Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
ancientdoctrine 1
ancients 14
and 1271
animal 85
animalis 1
animalpoisons 1
animals 29
Frequency    [«  »]
92 would
86 erasistratus
86 parts
85 animal
85 more
84 being
84 bile
Galen
On the Natural Faculties

IntraText - Concordances

animal

   Book
1 1| Nature, then, while the animal is still being formedin 2 1| underlyingsubstance from which the animal springs must be altered; 3 1| alteration the materialof the animal, just as wood is the material 4 1| thicknessof the solid parts of the animal (those which have been subjectedto 5 1| willbe found to be in each animal of a number corresponding 6 1| at the first stage of the animal's genesis, employingat this 7 1| alterativefaculties in each animal are of the same number as 8 1| authority. When, however, the animal has attained its completesize, 9 1| exhaustivelydealt with, and the animal would appear not to need 10 1| any of the parts of the animal (I mean thestomach, intestines, 11 1| in thefirst place, any animal cannot naturally derive 12 1| reason of thislaw, every animal needs several organs for 13 1| are already nourishingthe animal, nor because they exist 14 1| show forethoughtfor the animal's welfare, and that she 15 1| exists in anypart of the animal a faculty for attracting 16 1| toshow them in a still living animal, the urine plainly running 17 1| having bandaged up the animal, let him go (for he will 18 1| clear, then, before the animal urinates,one has to tie 19 1| that not only in a dead animal,but in one which is still 20 1| loosens the ligature from the animal's penis and allows himto 21 1| divided, one bandagesup the animal externally. Then when enough 22 1| full ofurine, as if the animal were suffering from dropsy. 23 1| test this for himself on an animal, I think he will stronglycondemn 24 1| says, she suffices for the animal in every respect, performingof 25 1| foreign, and she nourishes the animal, makes it grow, and expels 26 1| constructive,preservative of the animal, and eliminative of its 27 1| the preservation of the animal. For his constantaim is 28 1| othersthat of some other animal; we can, in fact, plainly 29 1| will becomefilled, and the animal will be at once suffocated. 30 2| blood into parts of the animal by another, and the yellow 31 2| exercising forethought for the animal when she allowed a noxious 32 2| For there is not a single animal which could live or endure 33 2| disposed all the parts of the animal, and, after carrying out 34 2| so, then all parts of the animal would be blood - that blood, 35 2| there arises no part of the animal which is as red and moist [ 36 2| procreate and to shape the animal, becomes, so to say, a special 37 2| is this third overseer of animal generation that we are to 38 2| nature, but an actual living animal. And if we retain these 39 2| active principle of the animal, the material principle 40 2| basket suddenly becoming an animal or a plant; for growth belongs 41 2| secondary to the parts of the animal. Now, it is not the province 42 2| by which she shapes the animal, and makes it grow and receive 43 2| through what parts of the animal! Now, is it possible that, 44 2| digests food is weak, the animal's digestion fails, whereas 45 2| to be evacuated from the animal, and that it causes great 46 2| comes into existence in the animal's body? Will it not also 47 2| qualities, and that thus the animal should fall ill, either 48 2| thus in this case, the animal whose digestion is promoted 49 2| undergoing change in the animal body, then they would produce 50 2| exists naturally in every animal is well blended and moderately 51 2| same appearance when the animal is in normal health as that 52 2| vinegar and corrodes the animal's body - as also the earth, 53 2| waste substances, and the animal body needs to be purified 54 3| exists in every part of the animal a faculty which in view 55 3| for the nutrition of the animal; whilst a thing may be even 56 3| them. Here too, then, the [animal's] nature has need of some 57 3| artistic and solicitous for the animal's welfare, it necessarily 58 3| Now those parts of the animal which are especially hollow 59 3| Suppose you fill any animal whatsoever with liquid food - 60 3| observe this yourself in an animal, if you will try to hit 61 3| so long, as least, as the animal is in a natural condition. ~ 62 3| peritoneum of a still living animal and have always found all 63 3| almost all parts of the animal a certain inclination towards, 64 3| which is suited for the animal which is not also correspondingly 65 3| qualities existing in the animal. And to be subdued means 66 3| nutriment which is proper to the animal, they will not all do so 67 3| smell similar to that of the animal's mouth, and have been disintegrated 68 3| had the qualities of the animal's flesh impressed upon them. 69 3| proper to the body of the animal? This is still more impossible. 70 3| quality appropriate to the animal which is about to be nourished 71 3| of any advantage to the animal. If, again, he were unable 72 3| us demonstrate to them by animal dissection as well that 73 3| which I have stated. Take an animal, then; lay bare the structures 74 3| transverse fibres); then give the animal food and you will see that 75 3| abolished. If, again, in another animal, you cut through both coats 76 3| you will observe that this animal also swallows although the 77 3| this it is clear that the animal can also swallow by either 78 3| For when every part of the animal has been shewn to draw into 79 3| liver is a reason why the animal is not hungry; for when 80 3| disease Nature purges the animal through these same veins - 81 3| diarrhoea. And when the animal becomes sick, this means 82 3| that in one and the same animal a single organ subserves 83 3| physiological organ, but an animal possessing reason and intelligence, 84 3| presentation. Now, if the animal takes food immediately after 85 3| need of nourishment and the animal has nothing to eat, seizes


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2008. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License