Revue bimestrielle 1978 in4. 1978. agrafe. Bon Etat intérieur propre
Reference : 100075974
Livres-sur-sorgue
M. Philippe Arnaiz
04 90 26 49 32
Conformes aux usages de la librairie ancienne et moderne. Les prix sont nets auxquels il faut ajouter les frais de port. Nous acceptons la carte bancaire. LE PORT EST UNIQUE : 10.00 € PAR COMMANDE ( SUIVI )POUR LA FRANCE 15€ (livres et brochures) POUR L'ETRANGER , L' ENVOI EST RAPIDE , PAIEMENT : CB , CHEQUE , PAYPAL
P., Bossange, 1800-1803, 4 VOLUMES in 8 reliés en pleine basane, dos ornés de fers et filets dorés, filets dorés sur les plats, tranches jaspées (reliures de l'époque), (petites épidermures sur 2 plats et à un dos, quelques coins émoussés, infimes rousseurs, petit manque de papier d'origine dans la marge extérieure de la page 201 au tome 3), T.1 : (2), 103pp., 352pp., T.2 : (2), 419pp., T.3 : (2), 476pp., (1-errata et avis au relieur), 46 PLANCHES dépliantes pour le traité élémentaire ou principes de physique ; (2), 14pp., 412pp., 6 PLANCHES dépliantes pour les Elemens ou principes physico-chymiques
---- BON EXEMPLAIRE ---- Quatrième éditon REVUE, CORRIGEE ET AUGMENTEE pour le TRAITÉ ÉLÉMENTAIRE OU PRINCIPES DE PHYSIQUE ; EDITION ORIGINALE pour les ELEMENS OU PRINCIPES PHYSICO-CHYMIQUES ---- "J.M. BRISSON was professor of physics in the Collège de Navarre, Ecole Centrale and Lycée Bonaparte. Having undergone an involuntary adjustment in his activities, Brisson carried on two successive careers, a sort one as a naturalist and Réaumur's collaborator and a longer one as Nollet's disciple and the disseminator of the ideas of experimental physics. His rather considerable influence was due to his teaching and his works which were an excellent means of spreading the scientific knowledge of the time. He collaborated with Baumé, Macquer and Lavoisier in experiments on the combustion fo diamonds". (Cole & DSB II pp. 473/475)**903/L2"J.M. Brisson was professor of physics in the Collège de Navarre, Ecole Centrale and Lycée Bonaparte. Having undergone an involuntary adjustment in his activities, Brisson carried on two successive careers, a sort one as a naturalist and Réaumur's collaborator and a longer one as Nollet's disciple and the disseminator of the ideas of experimental physics. His rather considerable influence was due to his teaching and his works which were an excellent means of spreading the scientific knowledge of the time. He collaborated with Baumé, Macquer and Lavoisier in experiments on the combustion fo diamonds". (Cole & DSB II pp. 473/475)**903/L2