INDEX TO THE SECTIONS. -Part I. 



S9 



R. 



S.aphania, periods of, xxxvi. 3. 9. 



Reafon, ix, r. 2. xv. 3. 



Reafoning, xv. 3. 



Recollection, ii. 10. ix. r. 2. xv. 2. 3. 



Relaxation and bracing, xxxii. 3. 2. 



Repetition, why agreeable, xii. 3. 3. 



xxii. 2. 

 Reipiration affected by attention, 



xxxvi. 2. t. 

 ReftleiTnefs in fevers, xxxiv. r. 2. 

 Retrograde motions, xii. 5. 5. xxv. 6. 

 XX ix. II. 

 of the ftomach, xxv. 6. 

 of the fkin, xxv. 9. 

 •of fluids, how diftiiiguifhed, 



xxxix. 8. 

 how caufed, xxix. it. 5. 

 Retrograde vegetable motions, xxix. 9. 

 .Retina is fibrous, iii. 2. xl. x. 



is active in vihon, iii. 3. xl. I. 

 excited into fpafmodic motions, 



xl. 7. 

 is fenfible during fleep, xviii. 5. 

 xix. 8. 

 Reverie, xix. 1. xxxiv. 3. 



cafe of a fleep-walker, xix. 2. 

 is an epileptic difeafe, xix. 9. 

 Rhymes in poetry, ivhy agreeable, 



xxii. 2. 

 Rheumatifm, three kinds of, xxvi. 3. 

 Rocking young children, xxi. 4. 

 Rot in fneep, xxxii. 7. 

 Ruminating animals, xxv. I. 



S. 

 Saliva produced by mercury, xxiii. 

 by food, xxiii. 1. 

 by ideas, xxiii. 2. and 5. 

 by disordered volition, xxiii. 7. 

 Scirrhous tumours revive, xii. 2. 2. 

 Screaming in pain, xxxiv. 1. 2. ^ 

 Scrofula, its temperament, xxxi. I. 



xxviii. 2. xxxix. 4. 5. 

 Scurvy of the lungs, xxvii. 2. 

 Sea hcknefs, xx. 4. 



flopped by attention, xx. 5. 

 Secretion, xxxiii. r. xxxvii. 



increafed during deep, xviii. 16. 

 Seeds require oxygenation, xxxviii. 2. 

 Senfation defined, ii. 2. 9. v. 2. xxxix. 8.4, 

 difeafes of, xxxiii. 

 from fibrous contractions, 



iv. 5. xii. 1. 6. 

 in an amputated limb, iii. 7. 3. 

 ail'cdls the whole fenforium, 



xi. 2. 

 produces volition, iv. 6. 

 Senfibility increases during fleep, xviii. 



Senlititive motions, viii. xxxiii. 2. 

 xxxiv. 1. 

 f ever* oi two kinds, xxxiii. 1.2 

 ideas, xv. 2. 2. 

 SenfoTiirm defined, ii. 2. r. 

 Senfes correct one another, xviii. 7. 



difiinguifhed from appetites, 

 xxxiv. r, 1. 

 Senforial power. See Spirit of Ani- 

 mation, 

 great expenfeof in the vital 



motions, xxxii. 3. ?. 

 two kinds of excited in fen- 



fitive fevers, xxxiii. 1. 3, 

 powers defined, v. i, 

 motions diftinguifn^d from 



fibrous motions, v. 3. 

 not much accumulated in 



fleep, xviii. 2. 

 powers, accumulation cf, xii. 



5- i. 



exhauftion of, xii. 4. r. 

 wafted below natural in hot 



fits, xxxii. 9. 3. 

 lefs exertion of produces 



pain, xii. 5. 3. 

 lefs quantitv of it, xii. 5. 4. 

 Senfual motions diftinguiflied from 



mufcular, ii. 7. 

 Sex owing to the imagination of the 

 father, xxxiv. 5. xxxix. 7. 6. xxxix. 

 6. 3. xxxix. 6. 7. 

 Shingles from inflamed kidney, xxxv a 



2. 2. 

 Shoulders broad, xxxi. r. xxxix. 7. 6. 

 Shuddering from cold, xxxiv. t. j. & 3 

 Sight, its accuracy in men, xvi. 6. 

 •Skin, fcurfon it, xxvi. 1. 

 Sleep ihfpends volition, xviii. 1. 

 defined, xviii. 21. 

 remote caufes, xviii. 2C. 

 fenfation continues in it, xviii. t. 

 from food, xxi. 1. 

 from rocking, uniform founds. 



xxi. I. 

 from wine and opium, xxi. 3. 

 why it invigorates, xii. c. j. 

 pulfe flower and fuller in, xxxif. . 

 2. 2. 



interrupted, xxvii. 2. 

 from ♦•'breathing; lefs oxv<*cne. 



xviii. ao. 

 from being whirled on a mi II- 



flonc, xxiii. 2C 

 from application of cold,xviii.io. 

 induced by regular hours,.\xxvi. 

 2. 2. 

 Sleeping animals, xxi. 2. 2. 

 Sleep-walkers, See P*cvcrie, x'x. i. 



Small-pox, 



