Book
1 1| growth and decay, as when a small thing becomesbigger, or
2 1| explanation ofit. For, that these small corpuscles belonging to
3 1| third.Now, if you imagine a small lodestone hanging in a house,
4 1| Then, again, when a small body becomes entangled with
5 1| suppose thateach of these small bodies has a large number
6 1| above everything, what small bodiesthese are which possess
7 1| that the kidneys alone, small bodies as they are, could
8 2| This, however, is a small matter. I shall again point
9 2| formed were to remain as small as when it first came into
10 2| be, at the beginning, so small as to differ in no respect
11 2| similar difficulty. For this small vessel will nourish itself,
12 2| vessel [i.e. nerve] is so small - as are also the other
13 2| to answer regarding this small elementary nerve, whether
14 2| whether it consists of many small bodies, such as those assumed
15 2| as this, interspersed in small portions among the corpuscles,
16 3| whereas with respect to the small organs, even if they possess
17 3| if its contents be very small, it grasps the whole of
18 3| generated right away in the small intestine? For what is there
19 3| excessive propensity for food, a small gullet, and ample mouth
20 3| of digested food into the small intestine - and digestion
21 3| soon as it falls into the small intestine, on the other
22 3| traversed the whole of the small intestine, the jejunum,
23 3| stage of satiety - while a small part of it is carried all
24 3| the omentum, mesentery, small intestine, colon, and the
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