;!. Reduced to three classes : those of the solids 117 



4. Those of the fluids, particularly the blood 119 



5. Those of the animal spirits ih. 



6. The remote causes of diseases 120 



7. Of fevers - - ib. 



8. The way to preserve health 1 2 ! 



9. Of life and death - - 123' 



CHAP, IV. 



Of the Soul } and of the Origin of Man. 



1. There is something in man, which perceives the various 



motions of the body - - 134 



2. The perception is sometimes continued and recalled ib. 



3. We know some things in a more sublime manner 135 



4. There is something in us which has an appetite to sen- 



sual things ib. 



5 And another appetite which is often contrary to this ib. 



6. How philosophers account for the direction of our bodily 



motions ... ib. 



7. For the external senses - - ib. 



8. The imagination and memory 136 



9. The understanding, will, and affections ib. 



10. This" may be so, or not - - ib. 



11. Of the immortality of the soul - - ib. 



12. Of the union of the soul and body 157 



13. Reason cannot discover the origin of man ib. 



14. The. scriptural account of it ib 



