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	<title>Galen &#8211; Via Negativa</title>
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	<title>Galen &#8211; Via Negativa</title>
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		<title>Natural Faculties</title>
		<link>https://www.vianegativa.us/2010/05/natural-faculties/</link>
					<comments>https://www.vianegativa.us/2010/05/natural-faculties/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2010 03:22:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Books and Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Epigrams and Conundrums]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poems & poem-like things]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Galen]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vianegativa.us/?p=7738</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Lines from Galen, translated by Arthur John Brock (1916) 1. When a warm thing becomes cold, and a cold warm When anything moist becomes dry, or dry moist When a small thing becomes bigger When food turns into blood When the limbs have their position altered When, therefore, the animal has attained its complete size &#8230; <p class="link-more"><a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2010/05/natural-faculties/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Natural Faculties"</span></a></p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Lines from <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=yG5iAAAAMAAJ&#038;ots=XAmF3KzfJi&#038;dq=galen%20%22on%20the%20natural%20faculties%22&#038;pg=PR7#v=onepage&#038;q&#038;f=false">Galen</a>, translated by Arthur John Brock (1916)</em></p>
<p>1.<br />
When a warm thing becomes cold, and a cold warm<br />
When anything moist becomes dry, or dry moist<br />
When a small thing becomes bigger<br />
When food turns into blood<br />
When the limbs have their position altered<br />
When, therefore, the animal has attained its complete size<br />
When the matter that flows into each part of the body in the form of nutriment is being worked up into it<br />
When the vapours have passed through the coats of the stomach and intestines<br />
When this has been made quite clear<br />
When the iron has another piece brought into contact with it<br />
When a small body becomes entangeld with another small body<br />
When our peasants are bringing corn from the country into the city in wagons</p>
<p>2.<br />
Children take the bladders of pigs, fill them with air, and then rub them on ashes near the fire, so as to warm but not to injure them. This is a common game in the district of Ionia, and among not a few other nations. As they rub, they sing songs, to a certain measure, time, and rhythm, and all their words are an exhortation to the bladder to increase in size.</p>
<p>3.<br />
Imagine the heart to be, at the beginning, so small as to differ in no respect from a millet-seed, or, if you will, a bean&#8230;</p>
<p>4.<br />
Now, clearly, in these doings of the children, the more the interior cavity of the bladder increases in size, the thinner, necessarily, does its substance become</p>
<p>common to all kinds of motion is change</p>
<p>tangible distinctions are hardness and softness, viscosity, friability, lightness, heaviness, density, rarity, smoothness, roughness, thickness and thinness; all of these have been duly mentioned by Aristotle</p>
<p>Nature constructs bone, cartilage, nerve, membrane, ligament, vein, and so forth, at the first stage of the animal&#8217;s genesis</p>
<p>pain is common to all these conditions</p>
<p>please test this assertion first in the muscles themselves</p>
<p>5.<br />
This also was unknown to Erasistratus, whom nothing escaped.</p>
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