Quotesdtb.com
Popular Searches
Marcus Aurelius
Albert Einstein
Oscar Wilde
Mark Twain
Confucius
Plato
Authors
Topics
Quotes
Home
Authors
Quotes of the day
Top quotes
Topics
Once a disease has entered the body, all parts which are healthy must fight it: not one alone, but all. Because a disease might mean their common death. Nature knows this; and Nature attacks the disease with whatever help she can muster.
Paracelsus
Embed this Quote Image
×
Copy the code below to show this image on your website:
Embed code
<a href="https://www.quotesdtb.com/quote/11970955/paracelsus-body-common-death" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><img loading="lazy" src="https://cdn.quotesdtb.com/img/quotes_images_webp/78/paracelsus-body-common-death-144178.webp" alt="Once a disease has entered the body, all parts which are healthy must fight it: not one alone, but all. Because a disease might mean their common death. Nature knows this; and Nature attacks the disease with whatever help she can muster. (Paracelsus)" style="max-width:1200px;width:100%;height:auto;border:0;display:block;" width="1200" height="630"></a>
Copy code
Code copied!
Add to your website
Related topics
body
common
death
disease
fight
help
might
mean
muster
nature
once
whatever
parts
Related quotes
Nature might be a great experimentalist, but one who would never pass muster with an ethics review board – contravening the Helsinki Declaration and every norm of moral decency, left, right, and center.
Nick Bostrom
If we help an educated man's daughter to go to Cambridge are we not forcing her to think not about education but about war? - not how she can learn, but how she can fight in order that she might win the same advantages as her brothers?
Virginia Woolf
I must no less commend the study of anatomy, which whosoever considers, I believe will never be an atheist; the frame of man's body and coherence of his parts, being so strange and paradoxal, that I hold it to be the greatest miracle of nature.
Edward Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Cherbury
Marriage is a fight to the death, before which the wedded couple ask a blessing from heaven, because it is the rashest of all undertakings to swear eternal love; the fight at once commences and victory, that is to say liberty, remains in the hands of the cleverer of the two.
Honoré de Balzac
When I warned the French that Britain would fight on alone whatever they did, their generals told their prime minister and his divided cabinet, 'In three weeks England will have her neck wrung like a chicken.' Some chicken some neck.
Winston Churchill