Boyle, Robert, New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects, 1660

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1Pecquet) hath been newly mix'd with it in
the Heart.) And this Opinion is that of
the Induſtrious Mœbius, and is ſaid to
have been that of that excellent Philoſo­
pher Gaſſendus; and hath been in part an
Opinion almoſt vulgar: But this Hypo­
theſis may be explicated two ways: For
firſt, The neceſſity of the Air in Reſpi­
ration, may be ſuppoſ'd to proceed from
hence; That as a Flame cannot long burn
in a narrow and cloſe place, becauſe the
Fuliginous Steams it unceſſantly throws
out, cannot be long receiv'd into the am­
bient Body; which after a while growing
too full of them, to admit any more, ſti­
fles the flame, ſo that the vital Fire in the
Heart requires an ambient Body, of a
yielding nature, to receive into it the ſu­
perfluous Seroſities and other Recrements
of the Blood, whoſe ſeaſonable Expulſi­
on is requiſite to depurate the Maſs of
Blood, and make it fit both to Circulate;
and to maintain the vital heat reſiding in
the Heart.
The other way of explicating
the above-mention'd Hypotheſis, is, by
ſuppoſing, that the Air does not onely, as
a Receptacle, admit into its Pores the Ex­
crementitious vapors of the Blood, when
they are expell'd through the Wind-Pipe,

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