Book
1 1| another kind which occursin bodies which change their position,
2 1| growing things. For if such bodies were distended, but not
3 1| directionsbelongs only to bodies whose growth is directed
4 1| which puts together the bodies both ofplants and animals;
5 1| says that there is in our bodies a concordancein the movements
6 1| evacuate the bile from the bodies of jaundicedsubjects, but
7 1| belief that thereare in all bodies certain faculties by which
8 1| that there occur in the bodies of animalsthe dispersal
9 1| thateach of these small bodies has a large number of these
10 1| the kidneys alone, small bodies as they are, could hold
11 2| for them the qualities are bodies). Perhaps, however, they
12 2| it consists of many small bodies, such as those assumed by
13 2| into yet other elementary bodies. But if it be one and continuous,
14 2| But if it consists of many bodies, then we have "escaped by
15 2| Erasistratus into other elementary bodies to give up their opinion;
16 2| demonstrated with regard to our bodies being compounded out of
17 2| phlegmatic. In a word, in bodies which are warm either through
18 2| produce it similarly in all bodies; the food which was bitter
19 2| into bile in the aforesaid bodies which are warm for any of
20 2| already spoken - namely, that bodies act upon and are acted upon
21 3| it is impossible for two bodies which are adapted for acting
22 3| upper is common both to dead bodies, when anything whatsoever
23 3| sometimes stretch out our whole bodies along with our hands, so
24 3| coats (which are the real bodies of these organs) that the
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