Philosophical conjectures on aereal influences, the probable origin of diseases: with an unusual cure in the scurvy / Address'd to Dr. Shaw, by E-m-d L-tt-n [i.e. Edmund Litton].
- Litton, Edmund
- Date:
- 1747
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Philosophical conjectures on aereal influences, the probable origin of diseases: with an unusual cure in the scurvy / Address'd to Dr. Shaw, by E-m-d L-tt-n [i.e. Edmund Litton]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Not only in animal Nutrition, but upon every Occafion, he intro¬ duces this Attraction into the ani¬ mal Oeconomy. In the Sixth of Epidemics, illuftrated by Galen s Interpretation, are thefe Words, OEKYI aeu CM HOih'm, HcU cTtfAoP, Y! cUffQtKWf tKWVOOV Kct] SrlG'&VQQV OhOV 'fQ (tCdy.Ct, “ The “ Flefh draws both from the Belly ‘f and from without; apdit is mani- “ feft to the Senfes, that the whole “Body both expires andinfpires,’ Ga¬ len de uju pulJuUM.Ui’laAciij.Cd.rtvi g tls itwjaf CM Td 7Ts£ti%0l''l&' yjpLXf XK oEtyHV lAOi&lV' Keti TdT \<?i il '7n>W\'Hs7SMpJ,Ti$ hiy'ofjfrjMV, cot iK'ZS-yw nett &jpqrtWf kk im 70 <ra/xcc. “ But they” (the Pores or Extremities of the Arteries) “draw “ no fmall Part from the furrounding “ Air: And this we find in Hippo-* “ crates, that the whole Body both “ expires and infpires.” Idippocrates not only efleems the Air the Author of Life and Difi. eafes I](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30383614_0017.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


