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Willis, Thomas.
London : printed for T. Dring, C. Harper, and J. Leigh, 1684.
Exemplaire numérisé : BIU Santé (Paris)
Nombre de pages : 1150
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 [sans numérotation]  [Dédicace]
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 [sans numérotation]  [Préface]
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 [sans numérotation]  [Index]
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 [sans numérotation]  On the authors Medical-Philosophical Discourses
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 [sans numérotation]  [Index]
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 [sans numérotation]  The Table to the Treatises of 1. Of urins / 2. Of the accension of the blood / 3. Of musculary motion / 4. Of the anatomy of the brain / 5. Of the description and use of the nerves
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 [sans numérotation]  The Epistle Dedicatory
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 1  Of fermentation, or the inorganical motion of natural bodies. Chap. I. Of the principles of natural things
 2  
 3  Chap. II. A description of the principles of chymists, and the properties and affections of them
 4  
 5  
 6  
 7  
 8  Chap. III. What fermentation is: its division as to the subjects; and first of minerals
 9  
 10  Chap. IV. Of fermentation for as much as id observed in vegetables
 11  Chap. V. Of things to be observed of fermentation about animals
 12  
 13  
 14  Chap. VI. Of fermentation, as it is performed in artificial things
 15  
 16  Chap. VII. Of fermentation, as it is seen in the exaltation of bodies, and tendency to perfection
 17  
 18  
 19  
 20  
 21  
 22  Chap. VIII. Of the motion of fermentation, which is observed in the death, also in the putrefaction and corruption of bodies
 23  
 24  
 25  
 26  Chap. IX. Of the motion of fermentation, as much as is to be observed in the dissolution of bodies
 27  
 28  
 29  
 30  Chap. X. Of the nature of fire: and by the way of heat, and light
 31  
 32  
 33  
 34  
 35  
 36  
 37  
 38  Chap. XI. Of the motion of fermentation, as it is to be observed, in the precipitation of bodies
 39  
 40  
 41  Chap. XII. Of the motion of fermentation, as much as it is to be observed in the coagulation, and the congelation of bodies
 42  
 43  
 44  
 45  The Preface to the Treatise of feavers
 46  
 47  Chap. I. The anatomy of the blood; and its resolution into five principles: a comparing it with wine and milk
 48  
 49  
 50  
 51  
 52  
 53  Chap. II. Of the motion and heats of the blood
 54  
 55  
 56  Chap. III. Of intermitting feavers or agues
 57  
 58  
 59  
 60  
 61  
 62  
 63  Chap. IV. Of the kinds of intermitting feavers; and first of a tertian
 64  
 65  
 66  
 67  
 68  Chap. V. Of the quotidian intermitting feaver
 69  Chap. VI. Of a quartan feaver
 70  
 71  
 72  
 73  
 74  Chap. VII. Of continual feavers
 75  Chap. VIII. Of the ephemera, or feaver for a day
 76  
 77  Chap. IX. Of a putrid feaver
 78  
 79  
 80  
 81  
 82  
 83  Chap. X. Of the symptoms and signs chiefly to be noted a putrid feaver
 84  
 85  
 86  
 87  
 88  
 89  
 90  Chap. XI. Of the kinds, and cure of a putrid synochus, or continual feaver
 91  
 92  
 93  
 94  
 95  
 96  
 97  
 98  
 99  
 100  Chap. XII. Of a malignant or pestilential feaver in general
 101  
 102  
 103  
 104  
 105  
 106  Chap. XIII. Of the plague
 107  
 108  
 109  
 110  
 111  Chap. XIV. Of pestilential and malignant feavers in specie, and of others epidemical
 112  
 113  
 114  
 115  
 116  
 117  
 118  Chap. XV. Of the measles and small pox
 119  
 120  
 121  
 122  
 123  
 124  
 125  Chap. XVI. Of feavers of child-bearing women
 126  
 127  
 128  The milky feaver
 129  The putrid feaver of women in child-bed
 130  
 131  
 132  
 133  The symptomatic feavers of women in child-bed
 134  
 135  
 136  
 137  Chap. XVII. Of epidemical feavers
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 139  
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 [sans numérotation]  The Authors Epistle (To the Treatise of urines) to Dr Bathurst
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 1  Chap. I. Of the elements and chief accidents of urine
 2  Chap. II. Of the quantity and color of the urines of sound people
 3  
 4  Chap. III. Of the consistency and contents of the urine of sound people
 5  
 6  Chap. IV. Of the quantity and color in urines of sick people
 7  
 8  
 9  
 10  
 11  Chap. V. If the contents in the urines of sick people
 12  
 13  
 14  Chap. VI. Of judgments to be given concerning the urines of sick people
 15  
 16  
 17  Chap. VII. Of the examination and various ways of proving of urines
 18  
 19  
 20  Two Physical and Medical Exercitations, viz. I. Of the accension of the blood / II. Of musculary motion. / The first Medical and Physical Discourse. Of the growing hot or inkindling of the blood
 21  
 22  
 23  
 24  
 25  
 26  
 27  
 28  The second Physical & Medical Discourse. Of musculary motion
 29  
 30  
 31  
 32  
 33  
 34  
 35  
 36  
 37  
 38  
 39  
 40  The explication of the Figures
 41  The authors epistle dedicatory to his grace Gilbert archibishop of Canterbury, &c
 42  
 43  The Preface to the Reader
 44  
 45  The anatomy of the brain. Chap. I. The method or anatomical administration of dissecting the brain is proposed
 46  
 47  
 48  
 49  
 50  
 51  The first Figure / The second Figure
 52  Chap. II. The parts of the oblong marrow, and the rest of the hinder parts of the head are recounted, and their dissection shewn
 53  
 54  
 55  Chap. II. A description of the cerebel and it processes, also of the hinder region of the oblong marrow
 56  
 57  The third Figure / The fourth Figure
 58  Chap. IV. The parts and some of the contents of the separated skull unfolded
 59  
 60  The fifth Figure
 61  The sixth Figure / Chap. V. The brains of fowls and fishes described
 62  
 63  
 64  Chap. VI. Of the offices of the brain and its parts: where first of all the uses of the skull and the hard meninx or Dura Mater is treated of
 65  
 66  
 67  Chap. VII. Of the meninx or Pia Mater, of its stretching out, as also of the infoldings of the vessels every where interwoven with it
 68  
 69  Chap. VIII. Shews with what diffference the arteries in various animals pass through the skull; also for what use the wonderful net is made, and the reason of it
 70  
 71  The first Figure to fourth Figure
 72  Chap. IX. Shews by what provision, and in what places of the head the animal spirits are begotten: also other uses and accidents of the Pia Mater are added
 73  
 74  Chap. X. A description of the brain, properly so called, and the explication and use of its parts
 75  
 76  
 77  The seventh Figure
 78  Chap. XI. Shews with what motion and tendency of the animal spirits, the exercises of the animal faculties are performed within the confines of the brain: also what the use of its ventricles is
 79  
 80  Chap. XII. It is inquired into, whether the ferous Humors, heaped together within the vacuity of the brain, be sent out by the pituitary glandula and the sieve-like bone, or not ?
 81  
 82  
 83  Chap. XIII. The actions and uses of the oblong marrow, and forme of its parts are unfolded
 84  
 85  
 86  The eight figure
 87  Chap. XIV. Of the uses of pineal glandula and the choroeidal infolding; also of the orbicular prominences which are commonly called nates and testes; and other parts which seem to be dependences of them
 88  
 89  
 90  Chap. XV. Of the uses of the cerebel, and some of its parts and processes
 91  
 92  
 93  Chap. XVI. Of the various order and diverse manner of exercise of the spirits produced in the cerebel for the acts of the involuntary function
 94  
 95  Chap. XVII. Of the nerves, which receiving the flores or companies of the spirits from the cerebel, bestow them on the acts of involuntary function
 96  
 97  
 98  
 99  Chap. XVIII. Of the relation or mutual respect of either appendix of the cerebel, to wit, of the anterior, which are the orbicular prominences; and the posterior, viz. The annular protuberance: also of the remaining portion of the oblong marrow continued into spinal marrow
 100  
 101  
 102  Chap. XIX. Of the nervous system in general, where its parts (which are the nerves and fibres) being designed, a prospect of the whole animal governement is exhibited
 103  
 104  
 105  
 106  
 107  Chap. XX. Of the nervous liquor, and wheter that or the bloody humor be nutritious
 108  
 109  
 110  
 111  
 112  Chap. XXI. The first four pair of nerves arising within the skull are described
 113  
 114  
 115  Chap. XXII. The fifth, sixth, and seventh pair of nerves are unfolded
 116  
 117  
 118  
 119  Chap. XXIII. The description of the eighth pair of nerves
 120  
 121  
 122  Chap. XXIV. The actions and uses of nerver of the eighth pair, described in the foregoing chapter, are unfolded
 123  
 124  
 125  
 126  
 127  
 128  Chap. XXV. A description of intercostal nerve
 129  
 130  
 131  Chap. XXVI. A explication of the intercostal pair of nerves which are described in the former chapter as to their offices ans uses: and first the upper branching of them is considered
 132  
 133  
 134  Chap. XXVII. The lower branching of the intercostal nerve belonging to the parts and viscera of the lower Belly is unfolded
 135  
 136  
 137  
 138  
 139  
 140  
 141  Chap. XXVIII. Of the spinal Nerve an accessory of the wandring pair, also of the nerve of the diaphragma
 142  
 143  
 144  Chap. XXIX. Of the reason of the difference that happens, between the nerves of the wandring and intercostal pair in man an brute beasts; also of the other pairs of the nerves arising both within the skull, and from the spinal marrow: also something of the blood-carrying vessels which belong to spinal marrow
 145  
 146  
 147  
 148  
 149  The ninth table
 150  
 151  
 152  The tenth table
 153  The eleventh table
 154  
 155  The twelth table / The thirteenth table
 156  
 157  
 158  The conclusion
 sp  [Page de titre] An essay of the pathology of the brain and nervous stock in which concvulsive diseases are treated of
 160  
 161  The authors epistle dedicatory
 162  
 1  Of convulsive disease / Chapter I. Of spasms or convulsive motions in general
 2  
 3  
 4  
 5  
 6  
 7  
 8  
 9  
 10  
 11  Chapter II. Of the epilepsie
 12  
 13  
 14  Chapter III. The differences of the epilepsie, and the reasons of some of the symptoms are unfolded. Also its curatory method is represented
 15  
 16  
 17  
 18  
 19  
 20  
 21  
 22  Chapter IV. Of the other kinds of convulsions, and first of the convuslive motions of children
 23  
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 25  
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 27  
 28  Chapter V. Of convulsive diseases of ripe age, arising chiefly by reason of the nervous origine being affected
 29  
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 35  
 36  
 37  Chapter VI. Of convulsive motions, whose cause subsists about the extremities of the nerves, or within the nervous foldings
 38  
 39  
 40  
 41  Chapter VII. Of convulsive motions, arising from the liquor watering the nervous bodies, and irrating their whole processses into convulsions
 42  
 43  
 44  Chapter VIII. Of universal convulsions, which are wont to be excited in malignant, ill-cured, and some irregular fevers
 45  
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 48  
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 50  
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 52  
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 54  
 55  Chapter IX. Of universal convulsions, which are wont to be excited, because of the scorbutic disposition of the nervous juice
 56  
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 68  
 69  Chapter X. Of the passions commonly called hysterical, or fits of the mother
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 79  
 80  
 81  Chapter XI. Of the distempers commonly called hypochondriack, which is shown to be for the most part convulsive: briefly also of chalybeats or steel medecines
 82  
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 90  
 91  
 92  Chapter XII. Of the convulsive cough and asthma
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 [sans numérotation]  [Page de titre] Pharmaceutice rationalis : or an exercitation of the operations of medicines in humane bodies: shewing the signs, causes, and cures of most distempers incident thereunto
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 [sans numérotation]  The preface to the reader
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 1  Sect. I. Of the operations of medicins in mans body / Chap. I. The design of the whole work
 2  
 3  Chap. II. The description, uses, and affections of the parts in which medicins begin first to operate
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 15  Sect. II. / Chap. I. Of vomiting and medicins that give vomits
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 24  Chap. II. Receipts for vomits, together with a rational account of some of them, as to their preparations and chymical resolutions
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 30  
 31  Chap. III. Touching the cure of exessive vomiting, as also of medicins to flop it
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 35  Sect. III. / Chap. I. Of purging and purgative medicins
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 44  Chap. II. The several sorts of purges, with the receipts and reasons of some compositions
 45  
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 48  
 49  
 50  Chap. III. Of the remedy for excessive purging, or of medicins that stop too violent purgation or a lask. As also of the london dysentry, into the nature and cure where-of we here inquire
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 59  Sect. IV. / Chap. I. Of purging by urine and of medicins that provoke it
 60  
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 64  Chap. II. The sorts and forms of diureticks (or medicins that purge urin) as also the reasons of the chymical preparations of some of theme
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Image : Fig. I / Fig. II. / Fig. III / Fig. IIII
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 71  Chap. III. Of excessive pissing, and the remedy for it; particulary of the diabetes ( or pissing disease) into the theory and cure of which we here inquire
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 77  Chap. IV. The several sorts and receipts of medicins that stop excessive pissing
 78  
 79  
 80  Sect. V. / Chap.I. Of sweating and medicins that cause evacuation thereby
 81  
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 87  Chap. II. The sorts and receipts of diaphoreticks (or sweating medicins) with the reasons of some among them which are chymical
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 95  Chap. III. Of excessive or depraved sweating, and the cure of it
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 104  Sect. VI. / Chap. I. Of cordials and antidotes
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 108  
 109  
 110  Chap. II. The several and receipts of cordials
 111  
 112  
 113  
 114  Chap. III. Of indispositions in the heart, and their cures
 115  
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 125  Sect. VII. / Chap. I. Of opiates, or such medicins as make a man sleep
 126  
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 128  
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 131  
 132  
 133  Chap. II. Of the injuries and inconveniences of opium; to which are added cautions concerning the use thereof
 134  
 135  
 136  
 137  Chap. III. The several sorts, preparations and receipts of opiates
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 145  The table for the first part of Pharmacutice Rationalis
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 151  The table for the second part of Pharmacutice Rationalis
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 158  The table to the tract of the Scurver
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 [sans numérotation]  [Page de titre] Pharmaceutice Rationalis: or the opérations of medicines in humae bodies. The second part
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 1  Sect. I. Of the medicines of the thorax. / Chap. I. Of the organs of breathing and their use
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 15  
 16  Chap. II. Of the fundry kinds of breathing hurt, and their causes, with the accounts of their symptoms
 17  
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 19  
 20  
 21  Chap. III. Of inspiration hurt
 22  
 23  Chap. IV. Of expiration hurt
 24  
 25  Chap. V. Of a phtisis or consumption in general
 26  
 27  
 28  Chap. VI. Of a phtisis properly so called, or of a consumption arising byfault of the lungs
 29  
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 48  Chap VII. Of spitting blood
 49  
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 55  
 56  
 57  Chap. VIII. Of a peripneumony, or inflammation of the lungs
 58  
 59  
 60  
 61  
 62  
 63  
 64  Chap. IX. Of a pleurisie
 65  
 66  
 67  
 68  
 69  
 70  Chap. X. Of an empyema
 71  
 72  
 73  
 74  Chap. XI. Of a imposthume of the lungs
 75  
 76  
 77  
 78  Chap. XII. Of a asthma
 79  
 80  
 81  
 82  
 83  
 84  
 85  Chap. XIII. Of a dropse of the breast
 86  
 87  
 88  
 89  Sect. II. Of splanchnick, or those which respect the bowels of the lower belly / Chap. I. Of the Jaundies and the remedies thereof, and the manner and reason of their operations
 90  
 91  
 92  
 93  
 94  
 95  Chap. II. Of other hepatick remedies
 96  
 97  
 98  Chap. III. Of remedies for the dropsie called ascites
 99  
 100  
 101  
 102  
 103  
 104  
 105  
 106  
 107  Chap. IV. Of a tympanie
 108  
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 114  
 115  
 116  Chap. V. Of an anasarca
 117  
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 125  Chap. I. Of phlebotomie
 126  
 127  
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 131  
 132  
 133  
 134  Chap. II. Of remedies restraining of blood
 135  
 136  
 137  
 138  
 139  
 140  Chap. III. Of vesicatories
 141  
 142  
 143  
 144  
 145  
 146  Chap. IV. Of fontinels on issues
 147  
 148  
 149  
 150  
 151  Chap. V. Of the diseases of the skin, and of their remedies
 152  
 153  
 154  
 155  Chap. VI. Of the mange or scab with the itch
 156  
 157  
 158  
 159  
 160  
 161  Chap. VII. Of the impetigo, or lepra of the greeks
 162  
 163  
 164  
 165  
 166  
 167  
 168  
 169  A tract of the scurvy / Chap. I. The contents. A secription of the scurvy. The internal and nearest cause of it is chiefly in the blood, and also in some part radicated in the nervous liquor
 170  
 171  
 172  
 173  Chap. II. Of the more remote causes of the scurvy, by which its contagion is affixed on the mass of blood, and consequently on the nervous juice
 174  
 175  
 176  
 177  
 178  Chap. III. Of the differences of the scurvy, also of the signs, symptoms, and causes of this disease, and chiefly of those which arise by reason of the taint being impressed on the blood
 179  
 180  
 181  
 182  
 183  
 184  Chap. IV. The symptoms and accidents which are wont to arise in the scurvy, by reason of the taint impressed on the brain and nervous stock
 185  
 186  
 187  
 188  Chap. V. Of the symptomes of the scurvy which arise by reason of the conjunct dyscrasies of the blood and nervous juice
 189  
 190  Chap. VI. The prognosticks of the scurvy
 191  Chap. VII. Of the cure of the scurvy
 192  
 193  
 194  
 195  
 196  The orange tablets sold in the apothicaries shop in Oxford
 197  
 198  
 199  Chap. VIII. Of medicines of every one of the aforesaid forms respecting the scurvy, being excited in a more hot costitution, and sulphureous-saline dyscrasie of the blood
 200  
 201  
 202  Chap. IX. Of the curatory indication of the scurvy, by which help is afforded to the disease it self, and to symptoms chiefly afflicting
 203  
 204  
 205  
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 207  
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 210  
 211  Chap. X. Of the vitaldication, in which are included cardiack medicines, opiates and diets, or the manner of living as to eating or drinking, requisite in the scurvy
 212  
 213  Chap. XI. Some histories and rare cases of scorbuticks
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 218  
 [sans numérotation]  [Page de titre] Two discourses concerning the soul of brutes, which is that of the vital and sensitive of man
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 [sans numérotation]  To the most reverend father in god Gilbert arch-bishop of Canterbury
 [sans numérotation]  
 [sans numérotation]  
 [sans numérotation]  The preface to the reader
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 1  Of the soul of the brutes, the first part physiological, shewing, its Nature, parts, powers, and affections / Chap. I. The opinions of authors both ancient and modern are recounted
 2  
 3  
 4  Chap. II. The Opinion of the author concerning the soul in general, that the soul of the brute is corporeal and fiery
 5  
 6  
 7  Chap. III. The various kinds of brutes, together with their respective souls, and the chief species of each of them, are rehearsed and described
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 18  The explanation of the figures
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 20  
 21  
 22  Chap. IV. Of the parts or members of the soul of the brutes
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 24  
 25  
 26  
 27  The explanation of the figures
 28  
 29  Chap. V. The beginnings and increase of the whole corporeal soul, also some innate habits and inclinations of it are noted
 30  
 31  
 32  Chap. VI. Of the science or knowledge of brutes
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 34  
 35  
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 37  
 38  Chap. VII. The corporeal soul, or that of the brutes, is compared with the rational soul
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 40  
 41  
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 43  
 44  
 45  Chap. VIII. Of the passions or affections of the corporeal soul in general
 46  
 47  
 48  
 49  Chap. IX. Of the passions particulary
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 51  
 52  
 53  
 54  
 55  Chap. X. Of the sense in general
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 57  
 58  
 59  
 60  Chap. XI. Of the senses in particular, and first of the touch or feeling
 61  
 62  Chap. XII. Of the taste
 63  
 64  
 65  
 66  
 67  
 68  Chap. XIII. Of the sense of smelling
 69  Chap. XIV. Of the sense of hearing
 70  
 71  
 72  
 73  
 74  
 75  Chap. XIV. Of the sight
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 83  
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 85  
 86  Chap. XVI. Of sleeping and waking
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Image : Tabula I
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Image : Tabula II
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Image : Tabula III
 100  
Image : Tabula IIII
 101  
Image : Tabula VI. / Tabula VII
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 103  
Image : Tabula V
 104  
 105  
Image : Tabula VIII
 106  
 105  Chap. I. Of the headach
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 107  
 108  
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 111  
 112  
 113  Chap. II. The prognostick and cure of the headach
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 119  
 120  
 121  
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 124  
 125  Chap. III. Of the lethargy
 126  
 127  
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 131  
 132  
 133  Chap. IV. Of some other sleepy distempers, viz. A continual somnolency, the coma, of heavy sleeping; and the caros, or a deprivation of the senses
 134  
 135  
 136  
 137  
 138  Chap. V. Of thorow or long waking, and of the waking coma
 139  
 140  
 141  
 142  Chap. VI. Of the incubus, or night-mare
 143  
 144  
 145  Chap. VII. Of the vertigo, or a turning round in the head
 146  
 147  
 148  
 149  
 150  
 151  
 152  
 153  Chap. VIII. Of the apoplexy
 154  
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 161  Chap. IX. Of the palsie
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 178  
 179  Chap. X. Of the delirium and phrensie
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 187  
 188  Chap. XI. Of melancoly
 189  
 190  
 191  
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 199  
 200  
 201  Chap. XII. Of madness
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 208  
 209  Chap. XIII. Of stupidity, or foolishness
 210  
 211  
 212  
 213  
 214  Chap. XIV. Of the gout
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 225  Chap. XV. Of the colick passion
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 234  
 235  A table
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