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Alphabetical    [«  »]
factors 3
facts 22
factthat 1
faculties 41
facultiesof 1
facultieswhich 1
faculty 95
Frequency    [«  »]
42 like
42 our
41 every
41 faculties
41 nothing
40 once
40 take
Galen
On the Natural Faculties

IntraText - Concordances

faculties

   Book
1 1| by the activity of these faculties - for example,blood, flesh, 2 1| as wellas all the other faculties, fall within the category 3 1| the number and kinds of faculties, we mustbegin with the effects; 4 1| to know which alterative faculties are primary and elementary, 5 1| and cartilage-producing faculties (since for thesake of clearness 6 1| at that stage these two faculties are, as it were,handmaids 7 1| thealterative and nutritive faculties are accessory - in fact, 8 1| 9. Now, since the three faculties of Nature have been exhaustivelydealt 9 1| an expositionof all the faculties of Nature. If, however, 10 1| it has not dealtwith the faculties resident in these, it will 11 1| ofNature; similarly also the faculties which produce these effects - 12 1| these effects - the first faculties - are three in number, and 13 1| other, and of yet different faculties. Now, these which thefaculties 14 1| nutriment, as also their faculties, existfor the sake of this 15 1| acquaintance with all the faculties of Nature,you will have 16 1| corresponding parts and faculties,which are closely connected 17 1| birth, employinghere other faculties again, namely, one of affection 18 1| as he supposes, certain faculties, one attractive ofwhat is 19 1| hewas ignorant of Nature's faculties, both that attracting what 20 1| thereare in all bodies certain faculties by which they attract their 21 2| and not by any special faculties (the one attracting what 22 2| parts, it did not employ faculties which were attractive of 23 2| other hand, if we have these faculties, we no longer need channels, 24 2| day, endowed with certain faculties necessary for its very existence, 25 2| that Phidias possessed the faculties of his art even before touching 26 2| it is with the semen: its faculties it possessed from the beginning, 27 2| regard to the aforesaid faculties, the origin of diseases, 28 2| necessarily suppose that the faculties of Nature, by which she 29 3| micturition. ~ 4. Thus the two faculties are clearly to be seen in 30 3| bladders possess certain inborn faculties which are retentive of their 31 3| attractive and the propulsive faculties have been demonstrated to 32 3| demonstrated these four faculties existing in the stomach - 33 3| other organ. For these four faculties have been shown to be necessary 34 3| why we have called these faculties the handmaids of nutrition. 35 3| said anything about the faculties, if any of our predecessors 36 3| other organs possesses both faculties - that of attracting what 37 3| consider duly the natural faculties, which, to the number of 38 3| the first of the natural faculties), the next point to realise 39 3| stoma subserves two distinct faculties, and these exercise their 40 3| ignorant of all the natural faculties, and particularly of the 41 3| necessarily follow opposite faculties; that is to say, every part,


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