Book
1 1| immediate purposes we only need to recognizethe complete
2 1| medicine, and because I need it for the presenttreatise,
3 1| animal would appear not to need any others (beingpossessed
4 1| already been shown, these need the service bothof each
5 1| blood. Nature, therefore,had need of a second process of separation
6 1| Moreover, these superfluities need, on the one hand, certainfresh
7 1| substances, and they also need certain reservoirs,as it
8 1| dispersalof nutriment [anadosis] need not make us have recourse
9 2| if, therefore, there is need of some other mechanism
10 2| indefinitely, we have no further need of the principle of the
11 2| faculties, we no longer need channels, little or big,
12 2| blood-vessel it will no longer need the adventitious flow of
13 2| since none of their elements need it. For this principle only
14 2| atrophied and thin, and in need of additional substance
15 2| the one hand they stand in need of feeding-up, and if on
16 2| are very emaciated and who need a great restoration of nutrition,
17 2| than into blood. Thus we need a cold temperament and a
18 2| changed to acid. There is no need, however, to dispute about
19 2| many parts of the body has need of a certain amount of thickening,
20 3| the [animal's] nature has need of some other faculty for
21 3| clearly and manifestly as to need no demonstration, and others
22 3| one and the same duct, we need no longer feel surprised
23 3| through the veins. Still less need we be astonished if a certain
24 3| the canal is empty and in need of nutriment, this is again
25 3| the stomach empty and in need, then the force of the traction
26 3| sources, but if ever it is in need and is at a loss how to
27 3| a loss how to supply the need, it becomes filled with
28 3| is stronger and more in need. ~ It is in this way, therefore,
29 3| the stomach, when it is in need of nourishment and the animal
30 3| plundering another, if he be in need while the other has an abundant
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