16-convi | cool-havea | haveb-overt | overw-surro | susce-zeno
Book
2002 2| the flanks or in any other susceptible part; this clearly confutes
2003 1| is at once continuous and susceptibleof alteration. The other school
2004 1| time, however, it became suspectto the Erasistrateans themselves,
2005 1| however, who viewed with suspicion the incredible characterof
2006 1| dejections or passes off as sweat or insensible perspiration.
2007 2| reason it does not become sweeter on being boiled, since exactly
2008 2| needed for the production of sweetness exists from before hand
2009 1| say, clearly lied when he swore that the urinedoes not reach
2010 1| and that everything is in sympathy.According to Asclepiades,
2011 1| nothing is naturally in sympathywith anything else, all substance
2012 3| it (as in the case of the synodont and channae), it is in no
2013 3| happens in the channae and synodonts; the stomachs of these animals
2014 1| difference, of separation or synthesis, ofjustice or injustice,
2015 1| to be detected not by any system,but by personal observation
2016 3| then, by first dealing systematically for a while with certain
2017 3| superfluous to them as a tale told to an ass. ~ 11. For
2018 1| 15. Since, then, we have talked sufficient nonsense - not
2019 1| regard to the urine. He also talksno less nonsense about the
2020 1| peopleused to be set to menial tasks.... What will be the end
2021 2| of bile, while that which tasted good and sweet would not
2022 1| toremember what he himself taught us in his work "On Genesis
2023 1| they meet with morethan one teacher, are yet so unintelligent
2024 1| everyone becomes like the first teacherthat he comes across, without
2025 2| the finest needle you will tear the whole three of them
2026 1| obviously, courage, wisdom, temperance, and self-control are all
2027 2| which are naturally warmer tend more to bile, and the colder
2028 1| whereas vapours have a natural tendencyto rise upwards; thus they
2029 1| existence still. Yet the tenetsof Asclepiades have been unanswerably
2030 1| yet it does not take up a tenth part of themoisture which
2031 3| the transference finally terminated at the inner of the veins. ~
2032 2| liver and two other vascular terminations (that of the vessel on the
2033 2| while using a different terminology, still keeps to the fact
2034 1| long time to judging and testing the true and false in each
2035 1| corn has a greater power thanextreme solar heat of drawing to
2036 1| nerves they differ still more thanfrom the structures mentioned. ~ ~"
2037 1| much more rarefied there thanit is amongst the corn, yet
2038 1| we must perforce suppose thateach of these small bodies has
2039 1| objection to our view, in order thateither you may convince us by a
2040 1| forsooth, some of the particles thatflow from the lodestone collide
2041 1| going to do so. For I know thatif one passes over the Hippocratic
2042 1| presumed to dispute, and said thatit was not to be wondered at
2043 1| from the kidneys, seeing thatthese were well dilated. We were,
2044 1| juice, nor has it acquired thatviscous and agglutinative quality
2045 1| growth is predominant, while thealterative and nutritive faculties
2046 1| painlessly and rapidly on theapplication of a medicament. Yet even
2047 1| other credible cause on thebasis of his supposed elements,
2048 1| that neither does that of theblood nor that of the bile; or
2049 1| clearly observe any day in thecase of any bladder, that, if
2050 1| clearly, in these doings of thechildren, the more the interior cavity
2051 1| through the peritoneum and thediaphragm, thus filling the whole
2052 1| faculties. Now, these which thefaculties of generation and growth
2053 1| that it is the whole of thefluid drunk which becomes urine,
2054 1| maintained that it passes, in theform of vapour, straight from
2055 1| more than twice as thick as theformer. ~ ~Perhaps, however, it
2056 1| the substances as well as theirqualities undergo this intimate mingling,
2057 2| between the two doctrines, and theirs to make the choice.... ~
2058 1| nutritive faculty. Of course, thekind of activity here involved
2059 1| bid this blood retire to thelower part of the vena cava, and
2060 1| would now at least draw themaway from their false assumptions,
2061 1| he also considered fully themethod, which he held to be from
2062 1| take up a tenth part of themoisture which the corn does. ~ ~
2063 1| though thunderstruck, whilst themore shameless continues to hide
2064 1| the change of the elements themselvesinto one another to certain diffusions
2065 1| mentioned, and do not possess in themselvessupreme authority. When, however,
2066 1| until the bladder seems to themto have become large enough.
2067 1| the latter as effects of thenature. And if there be anyone
2068 1| of these latter does so, thenso also does that of the former.
2069 1| nourishment to this thin part, thenthey would make the bladder big
2070 1| it with water or air and thenties up its neck and squeezes
2071 1| but pays no attention to theobvious fact. Whoever, therefore,
2072 1| convert them forthwith to theopposite view. But even this they
2073 1| ridiculous even than the theoryof the lodestone, mentioned
2074 1| us have recourse to the theoryregarding the natural tendency of
2075 1| are inserted into them, theoutgrowth into the intestine, the
2076 1| consideration which we proposed at theoutset. For, when the matter which
2077 1| the stone was passed, both thepain and the retention at once
2078 1| follows. One has to divide theperitoneum in front of the ureters,
2079 1| ought ipso facto; to possess thepower of extracting these substances
2080 1| of rest is retention of thepreexisting state. The Sophists, however,
2081 1| and older than they; and thereforein their view it is Nature
2082 1| own particular quality. He thereforesays that safflower, the Cnidian
2083 1| qualities which naturally derive therefrom.These derivative qualities,
2084 | therein
2085 1| functions of animals, and therest. For those people who do
2086 3| demonstration alone, but to add thereto cogent and compelling proofs
2087 1| cartilage-producing faculties (since for thesake of clearness these names
2088 1| eternity to eternity, and that theseapparent alterations are brought
2089 1| biliary superfluities; for in thesecases also it would have been
2090 1| in fact, plainly observe thesepoisons deposited on the medicaments.
2091 1| at their disputations on thesesubjects - so difficult an evil to
2092 1| a faculty which we call theshaping or formative faculty; this
2093 1| the atoms which flow from thestone are related in shape to
2094 1| the example was drawn from thesubject-matter of medicine, and because
2095 1| constructive artist and that thesubstance of things is always tending
2096 1| dispersed from the part thethorn comes away of itself, without
2097 1| some, again, are paths for thetransit in all directions of the
2098 1| unless someone who knew about thetrick before makes a more careful
2099 1| assumed "elements" to confess thetruth about such matters. For
2100 1| cases I call the motion of thevein and of the muscle an activity,
2101 1| kidneys lie on either side of thevena cava. They therefore do
2102 1| prove more foolish than thevery butchers if we do not agree
2103 1| nor would he agree with theview held not merely by Hippocrates
2104 1| are not arteries, since theydo not pulsate nor do they
2105 1| those going to the kidneys? Theyhave not answered the question
2106 1| or ugly; all such things, theysay, arise in us from sensation
2107 1| becomeflesh; for, if Nature thicken it to such an extent that
2108 1| become,as far as possible, thickened and white? And how could
2109 2| need of a certain amount of thickening, as also, I take it, of
2110 1| in length, breadth, and thicknessof the solid parts of the animal (
2111 1| whey [serum]; the remaining thickportion which is destined to become
2112 1| when caught in the act of thieving, cannot find any excuse;
2113 1| undergo motion; when a warm thingbecomes cold, and a cold warm, here
2114 1| this treatise, and to what thingswe apply them; and this will
2115 1| and to pin one's faith in thingswhich could not be seen! ~ ~Also,
2116 1| bladder into the ureters, I thinkhe will be persuaded by this
2117 1| be purified. Further, the thinserous part of this will pass through
2118 1| by the kidneys, and that thisattraction does not take place in the
2119 1| For since the action of thisfaculty is assimilation, and it
2120 1| which they contain. And if thisis impossible, as we shall
2121 1| Therefore, by reason of thislaw, every animal needs several
2122 1| with obvious facts, and, in thismatter of urinary secretion, to
2123 1| they may also consider at thispoint which of the two roads lying
2124 1| of residual matter. For thissurplus must necessarily be greater
2125 1| into operation save only thistendency by which a vacuum becomes
2126 1| but also thosewhich remove thorns and the points of arrows
2127 1| certain medicaments draw out thornsand others poisons, but that
2128 3| starting-point of all this is a thorough-going enquiry into the question
2129 1| instances, as well as to thosepreviously mentioned, we shall apply
2130 1| knows this to be so, whilst thosewho take experience alone as
2131 2| Erasistratus makes havoc of it a thousand times over. For, according
2132 2| the blood, but there are thousands of the ancient physicians
2133 3| water be poured down his throat; this symptom results from
2134 1| rebound, how then do they pass throughinto the third piece? And if
2135 1| say that the vapours pass throughthese coats, why should they not
2136 1| able to tell us not merely throughwhat organs, but also in what
2137 1| to have named the parts throughwhich the function takes place,
2138 3| eagerness to overturn and throw others we are ourselves
2139 1| too, although it isall thrown into the wicker strainers,
2140 1| keeps silence, as though thunderstruck, whilst themore shameless
2141 1| animal urinates,one has to tie a ligature round his penis
2142 3| when the transverse fibres tighten, the breadth of the cavity
2143 3| each of the fibres becomes tightened and drawn towards its origin,
2144 3| period the part needs to be tightly contracted and stretched
2145 1| which they are collected till they reach a sufficientquantity,
2146 1| discussing have taken their timeover the construction of impudent
2147 3| not admit so much as the tip of a probe, that it no longer
2148 3| by the condensation [of tissue], it would turn to the remaining
2149 1| nerve,veins, and all other [tissues] may come into existence,
2150 1| and is sent, as blood, toall the parts below the kidneys. ~ ~
2151 1| quasi-nutriment, and what is destined tobe nutriment." For to that
2152 1| of alteration, in order tobecome blood. ~ ~This, then, is
2153 1| even thus we hardly hoped tocheck their nonsensical talk. ~ ~
2154 1| which are altered in regard tocolour and flavour which, we say,
2155 1| that the organs which have todo with the disposal of the
2156 1| Allowing, then, some time toelapse, one now demonstrates that
2157 2| and are leading a life of toil, the honey changes entirely
2158 1| part. If, therefore, we are toinvestigate methodically the number
2159 2| than does bile, by these tokens bile must also be thicker
2160 1| remarks in precise and clear tones,he concluded by jumping
2161 1| nonsense that comes to their tongues,and who do not remain definitely
2162 1| at least, Aristotle chose toremember what he himself taught us
2163 1| remain entire and not be torn through whilst we stretch
2164 2| intelligence is perfectly torpid and who is quite out of
2165 1| inspection. Yet, if you care toset down the same vessel in
2166 1| therefore, further compelled toshow them in a still living animal,
2167 1| peculiar either to Nature or toSoul, but that these result from
2168 1| before us is the better one totake. Hippocrates took the first-mentioned.
2169 1| He is forced here again totalk nonsense, just as he did
2170 1| conveyed by its own motion tothe kidneys, considering this
2171 1| point of their teaching totrust to no arguments, but only
2172 2| faculties of his art even before touching his material, and then activated
2173 2| latter faculty alone to be as tough as steel and unaffected
2174 1| tending towards unity and also towardsalteration because its own parts act
2175 1| nonsense about "conveyance towardsthe rarefied part [of the air],"
2176 3| not astonished when the trachea-artery alternately draws air into
2177 1| when we exerted forcible tractionwith our fingers, and yet come
2178 3| his nature and his early training. And when he reaches early
2179 2| is then no difficulty in transferring it to the rest. Certainly
2180 3| sufficient to allow of the transit of the foetus, she then
2181 2| others being, as it were, transition-stages in the genesis of these
2182 3| where he shows that all the transmutations and alterations throughout
2183 3| you will see it rapidly transmuting - in fact entirely digesting -
2184 2| the so-called insensible transpiration of the physicians will leave
2185 3| single organ subserves the transport of matter in opposite directions,
2186 1| the second group is merely transported. One might, therefore,also
2187 3| mouth without having first traversed the whole of the small intestine,
2188 2| alternatives; now, if we treat the disjunction as a disjunction
2189 1| time as possible), this treatisemight seem to be already complete,
2190 1| author of this third piece of trickery would appear to haveachieved
2191 1| that all such phenomena are tricks and illusions of oursenses;
2192 1| chaff by amber. He even tries to give the causeof the
2193 2| impaired, cannot contract and triturate as before - then, I say,
2194 2| to attack even the most trivial views, whilst in this he
2195 2| senses, although he had trusted these in the case of the
2196 2| in the case of reeds and tubes it is true to say that,
2197 1| injustice, of the beautiful or ugly; all such things, theysay,
2198 2| colour, and the cicatrices of ulcers are dark. For, generally
2199 2| General Principles": "In the ultimate simple [vessels], which
2200 2| similarly, should he have been unacquainted with the genesis of the
2201 1| either mad, or entirely unacquaintedwith practical medicine? For
2202 1| substance to be unchangeable,unalterable, and subdivided into fine
2203 1| tenetsof Asclepiades have been unanswerably confuted by Menodotus the
2204 2| burned lees differ from unburned. The former is a warm substance,
2205 3| the time that it becomes uncomfortable through the increasing quantity
2206 1| causation go, he is perfectly unconvincing; nevertheless,he does grant
2207 2| preserve meat and keep it uncorrupted, whilst all other water -
2208 1| here too we speak of its undergoingmotion; similarly also when anything
2209 1| now inanother, whereas the underlying substance does not admit
2210 1| come into existence, the underlyingsubstance from which the animal springs
2211 2| carrying out my original undertaking. There is, however, one
2212 2| General Principles" he undertook to say how all the various
2213 1| considerablenumber of not undistinguished men - philosophers and physicians -
2214 2| function (for she left nothing undone), brought it forward to
2215 2| the Peripatetics, as they undoubtedly do, and if none of them
2216 2| monthly discharge, or an undue evacuation such as is caused
2217 3| judge that there was an unduly long continuance of the
2218 2| its inner parts they left unembellished, unwrought, unaffected by
2219 1| so much from this as do unfamiliarterms; accordingly we employ those
2220 2| single, simple, and entirely unified structure, and let us consider
2221 2| statuary's wax, a single uniform matter, subjected to the
2222 2| power; it is, by hypothesis, unimpressionable and untransformable, whereas,
2223 1| one teacher, are yet so unintelligent and slow-witted that evenby
2224 3| demonstrated by the Ancients are unintelligible to the bulk of the Moderns
2225 2| himself confesses this, albeit unintentionally; for when he says that the
2226 2| mentioned are unmixed and unique, while the latter forms
2227 3| had grown round and become united with the food. At the same
2228 3| clearly that there is a universal conveyance or transference
2229 1| eliminative of its diseases, unlessit be allowed that she conserves
2230 | unlike
2231 | unlikely
2232 2| those first mentioned are unmixed and unique, while the latter
2233 2| character and faculty is unnatural; it has assumed an acridity
2234 2| digested in the stomach, but unnecessary to know how bile comes into
2235 2| little or big, resting on an unproven hypothesis, for explaining
2236 2| we are troubled with an unquenchable thirst, and that when we
2237 3| utility demands, it seems not unreasonable to accept a common demonstration
2238 3| plainly, although not entirely unrecognizable to those who are willing
2239 3| and then apply it to an unripe [undigested] boil: you will
2240 1| directions so that it remains unruptured and preservescompletely
2241 2| are suited, and what kinds unsuited, to the process of blood-production
2242 1| ridiculous and obviously quite untenable. ~ ~What happens, then,
2243 1| following its birth and untilthe acme is reached, the faculty
2244 3| outlet were the cause of untriturated food remaining for an abnormally
2245 1| his language is somewhat unusual. We, however, forour part,
2246 2| attention and take care not unwittingly to credit the semen with
2247 3| suddenly oppressed by an unwonted cold, it should at once
2248 2| they left unembellished, unwrought, unaffected by art or forethought,
2249 1| themselves to be shown the ureterscoming from the kidneys and becoming
2250 1| both the kidneys and the uretersof their activity, by assuming
2251 3| nor night may he cease to urge and strain himself in order
2252 1| dysuria or from retention of urinecall themselves "nephritics,"
2253 1| cause of the secretion of urinecan be given except that of
2254 1| lied when he swore that the urinedoes not reach the kidneys, and
2255 1| the inner sanctuary, that urineis residual matter from the
2256 3| ridiculous by quarrelling uselessly with a mere name - as though
2257 1| it Godknows! ~ ~Now, we usually refrain from arguing with
2258 1| present in the foetus in utero as is also the nutritivefaculty,
2259 3| power of attracting and of utilising appropriate qualities, as
2260 1| you will do the man the utmostharm. On the other hand, if you
2261 1| then, maintains,as though uttering an oracle from the inner
2262 1| and anadosis, and, being utterlyunable to find anything to say
2263 2| purpose, and nothing in vain. ~ But even as regards this
2264 2| to choose always the most valueless doctrines, and to spend
2265 1| which is the reason for the vapoursbeing carried into it? On the
2266 1| the mouth - for all the variousarticles of food. What receives nourishment,
2267 1| Similarly we call the variouskinds of food "nutriment," not
2268 1| and explain clearly the variousterms which we are going to use
2269 2| the liver and two other vascular terminations (that of the
2270 1| being taken up into the veinsas blood - nor is this itself
2271 1| portion remaining in the veinswill obstruct the blood flowing
2272 1| but on either side of the venacava, and that the vena cava
2273 1| blood in the operation of vene-section; and after this onecuts
2274 3| regards the animals which emit venom, some it kills at once,
2275 3| that the reflux into the venous artery (as will also be
2276 2| nutriment into its right ventricle, thereafter sending it through
2277 2| one of our Erasistrateans ventured to say, herein clearly disregarding
2278 1| in the air." Then do you ventureto say that so great a weight
2279 2| their agreement is only verbal; in practice Erasistratus
2280 1| oncebecome very hard, nor vice versa; nor, similarly can anything
2281 3| situated; next divide with vertical incisions, from the lower
2282 1| great difficulty evacuate a verysmall quantity of this humour,
2283 1| oncebecome very hard, nor vice versa; nor, similarly can
2284 2| fall, actually seize their victorious adversaries by the necks
2285 1| Asclepiades, however, who viewed with suspicion the incredible
2286 1| entirely passed over the viewheld by Hippocrates, not even
2287 1| in which we discuss the viewsof Asclepiades the physician.
2288 2| pneuma is driven in more vigorously and continuously, and in
2289 3| movements visible owing to their vigour. And after the muscles,
2290 2| also becomes sharp like vinegar and corrodes the animal'
2291 1| attractthe poison of the viper, others that of the sting-ray,
2292 1| distinctionsare hardness and softness, viscosity, friability, lightness,
2293 1| also what Hippocrates said, viz., "Nutriment is what is
2294 1| One~ ~1. Since feeling and voluntary motion are peculiar to animals,
2295 3| that in cases of ileus [volvulus], when the lower exit is
2296 3| in eructations or in the vomited matter, or on dissection.
2297 3| therefore, which are naturally voracious, in whom the mouth cavity
2298 3| that it is owing to their voracity. ~ The facts are as follows.
2299 1| country into the city in wagons, and wish to filch someaway
2300 1| he comes across, without waiting to learn anything from anybodyelse.
2301 2| and moister, it must be warmed and dried; so also in other
2302 1| alterative, and, in more detail, warming, chilling, drying, or moistening;
2303 3| it becomes filled with waste-matters; these are certain biliary,
2304 3| also frequently discharge waste-substances into the stomach through
2305 1| be needed to contain the wasteproducts of them all. Yet one often
2306 2| indeed, says that the spleen wastes in those people in whom
2307 1| conditions of atrophy and wasting, from an insufficientsupply
2308 1| region that most of the watergathers). Otherwise the vapours
2309 1| seen it. For it was in this wayalso that Asclepiades, when all
2310 1| when it departs in various waysfrom its preexisting state, it
2311 3| cold, it should at once be weakened and should find that the
2312 3| comes to rest in one of the weakest of all; it cannot flow from
2313 2| imagines that animals grow like webs, ropes, sacks, or baskets,
2314 3| change than the food which is wedged into the vacant spaces between
2315 1| better course (as do we when wego off to market!), or, if
2316 1| place, of Genesis, which, as wehave said, results from alteration
2317 3| attracting what is suitable or well-disposed and of eliminating what
2318 2| calls blenna [mucus], is the well-known cold, moist humour which
2319 1| faculty in the veins, then, as wellas all the other faculties,
2320 1| leaving me as though I werequite incapable of finding any
2321 1| only? Of course, if anyone wereto maintain that in the case
2322 1| course of this treatise, from whatfaculties these effects themselves,
2323 1| rhetoric nor logic. For whatis it that he says? "Now, the
2324 1| would show that the whole of whatone drinks goes to the kidneys. ~ ~
2325 1| natural activities - firstly whatthey are, how they take place,
2326 3| I give a sort of mess of wheaten flour and water, there after
2327 | whence
2328 | whenever
2329 1| one of presentation. For wheneverthe juice which is destined
2330 1| I call a faculty. Thus, whenfood turns into blood, the motion
2331 1| vacuum to become refilled, whenonce we have granted the attractive
2332 1| downwards, and this is called whey [serum]; the remaining thickportion
2333 1| let the thinner serous [whey-like] portion through,and keep
2334 1| drug attracts something whichalready exists, and does not generate
2335 1| Indeed, it is nonsense, whichever alternativeis adopted. For,
2336 1| ourselves that everything whichexists possesses a faculty by which
2337 1| occur without the nutriment whichflows to the part and is worked
2338 1| nutriment by the stomach whichoccurs in the process of anadosis;
2339 1| receives the urine, and that whichreceives the yellow bile - not only
2340 1| of the countless veins whichspring from the vena cava, should
2341 1| impossible to find a body whichwill remain entire and not be
2342 1| did not exist previously, whilein nutrition the inflowing
2343 1| are now entirely extinct, whilethese alone maintain a respectable
2344 1| are peculiar to animals, whilstgrowth and nutrition are common
2345 2| justice to by Plato. Thus, the white-coloured substance which everyone
2346 1| as the saying is, like a whitecrow, which cannot mix with the
2347 1| required, but in order that the whitemay become black, and the black
2348 1| gradually parted with its whiteness and gradually acquired redness?
2349 1| of this is known to those whohave read the first book of his "
2350 1| of roads intersecting the wholebody. ~ ~Thus there is one entrance -
2351 1| smallest portion of the wholeparticle. ~ ~Then, again, when a
2352 1| philosophers and physicians - whorefer action to the Warm and the
2353 1| ducts, and that this was whythey were inserted into the neck
2354 1| it isall thrown into the wicker strainers, does not all
2355 1| fine in proportion to the width of the meshespasses downwards,
2356 1| itself, and germander,and wild mastich dissolve the body
2357 1| adherents of Asclepiades willassent to this - or rather, they
2358 1| combination of these, they willbe found to be in each animal
2359 1| for a prolonged period, he willhave blood enclosed in his veins
2360 3| unrecognizable to those who are willing to pay attention. ~ Thus,
2361 2| supposing themselves to be the winners! ~ 3. Thus, every hypothesis
2362 1| by the same drugs, and in winterphlegm, and that in a young man
2363 2| any one could add anything wiser than what has been said
2364 3| if it was facts that he wished to dispute about, was to
2365 1| fact. Whoever, therefore, wishes to expose the absurdity
2366 3| remain in the part, but withdraws to another one, and keeps
2367 1| obvious facts, but find fault withhis views as to causation. For
2368 1| and felt anxious to see it withmy own eyes. Afterwards, when
2369 1| and when it was impossible withoutincurring the greatest derision to
2370 1| this rhetorical fashion withoutsome proof; state some definite
2371 1| to enter into an argument withthese people, and it was only
2372 1| impervious body that it is, withtwo very strong coats. For if
2373 1| bladder becoming filled withurine. ~ ~When this has been made
2374 2| found which does not bear witness to the truth of this account.
2375 3| not make the parturient woman get up at once and sit down
2376 3| to be naturally lax. ~ A wonderful device of Nature's also
2377 1| perhaps, be stating some wonderfultruth, unknown to any of his predecessors. ~ ~
2378 1| materialof the animal, just as wood is the material of a ship,
2379 1| as a sponge or a piece of wool, and not as the perfectly
2380 3| tends to be thick, and by working it up converts it into more
2381 2| animals' future, and was workmanlike in her method; and at the
2382 1| Problems," and manyother works he uses the uses the two
2383 2| sudden entrance into the world, and is not yet familiar
2384 1| let us now speakof the worst doctrine of all, lately
2385 2| such distinguished teaching worthy either of contradiction
2386 1| his theory, when examined, wouldbe found as it stands to be
2387 3| as frequently occurs in wresting-bouts and struggles, when in our
2388 2| he is like the amateur wrestlers, who, when they have been
2389 1| foreign. Thus he invented some wretchednonsense to explain blood-production
2390 1| Erasistratus] had thought proper to write any other similar opinion,
2391 1| of fact, I have seen five writing-stylets of iron attachedto one another
2392 1| state that Hippocrates was wrongin criticizing the weakness
2393 3| of the stomach itself; it yearns after and tends towards
2394 2| far less for the number of years which they actually do.
2395 1| the fact that in summer yellowbile is evacuated in greater
2396 2| it is redder, in others yellower, in some blacker, in others
2397 3| substances that the liver yields in response to the traction
2398 1| Aristotle. And of course youknow those which appeal to taste,
2399 1| 17. Now such of the younger men as have dignified themselves
2400 1| we may convert you from yourignorance." Yet why do I say "rhetorical"?
2401 1| this intimate mingling, as Zeno of Citium afterwardsdeclared,
|