| William Harvey - Blood - 1894 - 200 pages
...within itself blood, life, sensation, and movement, before either the brain or the liver were created or had appeared distinctly, or, at all events, before...The heart, ready furnished with its proper organs of movement, like a kind of internal creature, existed before the body. The first to be formed, Nature... | |
| Charles Nicoll Bancker Camac - 1909 - 488 pages
...within itself blood, life, sensation, and motion, before either the brain or the liver were created or had appeared distinctly, or, at all events, before...organs of motion, like a kind of internal creature, existed before the body. The first to be formed, nature willed that it should afterwards fashion, nourish,... | |
| Geology - 1910 - 436 pages
...within itself blood, life, sensation, and motion, before either the brain or the liver were created or had appeared distinctly, or, at all events, before...organs of motion, like a kind of internal creature, existed before the body. The first to be formed, nature willed that it should afterwards fashion, nourish,... | |
| Charles Singer - Medical - 1922 - 110 pages
...and that it contains within itself 5 blood, life, sensation, motion, before either the brain or the liver were in being, or had appeared distinctly, or,...a date anterior to the body : first formed, nature willed that it should afterwards fashion, nourish, preserve, complete the entire animal, as its work... | |
| Charles Nicoll Bancker Camac - Medicine - 1909 - 472 pages
...within itself blood, life, sensation, and motion, before either the brain or the liver were created or had appeared distinctly, or, at all events, before...organs of motion, like a kind of internal creature, existed before the body. The first to be formed, nature willed that it should afterwards fashion, nourish,... | |
| William Harvey - Anatomy - 1959 - 184 pages
...spheres. are we the less to agree with Aristotle in regard to the sovereignty of the heart . . . . The heart, ready furnished with its proper organs...a date anterior to the body: first formed, nature willed that it should afterwards fashion, nourish, preserve, complete the entire animal, as its work... | |
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