Book
1 1| Aristotle later set his hand are to be foundfirst in
2 1| superfluities need, on the one hand, certainfresh routes to
3 1| first-mentioned teaching, on the other hand, Nature is not posterior
4 1| these being, on the one hand, attractive and assimilative
5 1| cholagogue, on the other hand, clears away a great quantityof
6 1| utmostharm. On the other hand, if you give him a cholagogue,
7 1| ancientdoctrine, or that, on the other hand, we may convert you from
8 2| nutrition. On the other hand, if we have these faculties,
9 2| embellished. Phidias, on the other hand, could not turn wax into
10 2| too. Now, if on the one hand they stand in need of feeding-up,
11 2| For to say, on the one hand, that the pneuma has a certain
12 2| sweetness exists from before hand in the honey. Therefore
13 2| impaired? Or, on the other hand, will you be convinced by
14 2| remains of the subject in hand. ~ What else, then, remains
15 2| into itself. On the other hand, that part of the nutriment
16 3| attracted, on the other hand to become adherent, altered,
17 3| of length, on the other hand, is peculiar to organs which
18 3| the gullet, as though by a hand. In fact, just as we ourselves,
19 3| which is, as it were, its hand. And thus, in these animals
20 3| intestine, on the other hand the bile even more readily
21 3| they contain. On the other hand, the veins which pass down
22 3| abundant supply ready to hand. Thus it is in no way surprising
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