Book
1 1| kinds of motion, then, are simple and primary, while compoundedfrom
2 1| Destruction,"not as a matter of simple statement, but with an accompanying
3 1| Genesis,however, is not a simple activity of Nature, but
4 1| similar partsall through, simple, and uncompounded. That
5 1| point of view ofthe senses, simple and elementary. As regards
6 1| coats, of which each is simple, of these organsthe coats
7 1| elementary, homogeneous, and simple. And I shall state in what
8 2| to nourish this adjacent simple nerve or artery, unless
9 2| how could the nerve, being simple, attract its nourishment,
10 2| it introduced? For this simple vessel [i.e. nerve] is so
11 2| would not have called it simple; and some venture to resolve
12 2| foolishly in reducing the simple vessels to elements such
13 2| absurd. For in these minute simple vessels constituting the
14 2| vessel called primary and simple by Erasistratus into other
15 2| declares that what he calls simple and primary is composite,
16 2| unity of substance to these simple structures as well, and
17 2| and continuity, then that simple vessel of his (as he himself
18 2| and uncompounded. And the simple vein will receive nourishment
19 2| that the nutrition of these simple vessels was impraticable
20 2| elementary nerve to be a single, simple, and entirely unified structure,
21 2| invisible, minute nerves, a few simple arteries, and similarly
22 2| assumption by each of these simple and visible nerves and arteries
23 2| Principles": "In the ultimate simple [vessels], which are thin
24 2| the sides." For, if the simple nerve were actually to take
25 2| sides from the adjacent simple vein. Secondly, I also accept
26 3| however, is found less simple; as regards the substances
27 3| nature in the gullet. Now simple observation will testify
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