Book
1 1| has been completed by the activity of these faculties - for
2 1| blood, flesh, or nerve. And activity is the name I give to the
3 1| thevein and of the muscle an activity, and that of the food and
4 1| therefore,also speak of the activity as an effect of Nature -
5 1| every casecall the effect an activity; thus flesh is an effect
6 1| butit is, of course, not an activity. It is, therefore, clear
7 1| faculty is the cause of the activity, but also,accidentally,
8 1| correspondingto the function or activity of that part. If, therefore,
9 1| however, is not a simple activity of Nature, but is compounded
10 1| faculty. Of course, thekind of activity here involved is also an
11 1| and the uretersof their activity, by assuming that there
12 2| are easily mastered by the activity of the stomach, and what
13 2| necessary that the function [activity] should be either completely
14 2| because the stomach, with its activity impaired, cannot contract
15 2| is that has impaired the activity of the stomach. ~ Thus,
16 2| in any way or damages the activity of the stomach. But if fever
17 2| right in saying that the activity of the stomach at once becomes
18 2| the damage to the gastric activity. For the pneuma is driven
19 2| adding as the cause that the activity of the stomach has been
20 2| abnormal heat impairs this activity, but by virtue of its own
21 2| qualities produces the normal activity. For a disproportionate
22 2| if one is speaking of any activity, whether it be exercised
23 2| to acknowledge that this activity depends upon the way in
24 2| certainly by this that the activity becomes impaired? Or, on
25 2| merely to know what the activity of each organ is. ~ Now,
26 3| faculty which in view of its activity we call, in general terms,
27 3| called, by reason of its activity, attractive or epispastic.
28 3| the end or goal of the activity corresponding to the attractive
29 3| which we desired such an activity; it is attracted in order
30 3| faculty, again, in view of its activity our predecessors were obliged
31 3| the longer duration of its activity as compared with that of
32 3| when this calls, there is activity; when it does not, there
33 3| strength, it will exert its activity upon its passive neighbour;
34 3| coats does exercise the activity which I have stated. Take
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