Book
1 1| language is clearness,and we know that nothing detracts so
2 1| Therefore, ifyou wish to know which alterative faculties
3 1| warmth, and if you wishto know which ones arise from the
4 1| course, of such of themas know what they are talking about,
5 1| medicine? For who does not know that if a drug forattracting
6 1| as their starting-point know otherwise;they, as well
7 1| not going to do so. For I know thatif one passes over the
8 2| Hippocrates of all writers whom we know, and were in the second
9 2| s name, is it useful to know how food is digested in
10 2| stomach, but unnecessary to know how bile comes into existence
11 2| essential for the physician to know in the first place, that
12 2| it not also be useful to know what state of the body is
13 2| better. But if we did not know in what respect they were
14 2| as Erasistratus says, to know the actual truth about the
15 2| Peripatetics, whether they know what Aristotle stated and
16 2| of the humours, I do not know that any one could add anything
17 2| Who, in fact, does not know that anything which is overcooked
18 2| knowing the cause; if we know this, we shall also be able
19 2| the normal if we do not know the cause of its disability?
20 2| purposes of treatment merely to know what the activity of each
21 2| virtually dry.) Who does not know that brine and sea-water
22 2| rots it? And who does not know that when yellow bile is
23 2| the humours? Or, does the know it, and yet voluntarily
24 3| the stomach. For, as we know, it takes nine months in
25 3| that he whose purpose is to know anything better than the
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