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1 1| voluntary motion are peculiar to animals, whilstgrowth and nutrition
2 1| to use, and we say that animals are governed at onceby their
3 1| maintain that in the case of animals and plants the Warm and
4 1| bodies both ofplants and animals; and this she does by virtue
5 1| themselves - the functions of animals, and therest. For those
6 1| shownby Nature in relation to animals. ~ ~Now Hippocrates, who
7 2| Nature took thought for the animals' future, and was workmanlike
8 2| useless in every way for the animals. Now these two things are
9 2| the very beginning, then animals could not continue to live
10 2| Nature! He imagines that animals grow like webs, ropes, sacks,
11 2| genesis and destruction of animals, their health, their diseases,
12 2| the bodily parts of all animals are governed by the Warm,
13 2| most active, and that those animals which are by nature warmest
14 2| additional help among those animals in which, according to Erasistratus,
15 2| Yet why do I mention those animals in which the property of
16 3| more obscure, dissecting animals which are near to man; not
17 3| near to man; not that even animals unlike him will not show,
18 3| on every occasion that animals were dissected, an equal
19 3| scorpions; while, as regards the animals which emit venom, some it
20 3| namely, that digestion in animals differs from boiling carried
21 3| synodonts; the stomachs of these animals are sometimes found in their
22 3| writes in his "History of Animals"; he also adds the cause
23 3| facts are as follows. In all animals, when the appetite is very
24 3| against their will. In those animals, therefore, which are naturally
25 3| pursuing one of the smaller animals, and are just on the point
26 3| hand. And thus, in these animals in whom those three factors
27 3| that many of the longnecked animals bend down to swallow. Hence,
28 3| Thus as in the case of the animals themselves the end of eating
29 3| might imagine a number of animals helping themselves at will
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