Book
1 1| willhave blood enclosed in his veins all the same). And clearly
2 1| blood-making faculty in the veins, then, as wellas all the
3 1| that there exists in the veins a blood-makingfaculty, as
4 1| in order that bone, nerve,veins, and all other [tissues]
5 1| mentioned its arteries, veins, and nerves,the substance
6 1| anyway resemble those of veins; from nerves they differ
7 1| resemblance either to arteries, veins or nerves. But these partshave
8 1| the body, the arteries, veins,nerves, bones, cartilages,
9 1| the superfluities inthe veins. Moreover, these superfluities
10 1| whichis still contained in the veins, and still more, that which
11 1| contained in the stomach and veins - the name of destinednutriment. ~ ~
12 1| attract the urine,or the veins must propel it - if, that
13 1| move of itself.But if the veins did exert a propulsive action
14 1| how is propulsion by the veins impossible? The situation
15 1| thatthis took place through the veins, but he also considered
16 1| can be contained in the veins going to the kidneys;this
17 1| cava, and so to empty the veins goingto the kidneys; these
18 1| goingto the kidneys; these veins will no longer be able to
19 1| For why, of the countless veins whichspring from the vena
20 2| anything flows from the veins, one of two things must
21 2| onwards; in the case of veins this no longer holds, since
22 2| power of compressing the veins, as he himself supposed,
23 2| himself supposed, and the veins again of contracting upon
24 2| assume contraction of the veins in addition - as is, again,
25 2| that the stomata of the veins are wider and those of the
26 2| common space into which the veins from the gateway [of the
27 2| conclusion in the case of the veins and their contained blood.
28 2| through the stomata of the veins, and is being dispersed,
29 2| space cannot result, and the veins cannot collapse (for this
30 2| that we may suppose the veins to be nourished; they get
31 2| draw their supply from the veins. But Erasistratus will not
32 2| nerve has within itself veins and arteries, like a rope
33 2| nourishment, as do the composite veins, by virtue of the tendency
34 2| arteries, and similarly also veins. Thus, all its elementary
35 2| conveyance of food through the veins delivery, and its assumption
36 2| ascribes conveyance through the veins to the principle of vacuum
37 2| propulsive action of the veins, as well as on the traction
38 2| comes into existence in the veins? Are we to pay attention
39 2| certainly to be found in the veins both thick and thin blood;
40 2| anadosis of blood through the veins results from the contiguity
41 2| its genesis in liver and veins, seeing that the old physicians
42 2| nutriment becomes altered in the veins by the innate heat, blood
43 2| upon the food, and why the veins generate blood. There is
44 2| this? And, as regards the veins and the blood, he omitted
45 2| about persistently in the veins mingled with the blood?
46 3| up of nutriment from the veins into each of the parts takes
47 3| extent as will the liver, veins, arteries, and heart. ~
48 3| than that in the liver and veins. For the latter alteration
49 3| the nerves, arteries, or veins which are there situated;
50 3| any doubt as to the liver, veins, arteries, heart, or any
51 3| bladders, the uterus, and the veins), it yet possesses both
52 3| ones also amongst them. Veins thus resemble the uterus
53 3| soon as ever it leaves the veins, and rapidly undergoes change
54 3| obviously the arteries and veins also belong. ~ 13. Nor is
55 3| the stomach through the veins. Still less need we be astonished
56 3| stomach through the same veins by which it was yielded
57 3| then, in the fact that the veins situated between the liver
58 3| carried up to the liver by the veins mentioned; and when the
59 3| from the liver by the same veins. ~ For everything appears
60 3| and the arteries than the veins. In each of us personally,
61 3| stomach by way of the very veins through which it had previously
62 3| course, through the same veins by which absorption took
63 3| animal through these same veins - although in this case
64 3| evacuated by way of the veins leading to the intestines
65 3| terminated at the inner of the veins. ~ Now, movements like these
66 3| about the mouths of the veins continues, that is, so long
67 3| difficulty in the case of the veins which pass down from the
68 3| the stomach by the same veins? You must define what you
69 3| On the other hand, the veins which pass down the from
70 3| most of it is seized by the veins, but a little also by the
71 3| its nutriment the from the veins in the mesentery and liver;
72 3| is in the cavity of the veins will be abstracted by the
73 3| eat, seizes it from the veins in the liver. Also in the
74 3| as communicate with it by veins, e.g. the omentum, mesentery,
75 3| anastomose at any point with the veins attract the thinnest and
76 3| of the blood out of the veins. So also the traction exercised
77 3| itself and the numerous veins in its neighbourhood; for
78 3| something is taken over from the veins into the arteries. If you
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