[139] The causal relation between mental and cerebral states—i. e. interaction—would be an alternative “condition of freedom;” but this relation is included in Bergson’s denial of any sort of correspondence or equivalence (such as the quantitative equivalence of causation) between states of brain and states of mind.
[140] Time and Free Will, p. 34.
[141] Ibid., p. 172.
[142] Ibid., p. 208.
[143] Ibid., p. 215.
[144] Time and Free Will, p. 83.
[145] Present Philosophical Tendencies, Chapter X, section 6.
[146] A Pluralistic Universe, p. 236. Quoted from Professor Perry’s work, named above.
[147] Creative Evolution, p. 3.
[148] The analogy holds even in the oppositeness of direction in which the evanishment, in the limiting cases, occurs (cf. above, pp. 72, 80).