GLOSSARY OF GREEK TERMS
an exhalation from blood (ava-
evjiuWis, y. 33, vi. 15), and an inhalation (aixxTn/euais) from the air ; (b) r) voepd, AoyiK/;, VI. 14, 32; ix. 8; xi. 1; xn. 30; ^v X ri = TO Tj-y<F j u.o iKoi>, I. 16 ad fin. ; IV. 41; V. 26; IX. 3, 27, 34; an emanation from God, xn. 26; imprisoned in the body, in. 7 ; cp. Int. p. xiv. The natural soul is called po/i/3<k, a vortex or cur rent, n. 17, 1; the rational soul a sphere, xi. 12; its attri butes, XI. 1, 2. There is a Soul of the Universe, XII. 30, 32, an of God, V. 34, the two beinj really the same <V XU>CTI. It was a view of the Stoics that the embryo in the womb had only the <I O-IKI tyvxh f plants, and that the voepa. ^vxn came gradually to the child after birth by contact with the (cold) air, xn. 24. It was by the respiration of the atmospheric nvev^a. that the child received the Trvev^ariov. VI. 15; X. 7
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