(seq. 34)

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A General Division into [?] fluids 1 Blood
The other Division of our Subjects is into 2 Fibres
3 Muscles, Bones, Cartilages, Ligaments, tendons,
Arteries, Veins, Nerves, Lympha[?], Glands, [?]
Vessels, 4 Membranes, 5 Fat Viscera

We have in the introductory Lecture this Division considered anatomy as synthetically analytically
divided into the six Branches above enumerated, and to their respective
Division may each particular Part be constantly referred as they become
the Subject of Demonstration in the following Course; all those
Divisions have formerly been comprehended under the [?] more general
Heads solid and fluid; solids the latter under those of of Osteology and Sarcology - but as we shall generally
find zur advantage in an analysynthetical method of describing the
Parts of the Animal Body; we are obliged to make Use of a still
[?] particular Arrangement, as it respects the constituent part
of the System - such an Arrangement is made by considered
the whole of those Divisions as offering themselves to Examination under the form of Blood Fibres & [?]

The Blood is to be considered as containing the Principles from which
all the other fluids even the solids are formed * and the various Juices of the Body are
[?] those principles variously combined in order to produce the
necessary Difference in their Nature and properties [??] vid 5 p.
The human Body is an hydraule Machine vid. [?] Lect. 2

* The only difference seems to be in the [?]ion of a
greater or less number of [?] Particles the Fluid being
the most simple Part of the System

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