Galen: On the Natural Faculties by Galen
Chapter XVII
Three other attempts (by adherents of the Erasistratean
school and by Lycus of Macedonia) to explain how the
kidneys come to separate out urine from the blood. All
these ignore the obvious principle of attraction.
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- INTRODUCTION ix Ch.2
- BOOK III 221 Ch.3
- INTRODUCTION Ch.4
- Chapter I Ch.5
- Chapter II Ch.6
- Chapter III Ch.7
- Chapter IV Ch.8
- Chapter V Ch.9
- Chapter VI Ch.10
- Chapter VII Ch.11
- Chapter VIII Ch.12
- Chapter IX Ch.13
- Chapter X Ch.14
- Chapter XI Ch.15
- Chapter XII Ch.16
- Chapter XIII Ch.17
- Chapter XIV Ch.18
- Chapter XV Ch.19
- Chapter XVI Ch.20
- Chapter XVII Ch.21
- Chapter I Ch.22
- Chapter II Ch.23
- Chapter III Ch.24
- Chapter IV Ch.25
- Chapter V Ch.26
- Chapter VI Ch.27
- Chapter VII Ch.28
- Chapter VIII Ch.29
- Chapter IX Ch.30
- Chapter I Ch.31
- Chapter II Ch.32
- Chapter III Ch.33
- Chapter IV Ch.34
- Chapter V Ch.35
- Chapter VI Ch.36
- Chapter VII Ch.37
- Chapter VIII Ch.38
- Chapter IX Ch.39
- Chapter X Ch.40
- Chapter XI Ch.41
- Chapter XII Ch.42
- Chapter XIII Ch.43
- Chapter XIV Ch.44
- Chapter XV Ch.45
- BOOK I Ch.46
- introduction had been given to the practical parts of our teaching. Ch.47
- Introduction, p. xxvii. Ch.48
- Introduction, p. xxix. Ch.49
- BOOK II Ch.50
- BOOK II Ch.51
- Introduction, p. xxxiv. Ch.52
- Introduction, pp. xii. and xxxi. Ch.53
- BOOK III Ch.54
- BOOK III Ch.55
- Introduction, pp. xxii.-xxiii. Ch.56