Book
1 1| undergoes alteration and the second group is merely transported.
2 1| inthe alteration of food. A second reason is the nature of
3 1| therefore,had need of a second process of separation for
4 1| discovered bodily parts of a second kind, consecratedin this
5 1| hold that, according to the second teaching, there doesnot
6 1| these then collide with the second piece of iron and are not
7 1| said that if you bring a second stylet intocontact with
8 1| thought, all through the second, and from that again to
9 1| remember how, in order that the second piece of iron may becomeattached
10 1| first, the third to the second, and to that the fourth,
11 1| the series, although this second piece is naturallyin every
12 1| of iron rebound from the second, and do not pass readilythrough
13 1| process of anadosis?~ ~In the second place there is this absurdity,
14 2| imagine, draw to itself a second and a third quantum, and
15 2| we know, and were in the second place correctly expounded
16 2| Nature, and according to the second, Erasistratus. It is my
17 2| which he takes up in the second book of his "General Principles,"
18 2| about these cases in the second book of his "General Principles": "
19 3| Aristotle carried out in the second of his books "On Genesis
20 3| taking place almost every second in opposite directions.
21 3| the liver. ~ During the second period it passes along the
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