Book
1 1| you removefrom each of the organs mentioned its arteries,
2 1| elementary. As regards those organs consistingof two dissimilar
3 1| everyone of the various organs has its own particular substance.
4 1| only differ from all other organs, butalso from one another.
5 1| that I shall prove that the organs which have todo with the
6 1| every animal needs several organs for altering the nutriment.
7 1| reason why there are so many organs concerned inthe alteration
8 1| passes throughthe digestive organs, only a very little being
9 1| therefore, at the abundance of organs which Nature hascreated
10 1| consider each one of these organs. ~ ~Now in giving an account
11 1| us not merely throughwhat organs, but also in what way it
12 2| Nature to each one of the organs at the very beginning, then
13 2| blood is generated in these organs. But it is inevitable that
14 2| For whilst there are two organs for the excretion of urine,
15 3| the largest and hollowest organs? Personally I do not think
16 3| with respect to the small organs, even if they possess a
17 3| impossible to speak of both organs at once, so we shall deal
18 3| movements of each of the mobile organs of the body depend on the
19 3| muscles, pass to the physical organs, and you will see that they
20 3| other hand, is peculiar to organs which possess longitudinal
21 3| the constitution of the organs might itself suffice to
22 3| the constitution of the organs, as well as those based
23 3| exists in every one of the organs, just as in the previous
24 3| similar way of the other organs possesses both faculties -
25 3| already spoken of. In the organs consisting of two coats
26 3| longitudinal fibres; but in the organs composed of one coat it
27 3| the stomach. Alone of all organs the intestines consist of
28 3| for the best that all the organs should be naturally such
29 3| of the uterus. ~ In all organs, then, both their natural
30 3| nerves than do the other organs. Here too, however, at least
31 3| burden inciting each of these organs to elimination, there is
32 3| as well as in the other organs,- to which obviously the
33 3| been yielded up from these organs into the liver. And in many
34 3| active movements of the organs and therewith the passive
35 3| take place through the same organs, albeit they differ in their
36 3| as follows:- Each of the organs draws into itself the nutriment
37 3| from the spleen into such organs as communicate with it by
38 3| so far as they are hollow organs, capable of diastole, that
39 3| the real bodies of these organs) that the appropriate matter
|