| William Harvey - Blood - 1889 - 202 pages
...and the contraction of the heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite character : the...some [of the higher] animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles ; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting... | |
| William Harvey - Blood - 1894 - 200 pages
...an eel, of several fishes, and even of some [of the higher] animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles ; nay, if it be cut in pieces the...pulsating and palpitating, after the cessation of all movement in the auricle. But is not this perchance peculiar to animals more tenacious of life, whose... | |
| William Harvey - Blood - 1894 - 194 pages
...and the contraction of the heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite character : the...some [of the higher] animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles ; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting... | |
| Charles Nicoll Bancker Camac - 1909 - 488 pages
...and the contraction of the heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite character: the...some (of the higher) animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting... | |
| Geology - 1910 - 452 pages
...and the contraction of the heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite character : the...some (of the higher) animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting... | |
| Charles Nicoll Bancker Camac - Medicine - 1909 - 472 pages
...and the contraction of the heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite character: the...some (of the higher) animals taken out of the body, pulsates without auricles; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting... | |
| William Harvey - Medical - 2006 - 268 pages
...heart or ventricle following afterwards. But I think it right to describe what I have observed of aa opposite character : the heart of an eel, of several...creatures the body of the heart may be seen pulsating, palpitating, after the cessation of all motion in the auricle. But is not this perchance peculiar to... | |
| William Harvey - Anatomy - 1959 - 184 pages
...sic musculi corpus intertexunt.' 4 See De motu cordis, ch. 4, p. 28: ' . . .the heart of an eel,. . .taken out of the body, beats without auricles; nay,...several parts may still be seen contracting and relaxing But is not this perchance peculiar to animals more tenacious of life, whose radical moisture is more... | |
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