Book
1 1| consistency and ceases to be fluid, it thus becomes originalnewly-formed
2 1| the movements of air and fluid throughout the whole body;
3 1| view, in fact,is that the fluid which we drink passes into
4 1| and turns from vapour into fluid.He simply looks upon the
5 1| the movements of air and fluid, and that everything is
6 1| not evacuatethe dropsical fluid contained in the body, but
7 1| heaviness of the serous fluid, which was said to be producedin
8 1| the beginning,when this fluid was being carried up from
9 1| situations?And if the watery fluid is so heavy, what plausibility
10 1| agreedthat all the watery fluid does fall downwards, and
11 1| surprising that the watery fluid runs into the kidneys,while
12 1| the others,and the serous fluid be diverted to those going
13 2| which abstract the biliary fluid, nor did she give it to
14 2| the contiguous quantum of fluid will run in and take the
15 2| maintained that the biliary fluid was useless in every way
16 2| thicker than the watery fluid. For here, again, there
17 2| proportion of blood? Now, this fluid would be in due proportion
18 2| the adjoining quantum of fluid should flow in and fill
19 2| and fill the place of the fluid evacuated. It is in this
20 2| not compel the adjacent fluid to come and fill it. ~ At
21 2| medicine to find out whether fluid of this kind arises from
22 2| very large quantities of fluid? Therefore this humour has
23 2| this is thin, moist, and fluid, not like what it is when,
24 3| and loaded and because the fluid runs from one part of it
25 3| to receive and accumulate fluid until it is so stretched
26 3| and devours all the useful fluid in it, until it is thoroughly
27 3| filled and saturated with the fluid pabulum from the food, it
|