Section IV. Organization. Whole and parts. Proportion. Union. System. Animal-system. System of the world. Universal system. Appearance of ill necessary. Solution. Example. Universal mind. Disturbance, whence. Human affairs. Selfishness. Virtue and vice. Their power, effect. A mind. Improvement. Temper. Appetites. Balance. Virtue. Deity. Matter and thought. Atheistical hypothesis. Nature arraign'd. Nature in man. In brutes. Nature in man. Volatiles. Anatomy. The brain. Parts. Balance. Distributio
Ashley-Cooper, Anthony
Characteristicks, Vol 2: An inquiry concerning virtue and merit; The moralists: A philosophical rhapsody, p.280-321
Of the motions of sense; and of the sensible qualities in generall; and in particular of those which belong to touch, tast, and smelling
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.242-249
A description of the two sortes of living creatures; plantes, and animals: And how they are framed in common to performe vitall motion
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.203-213
A more particular survey of the generation of animals; in which is discovered what part of the animal is first generated
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.213-226
Of some actions of beastes, that seeme to be formall actes of reason, as doubting, resolving, inventing
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.306-318
How a plant or animal cometh to that figure it hath
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.226-231
How motion beginneth in living creatures. And of the motion of the hart; circulation of the bloud; nutrition; augmentation; and corruption or death
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.232-242
Of prescience of future eventes, providencies, the knowing of thinges never seene before; and such other actions, observed in some living creatures; which seeme to be even above the reason that is in man himselfe
Digby, Kenelme
Two treatises in the one of which, the nature of the bodies; in the other, the nature of man's soule; is looked into: In a way of discovery, of the immortality of reasonable soules, 1644, p.327-339
Section IV. Organization. Whole and parts. Proportion. Union. System. Animal-system. System of the world. Universal system. Appearance of ill necessary. Solution. Example. Universal mind. Disturbance, whence. Human affairs. Selfishness. Virtue and vice. Their power, effect. A mind. Improvement. Temper. Appetites. Balance. Virtue. Deity. Matter and thought. Atheistical hypothesis. Nature arraign'd. Nature in man. In brutes. Nature in man. Volatiles. Anatomy. The brain. Parts. Balance. Distributio
Anonymous
Characteristicks, Vol II: An inquiry concerning virtue and merit; The moralists: A philosophical rhapsody, 1699, p.82-116