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Alphabetical    [«  »]
make 6
makes 1
making 3
man 50
manage 5
manifest 1
manifestly 1
Frequency    [«  »]
57 with
55 one
52 things
50 man
49 other
49 these
47 such
Hippocrates
On ancient medicine

IntraText - Concordances

man

   Part
1 3 | provided it had suited with man to eat and drink in like 2 3 | all other animals, except man, do of the productions of 3 3 | first, I am of opinion that man used the same sort of food, 4 3 | the nature and powers of man, and considering that the 5 3 | discovered for the health of man, for his nourishment and 6 6 | especially and decidedly hurt man, whether in health or in 7 7 | which the constitution of man cannot digest, because of 8 8 | animals. For, suppose a man laboring under one of those 9 8 | health; and that another man in good health, having a 10 9 | nor one that injuries a man less, provided a deficient 11 9 | in the constitution of man, abstinence may enervate, 12 10| less mischief happens to a man from unseasonable depletion 13 11| describe as befalling to this man I refer to want of food. 14 13| which proves injurious to man, and if the person who would 15 13| let me be presented with a man, not indeed one of a strong 16 14| diseases which befall a man? For, by every one of these 17 14| every one of these things, a man is affected and changed 18 14| according to the nature of man, made their discoveries, 19 14| are either injurious to man, or that man stands in need 20 14| injurious to man, or that man stands in need of them, 21 14| more than a match for a man’s constitution, whatever 22 14| they saw both existing in man, and proving injurious to 23 14| to him. For there is in man the bitter and the salt, 24 14| neither do they hurt a man; but when any of them is 25 14| perceptible, and hurts a man. And thus, of articles of 26 14| unsuitable and hurtful to man when administered, every 27 14| all those things which a man eats and drinks are devoid 28 14| of a similar nature which man is accustomed to use for 29 15| either of these, not only in man, but also in a bladder, 30 15| far less sensibility than man; for it is not the heat 31 15| described by me, both in man and out of man, and that 32 15| both in man and out of man, and that whether eaten 33 16| it creates some pain to a man, but quickly, for that very 34 19| other complaints to which man is subject arise from powers ( 35 19| other things connected with man become the more mild and 36 19| more things besides. But a man is in the best possible 37 20| medicine who does not know what man is [and how he was made 38 20| others have described what man in his origin is, and how 39 20| this history shows what man is, by what causes he was 40 20| perform his duties, what man is in relation to the articles 41 20| and with what principle in man it disagrees; for there 42 20| naturally bad which affect man in a different manner. Thus, 43 20| large quantity renders a man feeble; and everybody seeing 44 20| moreover, on what parts of a man’s body it principally exerts 45 20| had been pernicious to of man, it would have hurt all. 46 21| these things produce upon a man, cannot know the consequences 47 22| know what diseases arise in man from the powers, and what 48 22| conformations there are in man. For some are hollow, and 49 22| construction of the parts within a man are of a like nature; the 50 24| action each of them has upon man, and their alliances towards


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