form of Intelligence | ||
Relation of the problem of life to the problem of knowledge—The method of philosophy—Apparent vicious circle of the method proposed—Real vicious circle of the opposite method | 186 | |
Simultaneous genesis of matter and intelligence—Geometry inherent in matter—Geometrical tendency of the intellect—Geometry and deduction—Geometry and |