Book
1 1| special activitiesto these principles, and he was followed later
2 1| could logically make active principles ofthe Warm and Cold, since
3 1| says that itis on similar principles that there occur in the
4 1| the logical sequenceof the principles he had assumed; he showed
5 1| dependence on his first principles,but also their disagreement
6 1| that these agree with his principles, whereas Asclepiadessafeguards
7 1| Asclepiadessafeguards the sequence of principles, but pays no attention to
8 1| his discordance with his principles. Almost all the othersects
9 1| othersects depending on similar principles are now entirely extinct,
10 1| beginning of his "General Principles"that he was going to speak
11 1| first book of his "General Principles." Thus Lycus isspeaking
12 2| And if we retain these two principles - that of proportionate
13 2| according to which the principles of heat, cold, dryness and
14 2| first book of the "General Principles," in which Erasistratus
15 2| second book of his "General Principles," fails to escape this same
16 2| second book of his "General Principles": "In the ultimate simple [
17 2| his treatise on "General Principles" he undertook to say how
18 2| are to be drawn from these principles of which I have already
19 3| postulate concerning the active principles - to show, in fact, that
20 3| the most active of all the principles which play a part in things
21 3| place as a result of these principles. Erasistratus, however,
|