Chapter V.—Reference to the Processes of Digestion and Nutrition.
But it appears to me that such persons, in the first
place, are ignorant of the power and skill of Him that fashioned and
regulates this universe, who has adapted to the nature and kind of each
animal the nourishment suitable and correspondent to it, and has neither
ordained that everything in nature shall enter into union and combination
with every kind of body, nor is at any loss to separate what has been so
united, but grants to the nature of each several created being or thing
to do or to suffer what is naturally suited to it, and sometimes also
hinders and allows or forbids whatever He wishes, and for the purpose He
wishes; and, moreover, that they have not considered the power and nature
of each of the creatures that nourish or are nourished. Otherwise they
would have known that not everything which is taken for food under the
pressure of outward necessity turns out to be suitable nourishment for
the animal, but that some things no sooner come into contact with the
plicatures of the stomach than they are wont to be corrupted, and are
vomited or voided, or disposed of in some other way, so that not even for
a little time do they undergo the first and natural digestion, much less
become incorporated with that which is to be nourished; as also, that not
even everything which has been digested in the stomach and received the
first change actually arrives at the parts to be nourished, since some
of it loses its nutritive power even in the stomach, and some during
the second change, and the digestion that takes place in the liver is
separated and passes into something else which is destitute of the power
to nourish; nay, that the change which takes place in the liver does not
all issue in nourishment to men, but the matter changed is separated as
refuse according to its natural purpose; and that the nourishment which
is left in the members and parts themselves that have to be nourished
sometimes changes to something else, according as that predominates which
is present in greater or less836836 abundance,
and is apt to corrupt or to turn into itself that which comes near it.