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FUNCTION

Volume 7 · 181 words · 1797 Edition

the act of fulfilling the duties of any employment.

Function, being also applied to the actions of the body, is by physicians divided into vital, animal, and natural. The vital functions are those necessary to life, and without which the individual cannot subsist; as the motion of the heart, lungs, &c. The natural functions are such as it cannot subsist any considerable time without; as the digestion of the aliment, and its conversion into blood. Under animal functions are included the senses of touching, tasting, &c., memory, judgment, and voluntary motion; without any or all of which an animal may live, but not very comfortably.

The animal-functions perform the motion of the body by the action of the muscles; and this action consists chiefly in the shortening the fleshly fibres, which is called contraction, the principal agents of which are the arteries and nerves distributed in the fleshly fibres.

All parts of the body have their own functions, or actions peculiar to themselves. Life consists in the exercise of these functions, and health in the free and ready exercise of them.