Mention899089

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so:text Plants too ought to become heavy by death, the celestial heat being expelled: but the contrary is evident to all. As to the increased weight of animals by death, the true cause, far remote from that which increases the weight of lead when calcined, is this: in the living animal its natural heat subtilizes, dilates, and augments the dimensions of the humours, the flesh, and every thing in it capable of dilatation—but losing this heat by death, the whole on this becoming cold, contracts and diminishes, whence the increase of weight, as I have often said already. What is there like this in lead? (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Rey
so:description John Rey (en)
so:description Essay XVII. It is not the disappearance of the celestial heat which animates the Lead, (en)
so:description Art. XI. A Translation of Rey's Essays on the Calcination of Metals, &c. (1822) (en)
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