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Alphabetical    [«  »]
heads 2
health 2
heart 44
heat 48
heated 2
heats 1
heaving 1
Frequency    [«  »]
59 all
56 we
52 on
48 heat
44 heart
44 or
43 from
Aristotle
On youth and old age, on life and death, on breathing

IntraText - Concordances

heat

   Paragraph
1 4 | by means of their natural heat elaborate and concoct the 2 4 | ensues, because the source of heat in all the other members 3 4 | with the maintenance of heat, and what we call death 4 5 | is exhaustion,-when the heat accumulates excessively 5 5 | what happens is that the heat, accumulating in great quantity, 6 5 | therefore, if the bodily heat must be conserved (as is 7 5 | some way of cooling the heat resident in the source of 8 5 | by means of the supply of heat which it possesses. However, 9 6 | without the presence of heat in the constitution. In 10 6 | constitution. In plants the natural heat is sufficiently well kept 11 6 | abstinence from food produces heat and thirst. The air, if 12 6 | its cooling effect, the heat comes to an end by exhaustion. 13 7 | little blood, has not much heat. Hence, when once it is 14 7 | account of the amount of their heat, while none at all of the 15 10| breath is not let out and the heat accumulates too much then 16 11| than land-animals, their heat is preserved, and whether 17 11| consist in the entrance of heat, for the evidence is to 18 12| for all possess vital heat. Further, how are we to 19 12| process of the generation of heat from the breath? Observation 20 13| reasonable that it should be heat which raises up and that 21 14| of soul involve a certain heat. Not even the digesting 22 14| exhaustion is due to excess of heat; if there is too much heat 23 14| heat; if there is too much heat close at hand and the thing 24 15| this cause. Having little heat, they require little cold 25 15| stomach becomes filled and the heat in the central segment is 26 15| it is a small quantity of heat they possess, the air is 27 15| owing to their want of heat, to keep them finally in 28 18| every case they have little heat and are bloodless, and hence 29 19| a greater proportion of heat, for at the same time they 30 20| counterbalance the excess of heat in their constitution, in 31 20| occupy; for water has less heat than air. But it is wholly 32 20| destroy it, seeing that heat dissolves that which cold 33 20| beneficial effect on excess of heat, and a warm environment 34 20| why it is not owing to the heat in their constitution that 35 21| large quantity of blood and heat it contains. But both these 36 21| hence manifest; the more heat there is, the greater is 37 21| easily pass to the source of heat in the heart.~ 38 22| rapidly becomes hot. The heat of the blood counteracts 39 23| is always to some lack of heat that death is due, and in 40 23| its possessors when the heat with which it is bound up 41 23| death in old age. Little heat remains, for the most of 42 23| or by excess of morbid heat, as happens in fevers, accelerate 43 24| exhaustion of the vital heat (for either of these may 44 24| is the exhaustion of the heat owing to lapse of time, 45 26| volatilization of fluid by heat and the expansion consequent 46 26| beating is produced by the heat expanding the fluid, of 47 27| to its contact with the heat resident in this organ, 48 27| water. Continually as the heat in the heart rises, continually


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