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Alphabetical    [«  »]
alsoin 1
alsothat 1
alter 4
alteration 43
alterationhas 1
alterationlike 1
alterations 2
Frequency    [«  »]
44 most
44 since
44 upon
43 alteration
43 cannot
43 could
43 very
Galen
On the Natural Faculties

IntraText - Concordances

alteration

   Book
1 1| apply to all these cases is alteration.~ ~This is one kind of motion. 2 1| been written, "On Complete Alteration of Substance" byAristotle, 3 1| to recognizethe complete alteration of substance. In this way, 4 1| the first group undergoes alteration and the second group is 5 1| substance which undergoes alteration the materialof the animal, 6 1| wehave said, results from alteration together with shaping.~ ~ 7 1| here involved is also an alteration, but not an alterationlike 8 1| yellow, onesimple process of alteration is required, but in order 9 1| require a great deal of alteration, in order tobecome blood. ~ ~ 10 1| many organs concerned inthe alteration of food. A second reason 11 1| them which haveto do with alteration prepare the nutriment suitable 12 1| continuous and susceptibleof alteration. The other school assumes 13 1| is one and is subject to alteration; there is a consensusin 14 1| capable ofundergoing complete alteration and being assimilated to 15 2| and yet another causing alteration and adhesion of the matter 16 2| processes of mingling and alteration involve the entire substance. 17 2| digestion is a species of alteration - a transmutation of the 18 2| blood-production also is an alteration, and nutrition as well; 19 2| combined with nutrition; that alteration is effected mainly by the 20 2| without transformation, alteration, and complete intermixture. 21 2| the elements a process of alteration and transformation, and 22 2| enough, inasmuch as the alteration which it undergoes is not 23 2| occurred besides the bubo - an alteration in the arterial and cardiac 24 2| of natural heat). Now the alteration of these movements will 25 2| fermenting and undergoing alteration through the agency of its 26 2| produced during this process of alteration, the one tending to be light 27 2| does not take on well the alteration produced by the innate heat - 28 2| and has entirely escaped alteration in the liver, is drawn by 29 3| that nutrition occurs by an alteration or assimilation of that 30 3| subdued means to undergo alteration. Now, some parts are stronger 31 3| extent it does alter it. The alteration is more than that which 32 3| and veins. For the latter alteration changes the nutriment into 33 3| observe the extent of the alteration which occurs to food in 34 3| believe what an extraordinary alteration it is which occurs in the 35 3| previously undergone some other alteration? And how could the faeces 36 3| more potent in producing alteration than the factors in the 37 3| nutriment does undergo an alteration in the stomach, this is 38 3| this is a different kind of alteration and one which is not dependent 39 3| alters it? Or if it be an alteration of this latter kind, yet 40 3| be nothing else than an alteration to the quality proper to 41 3| tried to show that this alteration was not of any advantage 42 3| shown to be a process of alteration. ~ 9. Concerning the spleen, 43 3| process, the food undergoes alteration; further, when filled and


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