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1 1| is the effect which each naturally produces. Now,of course,
2 1| the other qualities which naturally derive therefrom.These derivative
3 1| place, any animal cannot naturally derive nourishment from
4 1| Asclepiades, however, nothing is naturally in sympathywith anything
5 1| only catharticdrugs which naturally attract their special qualities,
6 2| when the faculty which naturally digests food is weak, the
7 2| of life, those which are naturally warmer tend more to bile,
8 2| disproportionate heat. So we naturally find yellow bile appearing
9 2| not warm by nature, exists naturally in honey; for this reason
10 2| in those people who are naturally warm, or in their prime,
11 2| improperly advised those who were naturally bilious not to take honey,
12 2| harmful for those who are naturally bilious, and serviceable
13 2| when the heat which exists naturally in every animal is well
14 2| nutriment which belongs naturally to the thick and earth-like
15 2| other substances which have naturally a combined drying and chilling
16 3| of another faculty which naturally attracts its proper juice [
17 3| at every point, so that, naturally enough, when the midwives
18 3| with the spine happen to be naturally lax. ~ A wonderful device
19 3| for which it [the stomach] naturally exists. And it exists to
20 3| animals, therefore, which are naturally voracious, in whom the mouth
21 3| all the organs should be naturally such as they are (that,
22 3| stock of food; some will naturally be eating when others have
23 3| heavier (if this should be naturally more nearly related). Therefore,
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