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Alphabetical    [«  »]
partizanship 1
partly 1
partof 1
parts 86
partsall 1
partshave 1
parturient 1
Frequency    [«  »]
94 no
92 would
86 erasistratus
86 parts
85 animal
85 more
84 being
Galen
On the Natural Faculties

IntraText - Concordances

parts

   Book
1 1| nerve,and all the other parts, and that each of these 2 1| and in each of the other parts a special faculty correspondingto 3 1| womb, are all the different parts of its body; and after ithas 4 1| an effect in which all parts share is the progressof 5 1| and thicknessof the solid parts of the animal (those which 6 1| period, a greatnumber of parts become constituted in the 7 1| eachto one of the special parts, just as each part has its 8 1| in my work"On the Use of Parts." ~ ~7. Passing now to the 9 1| that is to say, the solid parts of the body, the arteries, 10 1| touched upon any of the parts of the animal (I mean thestomach, 11 1| been given to the practical parts of ourteaching. For the 12 1| you have discovered bodily parts of a second kind, consecratedin 13 1| singlepart, but a great many parts, and these widely separated; 14 1| with their corresponding parts and faculties,which are 15 1| Naturehas constructed all these parts. Its name, as previously 16 1| destined to nourish any of the parts of the animalis emitted 17 1| and each of the solid parts of the bodyis in a similar 18 1| slips away from the solid parts of the body. In white [leprosy], 19 1| towardsalteration because its own parts act upon and are acted upon 20 1| that alwayswhen the upper parts of the gullet contract the 21 1| gullet contract the lower parts dilate?"Again, then, we 22 1| that always whenthe lower parts of the gullet dilate the 23 1| gullet dilate the upper parts contract?" Now,if he would 24 1| sufficient to have named the parts throughwhich the function 25 1| Erasistratus maintain that the parts abovethe kidneys receive 26 1| sent, as blood, toall the parts below the kidneys. ~ ~For 27 1| Now it is agreed that all parts which are undergoing nutrition 28 1| amount in each of the other parts,where are the bladders, 29 2| one method, the blood into parts of the animal by another, 30 2| it to each of the other parts. And, assuredly, if this 31 2| a plethora in any of the parts coming after the liver, 32 2| for the heart alone of the parts which come after the liver 33 2| membranous excrescences, no other parts save the lungs receive nourishment 34 2| itself so many different parts, it did not employ faculties 35 2| since he does regard all the parts of the body as having been 36 2| shaped and disposed all the parts of the animal, and, after 37 2| and gradually adds to the parts is most certainly extended 38 2| touch it; but its inner parts they left unembellished, 39 2| if she did so, then all parts of the animal would be blood - 40 2| Nature." ~ But if each of the parts formed were to remain as 41 2| well as the intermediate parts, now becomes larger in all 42 2| Aristotelian teaching that the parts which receive that nourishment 43 2| treatise "On the Use of Parts," which I am personally 44 2| anything does run away; for the parts left come together (as is 45 2| but is secondary to the parts of the animal. Now, it is 46 2| since in these people all parts of the body are obviously 47 2| contains within itself various parts, namely, a great many of 48 2| clear, therefore, that these parts will have to exert a greater 49 2| and especially where the parts are very attenuated. It 50 2| traction exerted by each of the parts which are undergoing nourishment, 51 2| in saying that the bodily parts of all animals are governed 52 2| place, and through what parts of the animal! Now, is it 53 2| whole, or in certain of its parts. ~ Also the diseases which 54 2| body. For the blood in many parts of the body has need of 55 2| may deal with the use of parts. And the blood also needs, 56 3| the veins into each of the parts takes place through the 57 3| demonstrate that in certain parts of the body the retentive 58 3| senses, whilst in other parts it is less obvious to the 59 3| while with certain definite parts of the body, in reference 60 3| recognisable to sense. ~ Now those parts of the animal which are 61 3| the fundus the contiguous parts - which form as it were 62 3| condition develops in the lower parts of the stomach, while the 63 3| of the stomach, while the parts about the inlet are normal, 64 3| upper stomach, the lower parts being normal, it ends in 65 3| must exist in almost all parts of the animal a certain 66 3| attracts all the most useful parts of the food in a vaporous 67 3| undergo alteration. Now, some parts are stronger in power and 68 3| taking place in the various parts do not depend on the way 69 3| stomach as well as other parts performs its contractions) 70 3| is that when the upper parts contract the lower ones 71 3| dilatation of the lower parts along with the contraction 72 3| suffice to keep open those parts of the oesophagus which 73 3| the subject of the use of parts; thus we must not now desire 74 3| treatise "On the Use of Parts." ~ 12. It is not, however, 75 3| nutriment. ~ Now, just as the parts draw food from each other, 76 3| therefore, when one of these parts,- owing, of course, to some 77 3| superfluities from all the other parts. The strongest part deposits 78 3| surplus matter in all the parts near it; these again in 79 3| it; these again in other parts which are weaker; these 80 3| the body. Seeing that all parts have the faculty of attracting 81 3| the case of each of the parts, the end of presentation 82 3| it suitable for the other parts that the stomach contracts 83 3| is taking place to all parts of the body, as also presentation. 84 3| liver: while in the various parts of the body there will be 85 3| discharged back into the parts from which it was previously 86 3| in my work "On the Use of Parts," where among other things


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