Rocher 1953 190 pages in12. 1953. Broché. 190 pages.
Etat Correct pages jaunies
Hachette 310 pages in8. Sans date. Relié. 310 pages.
Bon Etat
London, 1837 + London, 1840. Five volumes 8vo. Bound in five contemporary, uniform brown half calf bindings (The Philosophy...-volumes slightly darker brown) with raised bands and gilt spines. Marbled edges. A bit of light edge-wear, but overall very fine and fresh. Some marginal pencil markings to first part of vol. 1 of ""The Philosophy..."", otherwise also internally very nice and clean. All five volumes with the same engraved amorial bookplate to inside of front boards. A very nice, uniform set of the five volumes that make up the two works. XXXVI, 437, (3)" XI, (1), VI pp., pp. (7)-534, (2) XII, 624 pp. + CXX, 523, (1)" IV, 586 pp. + folded plate.
Uncommon first editions of both these splendid works (the ""Philosophy"" is particularly scarce), Whewell's two main works, both seminal in the history of science and philosophy of science. The first of the two works, the ""History"" is considered ""one of the important surveys of science from the Greeks to the nineteenth century"" (DSB), and it is in the second of them, ""The Philosophy..."" - ""one of the masterpieces of Victorian philosophy of science"" (DSB) - that he coins the word ""scientist"", to describe a cultivator of science in general. “William Whewell (1794–1866) was one of the most important and influential figures in nineteenth-century Britain. Whewell, a polymath, wrote extensively on numerous subjects, including mechanics, mineralogy, geology, astronomy, political economy, theology, educational reform, international law, and architecture, as well as the works that remain the most well-known today in philosophy of science, history of science, and moral philosophy. He was one of the founding members and a president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, a fellow of the Royal Society, president of the Geological Society, and longtime Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. In his own time his influence was acknowledged by the major scientists of the day, such as John Herschel, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell and Michael Faraday, who frequently turned to Whewell for philosophical and scientific advice, and, interestingly, for terminological assistance. Whewell invented the terms “anode,” “cathode,” and “ion” for Faraday. In response to a challenge by the poet S.T. Coleridge in 1833, Whewell invented the English word “scientist""” before this time the only terms in use in that language were “natural philosopher” and “man of science”.” (SEP). ""First published in 1840, this two-volume treatise by Cambridge polymath William Whewell (1794-1886) remains significant in the philosophy of science. The work was intended as the 'moral' to his three-volume History of the Inductive Sciences (1837)... Building on philosophical foundations laid by Immanuel Kant and Francis Bacon, Whewell opens with the aphorism 'Man is the Interpreter of Nature, Science the right interpretation'. Volume 1 contains the majority of Whewell's section on 'ideas', in which he investigates the philosophy underlying a range of different disciplines, including pure, classificatory and mechanical sciences. Whewell's work upholds throughout his belief that the mind was active and not merely a passive receiver of knowledge from the world. A key text in Victorian epistemological debates, notably challenged by John Stuart Mill and his System of Logic, Whewell's treatise merits continued study and discussion in the present day."" (Cambridge University Press). ""From the late 1830's until his death, Whewell worked mainly in the history and philosophy of science. His three-volume ""History of the Inductive Sciences"" appeared in 1837" in 1838 he was appointed professor of moral philosophy" and the first edition of his two-volume ""The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, Founded Upon Their History"" was published in 1840. Both the ""History"" and the ""Philosophy"" were ambitious works, and together they constitute Whewell's major scholarly achievement. The ""History"" had no rivals in its day and remains, despite unevenness, one of the important surveys of science from the Greeks to the nineteenth century. Whewell appreciated the importance of Greek science, especially astronomy, but showed typical disregard for the contributions of medieval scientists. His assessment of the importance of contributions of such major figures as Galileo and Descartes suffers from a heavy intrusion of religious and philosophical biases. But his treatment of Newton and other modern mathematical scientists is fair and sometime brilliant, and is based throughout upon detailed considerations of texts. Wheweel's ""Philosophy"" stimulated major philosophical exchanges between its author and Sir John Herschel, Augustus De Morgan, Henry L. Mansel, and John Stuart Mill. Alongside Mill's ""System of Logic"" and Herschel's ""Preliminary Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy"", the work ranks as one of the masterpieces of Victorian philosophy of science. Whewell's effort in these works was unique in his attempt to derive a philosophy of science from the general features of the historical development of empirical science. The importance of this attempt has not been fully appreciated. Whewell thought that the history of science displayed a progressive movement from less to more general theories, from imperfectly understood facts to basic sciences built upon a priori foundations that he called ""Fundamental Ideas."" All science was theoretical in that no body of data comes to us selforganized"" even collection of data involves the imposition of a guiding interpretive idea. Major advances in science occur in what Whewell called an ""Inductive Epoch,"" a period in which the basic ideas of a science are well understood by one or more scientists, and in which the generality and explanatory power of a science are seen to be much more illuminating than those of rival theories. Each such ""Epoch"" had a ""Prelude,"" a period in which older theories experienced difficulties and new ideas were seen to be required, and a ""Sequel,"" a period in which the new theory was applied and refined. Largely ignoring the British tradition of empiricist philosophy and methodology, Whewell erected a philosophy of science upon his understanding of history that derived partly from Kant and Plato, and partly from an anachronistic theological position. Like his British predecessors, he thought that induction was the basic method of science. He understood induction not as a form of inference from particulars to generalizations, but as a conceptual act of coming to see that a group of data can best be understood and organized (his term was ""colligated"") under a certain idea. Furthermore, induction was demonstrative in that it yields necessary truths, propositions the logical opposites of which cannot be clearly conceived. The zenith of the inductive process was reached when a ""consilience of inductions"" took place-when sets of data previously considered disjoint came to be seen as derivable from the same, much richer theory. Although Whewell thought that the paradigm form of a scientific theory was deductive, he departed from the orthodox hypothetico-deductivist view of science by claiming that tests of the acceptability of given theories are extraevidential, based on considerations of simplicity and consilience. He made some attempt to justify the necessity of the conclusions that induction yields by arguing for the identity of facts and theories, and for the theological view that we know the world the way it is because that is the way God made it. In physical astronomy Whewell's work on the tides ranks second only to that of Newton. Also of great importance was his lifelong effort to modernize and improve science education at Cambridge. The achievement in history and philosophy of science probably is less significant, although recent revival of interest in Whewell has centered mainly upon his insights in philosophy of science and methodology. Interest is growing in the interrelations of history and philosophy of science"" and so long as this interest continues to be fruitful, it will be well worthwhile considering what Whewell had to say on the nature of scientific discovery, inductive methodology, and the characteristics of scientific progress."" (DSB, XIV, pp 293-94)
Jules tallandier 1925 in12. 1925. Broché.
Bon Etat des tâches une inscription début de livre deux écornures en fin de livre dos fragile
Duo Romance 1990 152 pages poche. 1990. broché. 152 pages.
Etat Correct
Marabout 1962 190 pages in12. 1962. Broché. 190 pages.
Bon Etat aspect sali pages fraîches
Kenneth Mason Publications Ltd 1983 176 pages in4. 1983. Cartonné jaquette. 176 pages.
Bon Etat petites déchirures bordures jaquette
Editions du Masque 1999 433 pages 21x13x3cm. 1999. Broché. 433 pages.
Bon Etat
1 volume in-4° relié plein cartonnage sous jaquette illustrée et étui illustré, 171 p., illustrations. Très bon état (coiffe sup. de la jaquette légèrement usagée).
Phone number : 06.31.29.75.65
Gallimard 1951 in12. 1951. Cartonné jaquette.
livre jauni jaquette très abîmée
Gallimard 1957 184 pages in12. 1957. Cartonné. 184 pages. collection série noire n°354
Etat Correct bords frottés couverture un peu ternie intérieur uniformément jauni texte net
Gallimard série noire 1995 204 pages in12. 1995. Broché. 204 pages.
Bon Etat pages légèrement jaunies
Gallimard 1957 248 pages collection série noire. in12. 1957. Cartonné. 248 pages. coll. série noire n°380
Etat Correct bords frottés intérieur uniformément jauni dos réparé au scotche en bas
Genève, Ed. Slatkine, 1978. In-8, cart. éd. vert, titre doré, XXXVII-IV-431 pp., reprod. du dernier croquis de l'auteur, menu et plan de table de l'Alpine Club du 15 déc. 1908 en excergue, très nb. vignettes, dessins, croquis, gravures et cartes in et h.-t. en n/b., appendices, tables, 5 cartes in fine,
Collection : Les Alpes et les Hommes. - 7 - dirigée par Yves Ballu. Comme neuf. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
Harlequin 1980 152 pages in12. 1980. Broché. 152 pages.
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Éditions Harlequin 1981 153 pages in12. 1981. Broché. 153 pages.
Bon Etat
Editions Harlequin 1982 155 pages 18x10x1cm. 1982. Broché. 155 pages.
Etat Correct pages + tranche assez jaunies coiffe bas abimée plusieurs rides couvertures
Belfond 1986 464 pages in8. 1986. Broché. 464 pages.
Bon Etat jauni
Plon 1927 381 pages in8. 1927. Relié. 381 pages.
Bon Etat ancien livre de bibliothèque couverture et dos frottés intérieur propre
Chapitre I : La concentration des entreprises et la théorie de l'équilibre concurrentiel Chapitre II : Les prémices de l'analyse contemporaine Chapitre III : Incitations et stimulants à la concentration Chapitre IV : Freins et obstacles Chapitre V : Les formes élémentaires de concentration dans les secteurs dispersés Chapitre VI : Concentration industrielle et diversification oligopolistique Chapitre VII : Regroupements internationaux et actions publiques Chapitre VIII : Regroupements industriels au démarrage du Marché Commun Chapitre IX : Concentration, Décentralisation Chapitre X : Effets d'entraînement entre secteurs inégalement concentrés
Paris, Flammarion, Nouvelle bibliothèque scientifique, 1966 - In-8°, 252 pp, broché, cartonnage souple éditeur, imprimé et illustré