‎ACTA ERUDITORUM - [VARIOUS AUTHORS, SEE BELOW].‎
‎Actorum Eruditorum. Supplementa. Tomus I.‎

‎Leipzig, Grosse & Gleditsch, 1692. 4to. The entire volume offered in contemporary full vellum. Hand written title on spine. A yellow label pasted on to top of spine. Two small stamps to title-page and free front end-paper. Library label to pasted down front free end-paper. As usual with various browning to leaves and plates. (4), 639, (5) pp. + drvrn engraved plates.].‎

Reference : 44274


‎First printing of this issue of the important and exceedingly influential journal Acta Eruditorum containing the following papers:1. Giannettasius, Nicolaus Parthenius. Piscatoria et nautica (Neapoli 1686, Rezension). Pp.1-5. 2. Eschinardus, Franciscus. Epistola ... in qua discursus physico-mathematici quidam continentur/Lettera ... nella quale si contengono alcuni discorsi fisico-mathematici (Romae 1681, Rezension). Pp. 5-9. 3. de Bonnatis, Antonius Franciscus. Universa astrosophia naturalis (Patavii 1687, Rezension). Pp. 9-12. 4. de Beatiano, Julius Caesar. Mercurius heraldicus Fecialis Venetus/Il Mercurio araldico in Italia" L'araldo Veneto (Venetiis 1686, Rezension). Pp. 12-14.5. Anonymus. Tentamen anatomicum, in quo clare explicatur constructio organorum, eorumque operatio mechanica /Essais d'anatomie ... (Lugduni Batavorum 1686, Rezension). Pp. 48-9.6. Starkey, Georgius. Medulla verae chymiae/Het pit der waare chymie ... (Leowardiae 1687, Rezension). Pp. 49-51.7. Thiers, Ioannes Baptista. Tractatus de ludis et recreationibus/Traité des jeux es des divertissements (Parisiis 1686, Rezension). Pp. 51-55.8. Lamy, Bernardus Elementa geometriae seu mesurae corporis/Les elemens de geometrie, ou de la mesure du corps ... (Parisiis 1685, Rezension). Pp. 94-5.9. Griendelius ab Ach, Ioannes Franciscus. Micrographia nova (Norimbergae 1687, Rezension). Pp. 95-6.10. Picardus (de la Hire (ed.)). Tractatus de libellatione/Traité du nivellement ... (Parisiis 1686, Rezension). Pp. 96-9.11. Bio" Moschus (de Longepierre (conv.)). Idyllia Bionis et Moschi/Les idylles de Bion et de Moschus (Parisiis 1686, Rezension). Pp. 99-102.12. Leeuwenhoek, Antonius Anatomia. Seu interiora rerum cum animaliusm tum inanimatarum, ope et beneficio exquisitissimorum microscopiorum detecta (Lugduni Batavorum 1687, Rezension). Pp. 102-6.13. Agricola, Ioannes (Jungkens, Ioannes Helfricus (ed.)). Notae in Poppii medicamenta chymica/Deutliche und wohlgegründete Anmerckung über die Chymische Artzeneyen Johannis Poppii ... (Noribergae 1686, Rezension). Pp. 106-10. 14. Lemee, Franciscus.Tractatus de statuis/Traité des statues (Parisiis 1688, Rezension)Pp. 110-1.15. Rajus, Ioannes. Historiae plantarum tomus II. (Londini 1688, Rezension). Pp. 111-13.16. Redus, Franciscus. Bacchus in Hetruria/Bacco in Toscana (Florentiae 1685, Rezension). Pp. 113-118.17. Botelerius, Nathaniel. De servitiis et expeditionibus nauticis dialogi sex/Six Dialogues about Sea-Services (Londini 1685, Rezension). Pp. 125-6. 18. Aurelius Prudentius Clemens (Chamillardus, Stephanus (ed.)). Opera (Parisiis 1687, Rezension). Pp. 126-37.19. Boyle, Robertus. Nova experimenta circa frigus .../New Experiments and Observations touching Cold, or an Experimental History of Cold begun ... (Londini 1683, Rezension). Pp. 137-44. 19. Halleius, Edmundus. De constructione problematum solidorum ... dissertatiuncula (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1687, Junius/Augustus, nr. 188, p. 335.). Pp. 144-151.20. Mariotte (de la Hire (ed.)). De motu aquarum/Traité du mouvement des eaux et des autres corps fluides (Parisiis 1686, Rezension).21. Cornelius, Thomas. Progymnasmata physica (Neapoli 1688, Rezension).22. P.V.D. Observationes excerptae ex praelectionibus ... Theodori Craanen (Lugduni Batavorum 1687, Rezension).23. Starkey, Georgius. Pyrotechnia asserta et illustrata/Pyrotechnia, ofte vuur-stook-kunde vastgesteld en opgehelderd ... (Amstelodami 1687, Rezension).24. de Zeidlern, Sebastianus Christianus. Institutiones medicae (Pragae 1687, Rezension).25. Anonymus. Observationes nova, seu civile Gallorum super lingua vernacula bellum/Nouvelles observations, ou guerre civile des Francois sur la langue (Parisiis 1688, Rezension). 26. Aelianus, Claudius (Schefferus, Ioannes" Kuhnius, Joachim). Variae historiae libri XIV./Klaudiou Ailianou poikiles historias biblia id' (gr.) (Argentorati 1685, Rezension).27. Strausius, Laurentius. Isagoge physica (Ulmae 1684, Rezension).28. Meyerus, Cornelius. Ars restituendi Romae navigationem sui Tiberis hactenus intermissam/L'arte di restituire a Roma la tralasciata navigatione suo Tevere ... (Romae 1685, Rezension). 29. Werdmuellerus, Ioannes Jacobus. Lapis Lydius architectorum militarium/Der Probier-Stein der Ingenieure ... (Francofurti ad Moenum 1685, Rezension).30. Sütteringus, Daniel. Georgius Rimplerus contra J. Jac. Werdmüllerum defensus/Der in Wien todte ehrliche Sachse ... (Dresdae 1687, Rezension).(vgl. p. 243.) 31. Scanavacca, Bartholomaeus. Nova inventio describendi ... horologia solaria/Novissima inventione per disegnare ... (Patavii 1688, Rezension).32. Hookius, Robertus. Contenta discursus mechanici, comcernentis descriptionem optimae formae velorum horizontalium pro usu molarum, nec non fundamentum ... (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1681, December, nr. 3, p. 61.).33. Brownius, Eduardus. Relatio de anatome struthiocameli (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1682, Februarius, nr. 5, p. 147.).34. Jaegerus, Ioannes Wolfgangus. Tractatus moralis de juramentis (Stutgardiae 1687, Rezension).35. Jaegerus, Ioannes Wolfgangus. Tractatus de legibus (Tubingae 1688, Rezension).36. Brown, Thomas Opera/The Works ... (Londini 1686, Rezension).37. Deckherrus, Ioannes. De scriptis adepostis, pseudepigraphis et suppostitiis conjecturae (Amstelodami 1686, Rezension).38. Newhouse, Daniel. Universa ars nautica/The whole Art of Navigation ... (Londini 1686, Rezension).39. Listerus, Martinus Relatio ... de miro quodam et monstroso animali ... per vomitum ejecto (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1682, Martius, nr. 6, p. 164.).40. Weichardus, Ioannes. ... methodus statuas ex metallo fundendi (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1687, Januarius, nr. 186, p. 259.).41. P.T. Chemia rationalis (Lugduni Batavorum 1687, Rezension).42. de Gottignies, Aegidius Franciscus. Logistica universalis (Neapoli 1687, Rezension).43. Bellorius, Ioannes Petrus. Veterum illustrium philosophorum, poetarum, rhetorum et oratorum imagines (Romae 1685, Rezension).44. Menetrejus, Claudius" Holstenius, Lucas" Bellorius, Ioannes Petrus Symbolica Dianae Ephesiae statua" Epistola de verubus Dianae Ephesiae statua" Notae in numismata apibus insignita (Romae 1688, Rezension).45. Smith, Ioannes Discursus completus de natura, usu et recta tractatione baroscopii/A compleat Discourse of the Nature, Use and right Managing of the Baroscope or Quick-Silver Weather Glaß (Londini 1688, Rezension).45. Schmidt, Samuel. Hodegus epistolicus (Quedlinburgi 1688, Rezension).46. Plot, Robertus. Discursus de lampadibus antiquorum sepulcralibus (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1684, December, nr. 166, p. 806.).47. Nicasius, Claudius. De numo pantheo Hadriani imperatoris (Lugduni 1689, Rezension).48. Nicasius, Claudius. Explicatio veteris monumenti .../Explication d'un ancien monument trouvé en Guienne dans de diocese d'Ausch (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).49. Commelinus, Ioannes. Catalogus plantarum horti medici Amstelodamensis. Pars I. (Amstelodami 1689, Rezension).50. Eschinardus, Franciscus. Cursus physico-mathematici pars I. (Romae 1689, Rezension).51. Gouye. Observationes physico-mathematicae, e regno Siam ... missae/Observations physiques et mathematiques, envoyées de Siam (Parisiis 1688, Rezension).52. Bartolus, Daniel Operum ... ea, quae moralia inscribuntur/Delle opere ... le morali (Romae 1684, Rezension).53. Weisenbornius, Ioannes. Nucleus artis logicae (Hildesiae 1689, Rezension).54. Seldenus, Janus. Colloquia mensalia/Table-Talk (Londini 1689, Rezension).55. Anonymus. Dissertatio de arthritide/Dissertation sur la goutte ... (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).(vgl. p. 591.) 56. de Villemandy, Petrus. Manuductio ad philosophiae Aristotelicae, Epicureae et Cartesianae parallelismum (Amstelodami 1685, Rezension).57. Averanus, Benedictus. Orationes (Florentiae 1688, Rezension).58. Wallerus, Richardus. Observationes de cicindela volante (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1685, Januarius, nr. 167, p. 841.)59. Hookius, Robertus. Descriptio inventi, cuius auxilio divisiones barometri ad datam quamlibet proportionem ampliare licet (Übernahme aus: Transactiones philosophicae Anglicanae, 1686, December, nr. 185, p. 241.)60. Bernier, Ioannes. Conamina physica/Essais de Medecine (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).61. Foy-Vaillant, Ioannes. Numismata aerea imperatorum, augustorum et caesarum, in coloniis, municipiis et urbibus ... percussa (Parisiis 1688, Rezension).62. Harduinus, Ioannes. Antirrheticus de nummis antiquis (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).63. Mortonus, Richardus. Phthisiologia (Londini 1689, Rezension).64. Perraltius. Tentamina physica. Tomus IV./Essais de physique ... (Parisiis 1688, Rezension).65. Floyerus, Ioannes. Lapis Lydius medicamentorum/Pharmako-Basanos (gr.), or, the Touchstone of Medicines (Londini 1687" 1691, Rezension).66. Porschon, A. Tractatus novus de purpura, morbillis et variolis/Nouveau traitté du pourpre, de la rougeole et petite verole ... (Parisiis 1688, Rezension).67. Alexander Phoebammon Minutianus (Normannus, Laurentius (ed.)). De figuris sententiae atque elocutionis libri duo De sedibus argumentorum" De schematibus oratoriis/Peri ton tes dianoias schematon, kai peri ton tes lexeos schematon ... (gr.) (Upsaliae 1690, Rezension) 518 68. Hickesius, Georgius. Institutiones grammaticae Anglo-Saxonicae et Moeso-Gothicae (Oxonii 1689, Rezension).69. Solski, Stanislaus. Praxis nova et expeditissima geometrice mensurandi distantias, altitudines et profunditates (Cracoviae 1688, Rezension).70. Goad, Ioannes. Astro-Meteorologia sana (Londini 1690, Rezension).71. Ovidius Naso, Publius (Crispinus, Daniel (ed.)). Opera (Lugduni 1689, Rezension).72. Solski, Stanislaus. Geometra et architectus Polonus/Geometra y architekt Polski (Cracoviae 1683"1686 1690, Rezension).73. Aristarchus Pappus (Wallis, Ioannes). De magnitudine et distantiis solis et lunae liber Secundi libri mathematicae collectionis fragmentum/Peri megethon kai apostematon heliou kai selenes biblion ... (gr.) Tou tes synagioges bibliou b' apospasma (gr.) (Oxoniae 1688, Rezension).74. Fabrettus, Raphael. De columna Trajani syntagma (Romae 1683, Rezension).75. Giannettasius, Nicolaus Parthenius. Halieutica (Neapoli 1689, Rezension).76. Piso, Homobonus. Ultio antiquitatis in sanguinis circulationem (Cremonae 1690, Rezension).77. Rigordus Graverolus. Dissertatio historica de numo aliquo/Dissertation historique sur une medaille d'herodes Antipas (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).78. Bayle, Fridericus. Dissertatio quaestiones quasdam physicas et medicas explanans/Dissertations sur quelques questions de physique et de medecine ... (Tolosae 1688, Rezension)79. Paragallus, Casparus. Disquisitio circa causam terrae motuum /Ragionamento ... intorno alla cagione de tremonti (Neapoli 1689, Rezension).80. Anonymus. Responsum ad dissertationem de arthritide/Response a la dissertation sur la goutte (Parisiis 1690, Rezension).(vgl. p. 429.) 81. Desroches. Dictionarium nauticum/Dictionaires de termes propres de marine (Parisiis 1687, Rezension).82. de Launay. Praecepta necessaria in eorum consignata gratiam, qui herniis laborant/Instructions necessaires pour ceux qui sont incommodés des décentes ... (Parisiis 1690, Rezension).83. le Monnier, L. tractatus novus de morbo Venereo/Nouveau traitté de la maladie venerienne ... (Parisiis 1689, Rezension).84. Capuanus, Leonardus. De medicamentorum incertitudine discursus/Ragionamenti ... intorno alla incertezza de' medicamenti (Neapoli 1689, Rezension) ‎

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4 book(s) with the same title

‎"LEIBNIZ, G.G. - LEIBNITZ [+ CHRISTIAN WOLFF].‎

Reference : 49396

(1721)

‎Principia Philosophiae [i.e. ""The Monadology""/""Monadologie""/""Theory of Monads""] + (Chr. Wolff:) Das Herrn Gottfrid Wilhelm von Leibnitz Lehrsätze über die Monadologie &c... [In: Actorum Eruditorum, Supplementa. Tomus VII + Acta Eruditorum anno 1721]. - [THE MONADOLOGY - A NEW PHILOSOPHY]‎

‎Leipzig, 1721. 4to. Both entire volumes (Acta Eruditorum 1721 + Supplementa VII, 1721) present, in uniform contemporary full vellum bindings with handwriting to spines. A small later label to top of spines. Old handwritten ex libris-inscription to top of both title-pages as well as a small stamp. The supplement-volume with an additional stamp to title-page, and both volumes with library label (Archiv des k.k. militär.-geograf Institutes) to pasted down front free end-paper. As usual some brownspotting. A nice set. pp. 500-514 (Supplement-vol.) + pp. 94-95. [Entire volumes: (2), 537, (39) pp. + three plates (Suppl.-vol.) + (4), 547, (42) pp. + five plates].‎


‎The highly important first Latin translation of Leibnitz' seminal ""The Monadology"" - his main philosophical work and the work that stands as the epitomization of anti-materialism - which was not published in the original French until 1814, and which only appeared in a German translation (exceedingly scarce) in 1720 and in a Latin translation, by Christian Wolff, in 1721, as it is here. Up until then, Leibnitz' key philosophical text had only circulated in manuscript form (written in 1714). - Here sold together with Wolff's anonymously written review of (the German version of the) ""Monadology"", which had great impact upon the reception of the seminal philosophical text that is the ""Monadology"".""Until the XXth century, criticism about Leibniz's ""Principles of Nature and Grace"" and ""Monadology"" has been characterised by a number of mistakes and misunderstandings, which have roots in the circumstances surrounding the genesis of these manuscripts. As a consequence, erroneous information about these texts was included in an anonymous review, published in 1721 in the ""Acta eruditorum"" of Leipzig. Research on primary sources proves that the author of this review (who was in fact the author of the latin translation of the Monadology, published immediately afterwards) was Christian Wolff, who was in possession of a copy of Leibniz's manuscript as early as 1717. Wolff's initiative of translating the Monadology can be seen as part of a cultural strategy aiming to prevent any idealistic interpretation of Leibniz's monadological thought. From this point of view, to consider the theory of pre-established harmony as based on a system of strictly dualistic metaphysics was an essential element of Wolff's philosophical strategy.""(Antonio Lamarra: Contexte génétique et première reception de la ""Monadologie"". Leibniz, Wolff et la doctrine de l'harmonie préétablie""). During his last stay in Vienna from 1712 to September 1714, Leibniz wrote two short texts, which were meant as concise expositions of his philosophy, namely the ""Principes de la Nature et de la Grace fondés en raison"" (written as a letter to Prince Eugene of Savoy) and the work we now know as the ""Monadology"" (which he had been asked to write by Nicolas Redmond, Duke of Orleons) - the latter being the work that established Leibnitz' fame as a philosopher and which has gone down in history as, not only as one of the most important philosophical texts of the 18th century, but also, arguably the most important work of immaterialism. After his death ""Principes de la Nature et de la Grace fondés en raison"" appeared in French in the Netherlands. Without having seen this publication, Christian Wolff and collaborators had assumed that it contained the French original of the ""Monadology"" as well, although this in fact remained unpublished until 1840. Thus it happened that Leibnitz' key philosophical text, which came to be known as ""The Monadology"", was printed in German and Latin ab. 120 years before it appeared in the original French. The German translation appeared in 1720 as ""Lehrsätze über die Monadologie"" and the following year the Latin translation appeared, in Acta Eruditorum, as ""Principia philosophiae"". Three manuscript versions of the text exist: the first written by Leibniz and overcharged with corrections and two further emended copies with some corrections appearing in one but not the other. ""Leibniz was one of the last ""universal men"" of the type which the Italian Renaissance had ideally postulated: philosopher, historian, mathematician, scientist, lawyer, librarian, and diplomat. In all these fields either all his actual achievements or his seminal suggestions have become part and parcel of European thought. Although trained for the law, mathematics was his favourite subject. Independently of Newton he worked out the infinitesimal calculus, introduced a number of mathematical symbols now in general use, and constructed an early calculating machine, the ancestor of our computers. Mathematical conceptions also determine his philosophy. In it, Leibniz tried to combine physics and metaphysics and to reconcile philosophy and theology. The ""essay on a Theodicy"" is the only larger philosophical work published by himself"" but his fame as a philosopher rests on his ""Theory of Monads"". The original French text of this was published for the first time in 1840"" but it had circulated in manuscript in its initial form of a letter addressed to Prince Eugene of Savoy (1714) and it was printed in German (1720) and Latin (1721) translations. Leibniz proclaimed a ""pre-established harmony"" of the universe which he explained as composed of hierarchically ordered ""monads"", i.e. the ultimate substances of mind as well as matter. This concept clearly reflects the ideal of the properly organized absolutist state of the baroque period and derives partly from the ""idées simples"" of Descartes whom Leibniz greatly admired. A generation later, Voltaire ridiculed the ""pre-established harmony"" in ""Candide"""" but modern nuclear science has vindicated Leibniz's basic ideas, albeit from different presuppositions."" (Printing and the Mind of Man, pp. 105-6). The ""Monadology"" is an extremely condense work that consists of 90 (in this Latin version, 93) numbered sections/paragraphs, which outline a metaphysics of a single substance. The Monadology ends the dualistic mind-body-problem of Descartes and offers a new solution to the question of the interaction between mind and matter, by explaining the pre-established harmony and the synchronous (not causal) relationship between the realm of final causes and that of efficient causes. Leibniz' groundbreaking work came to profoundly influence not only 18th century thought, but also much later philosophy and logic. For this we have to thank Christian Wolff, the translator of the ""Monadology"" into Latin and the first reviewer of the work. It is through Wolff and his elaboration of the development of Leibniz' speculative and metaphysical views that Leibniz becomes a recognized figure of importance, particularly in Germany from the 1720'ies onwards, where Wolff's writings were standardly studied. ""Notably, Wolff's Leibnizianism made a deep impact on Kant, in whose ""Critique of Pure Reason"" (1781) Leibniz himself came to figure as one of the main targets of Kant's anti-metaphysical programme. In particular, Kant saw Leibniz as pretending to ""a priori"" knowledge of the world as it is in itself and presented his own claim that the only knowledge we can have is of the world as it appears in our experience as sharply opposed to the Leibnizian vision. [...] today shows that his thought has survived even the extreme empiricism of the Vienna Circle in the 1930s, which would have viewed its principal doctrines as unverifiable and hence utterly meaningless. Although not in evidence in the ""Monadology"" itself, one of Leibniz' preoccupations was with the philosophy of logic and language, and the twentieth-century's concern for those topics has discovered in what he had to say about them a treasure house of good sense and wisdom which can be detached from the less appealing of his metaphysical speculations. Then, more recent writers who have been interested in the metaphysics of possibility and necessity have found inspiration in the Leibnizian image of possible worlds, and that too has helped keep his name alive for us."" (Savile, ""Leibniz and the Monadology"", pp. 6-7). ""The long span of Leibniz' intellectual life and his early involvement with philosophy made for engagement with a wide variety of philosophical traditions and issues. Early studies at home exposed him to the thought of the Scholastics"" during his university years he was something of a materialist, influenced by the atomism of Bacon and Gassendi. In his mid-20s and early 30s, becoming disenchanted with the intellectual prospects for materialist thought, he turned towards the sort of immaterialism that came to shape his mature thinking after the decade between 1675 and 1685 when he was more narrowly concerned with mathematics than philosophy. It is this anti-materialism that is epitomized in the ""Monadology"" itself...Although Leibniz produced a prodigious quantity of philosophical writing very little of it was published in his lifetime"" indeed, very little was intended for publication. For the most part..., his philosophical thoughts were prepared for individual scholars he had met, or with whom he corresponded, and were never presented as a worked-out system... it was not until the last period of his life that he found the time and the impetus to set down the whole, which he did in two condensed papers written in French during a visit to Vienna.The more popular and less taxing of these was the ""Principles of Nature and Grace Founded on Reason"", which he prepared for Prince Eugène of Savoy, and the second, which he had been asked to write by the councellor of the Duke of Orleans, Nicolas Remond, but never sent off, was the ""Principles of Philosophy"" or, as he called it ""Elucidation Concerning Monads"" ... The title by which that work is known today, ""Monadology"", was not one that Leibniz ever gave it, but was invented by the work's first editor, Henrich Kohler, who published it in a German translation under that title in 1720."" (Savile, ""Leibniz and the Monadology"", pp. 3-4). ""Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) was one of the great thinkers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and is known as the last ""universal genius"". He made deep and important contributions to the fields of metaphysics, epistemology, logic, philosophy of religion, as well as mathematics, physics, geology, jurisprudence, and history. Even the eighteenth-century French atheist and materialist Denis Diderot, whose views were very often at odds with those of Leibniz, could not help being awed by his achievement, writing in his entry on Leibniz in the Encyclopedia, ""Perhaps never has a man read as much, studied as much, meditated more, and written more than Leibniz... What he has composed on the world, God, nature, and the soul is of the most sublime eloquence. If his ideas had been expressed with the flair of Plato, the philosopher of Leipzig would cede nothing to the philosopher of Athens."" (""Oeuvres complètes"", vol. 7, p. 709) Indeed, Diderot was almost moved to despair in this piece: ""When one compares the talents one has with those of a Leibniz, one is tempted to throw away one's books and go die quietly in the dark of some forgotten corner."" (""Oeuvres complètes"", vol. 7, p. 678) More than a century later, Gottlob Frege, who fortunately did not cast his books away in despair, expressed similar admiration, declaring that ""in his writings, Leibniz threw out such a profusion of seeds of ideas that in this respect he is virtually in a class of his own."" (""Boole's logical Calculus and the Concept-script"" in ""Posthumous Writings"", p. 9)."" (SEP).Ravier: 357(PMM 177b - being the Latin translation)‎

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Phone number : +45 33 155 335

DKK50,000.00 (€6,706.10 )

‎"[MENCKE, FRIEDRICH OTTO [EDT.]].‎

Reference : 46343

(1734)

‎Actorum Eruditorum, Supplementa. Tomus X.‎

‎Leipzig, Grosse & Gleditsch, 1734. 4to. Contemp. full vellum. Faint handwritten title on spine. A small stamp to title page and pasted library label to pasted down front free end-paper. In: ""Actorum Eruditorum Anno MDCCXXXIV"". The entire volume offered.(4), 560, (27) pp. + 1 plate‎


‎The offered volume contain many papers by influential contemporary mathematicians, philosophers and historians.‎

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DKK1,500.00 (€201.18 )

‎"RICCATO, JACOBO. (JACOPO FRANCESCO RICCATI) - DANIELIS BERNOULLI (DANIEL BERNOULLI).‎

Reference : 42595

(1724)

‎[Riccati:] Animadversiones in aequationes differentiales secundi gradus. + [Bernouilli:] Notata in praecedens schediasma III. Co. Jacobi Riccati. (In: Actorum Eruditorum, Supplementa. Tomus VIII, 66-75 pp.). - [THE RICCATI-EQUATION]‎

‎Leipzig, Gross & Fritsch, 1724. 4to. Entire volume present. Nice contemporary full vellum. Small yellow paper label pasted to top of spine and library-label to inside of front board. Two smaller library stamps to title-page. Internally some browning and brownspotting, due to the paper quality. Overall a nice and tight copy. [Riccati-paper:] pp. 66-73. [Bernouilli-paper:] pp. 73-75. [Entire volume: (2), 532, (34) pp.].‎


‎The important first printing of Riccati's main work, his influential ""Animadversiones in aequationes differentiales secundi gradus"", in which the famous Riccati-equation is presented + Bernouilli's famous note on it.""In his ""Animadversiones in aequationes differentiales secundi gradus,"" published in Acta Eruditorum in 1724, Riccati suggested the study of cases of integrability [...] which is now known by his name. In response to this suggestion Nikolaus II Bernoulli wrote an important treatise on the equation and Daniel Bernoulli presented, in his Exercitationes quaedam mathematicae, the conditions under which it may be integrated by the method of separation of the variables. Euler also integrated it."" (DSB, XI).""In the supplement volume to Acta Eruditorum, Riccati's paper is immediately followed by Daniel Bernoulli' Notata (St. 5.). As the latter admitted in the Exercitationes, he had Riccati's paper in his hands for two days before it was sent to Leipzig. In this short paper Daniel Bernoulli first claims that equation (D) is not an appropriate example because by substituting dy=q it can easily (""Haud magno negotio"") be reduced to a first order differential equation."" (Die Werke von Daniel Bernoulli, 1996, Birkhäuser, Volker Zimmermann (edt). ""Riccati ( 1676 - 1754) was the son of a noble family who held land near Venice. His renown was such that Peter the Great invited him to come to Russia as president of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. [...]. Riccati carried on an extensive correspondence with mathematicians all over Europe. His work were collected and published, four years after his death, by his sons, of whom two, Vincenzo and Giordano were themselves eminent mathematicians. (DSB, XI). ‎

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Phone number : +45 33 155 335

DKK10,000.00 (€1,341.22 )

‎[MENCKE, OTTO [EDT.]].‎

Reference : 46396

(1696)

‎Actorum Eruditorum. Supplementa, tomus II [2].‎

‎Leipzig, Grosse & Fritschium, 1696. 4to. The entire volume offered in contemporary full vellum. Hand written title on spine. A yellow label pasted on to top of spine. A small stamp to title-page and free front end-paper. Library label to pasted down front free end-paper. As usual with various browning to leaves and plates. (2), 603 pp. + 10 engraved folded plates.‎


‎The offered volume contain many papers by influential contemporary mathematicians, philosophers and historians.‎

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