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1 1| thorax withwater? "But," says he, "of course the peritoneal
2 1| calling her "just." Alone,he says, she suffices for the animal
3 1| diseases bycrisis. Therefore he says that there is in our bodies
4 1| spirited venture; for he says this is actually generated
5 1| numbers of people!"Yes," says he, "they derive benefit
6 1| attraction. Further, he says that itis on similar principles
7 1| be also warm. ~ ~"Yes," says Epicurus, "but these corpuscles
8 1| were forced, as the proverb says, "to behave madlyamong madmen"-
9 1| logic. For whatis it that he says? "Now, the stomach does
10 1| quitebewildered, and while the one says nothing, the other indulges
11 2| think that everything he says is true. If this be so,
12 2| in which Erasistratus says, "Since there are two kinds
13 2| then, does he suppose? He says that a nerve has within
14 2| what Erasistratus himself says is, that "there cannot be
15 2| listening to what Erasistratus says about these cases in the
16 2| Erasistratus practically says so in the following words: "
17 2| treatment, as Erasistratus says, to know the actual truth
18 2| division of his argument; he says that it is of no practical
19 2| and the Moist, and how he says that among these the Warm
20 2| unintentionally; for when he says that the digestion of food
21 2| the blood? Yet Hippocrates says, "Dysentery is a fatal condition
22 2| opinion. Hippocrates, indeed, says that the spleen wastes in
23 3| and the first thing she says is that it has dilated "
24 3| with sophistries. It is, he says, inconceivable that digestion,
25 3| lessen its breadth. For he says that the stomach contracts
26 3| adds the cause of this: he says that it is owing to their
27 3| inertia of the uterus when he says:- "Its orifice has no power
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