Editions Universitaires Broché D'occasion bon état 28/04/1995 400 pages
F. Thibaud, Clermont-Ferrand Ch. Dumoulin, Paris 1870 un volume in-8 de 372 pp. Demi-maroquin à coins vert foncé, dos à nerfs orné de l'auteur et du titre dorés, tête dorée, couvertures conservées (DURVAND). (petits frottements à la reliure, un coin tassé). Bel exemplaire établi par Durvand pour ce texte en édition originale.
P., Didier et Clermont, Ferdinand Thibaud, 1867, in-8°, xxxii-492 pp, broché, dos fendu, état correct. Edition originale, envoi a.s.
Couverture souple. Broché. 286 pages.
Livre. Editions Bordas, 1969.
P.P.U.F., 1959. In-8, 291 pages.+index Broché.
De la bibliothèque de philosophie contenporaine.Etat neuf
UNIVERSITAIRES. 2nde édition. 1972. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. défraîchie, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 135 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 190-Philosophie occidentale moderne
"Collection ""Psychothèque"". Classification Dewey : 190-Philosophie occidentale moderne"
Editions Gamma, 1988. In-8 carré broché de 391 pages.
Bon état général. Quelques épidermures sur la tranche supérieure et sur les contre-plats. Intérieur frais.
Editions Gamma Editions Gamma, 1988. In-8 carré broché de 391 pages. Bon état
Toutes les expéditions sont faites en suivi au-dessus de 25 euros. Expédition quotidienne pour les envois simples, suivis, recommandés ou Colissimo.
Editions Gamma Editions Gamma, 1988. In-8 carré broché de 367 pages. Bon état
Toutes les expéditions sont faites en suivi au-dessus de 25 euros. Expédition quotidienne pour les envois simples, suivis, recommandés ou Colissimo.
PLON-ET-NOURRIT. 1920. In-12. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. XXI + 287 pages. Portrait en frontispice noir et blanc. Dos légèrement passé. Etiquette de code sur la coiffe en-tête et tampons de bibliothèque sur la page de titre et dans quelques marges.. . . . Classification Dewey : 190-Philosophie occidentale moderne
Classification Dewey : 190-Philosophie occidentale moderne
Editions Universitaires Editions Universitaires, 1970. In-8 broché de 135 pages. Quelques passages soulignés au crayon. Bon exemplaire.
Toutes les expéditions sont faites en suivi au-dessus de 25 euros. Expédition quotidienne pour les envois simples, suivis, recommandés ou Colissimo.
Cambridge (Massachusetts) / London, Harvard University Press 1997 vi + 184pp., 24cm., previous owner's name on front endpaper, hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, VG
P., Grasset, 1986, in 8° broché, 218 pages.
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Lausanne, Viret-Genton, 1893, pt. in-8vo, 136 p. + 1 f., cachet et nom sur titre, brochure originale.
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London, Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1878. Uncut in 2 orig. full cloth. Spines faded. Stamps to foot of titlepage. XXIV,454VI,404 pp. + Publisher's Cat. 24 pp. Internally clean. From the library of Anton Thomson (Danish professor in philosophy) and with his exlibris inside frontcovers.
London, Longmans Green Reader and Dyer, 1869, in-8vo, XXIV + 454 p. / VI + 404 p., engraved armorial bookplate with devise ‘anchor fast anchor’ in both volumes, hw. dedication of free fly and hw. first ownership ‘Malcolm Gray 1869’, Bound in half-leather with corners, spine on 5 raised bands, red titlepiece & gold tooling on spine, some rubbing and stains. In all a very good copy.
First by his son John Stuart edited edition. James Mill, a London Scott who had risen from humble origins to become a prominent intellectual, a collaborator of Jeremy Bentham, and a leading exponent of utilitarianism (or sometimes socalled ‘Benthamism’). In this work which was first published in 1829, he developed the psychological side of the Benthamite philosophy. Brockhaus (1932) XV/490.
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London, Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1872. Contemp. full calf. Profusely gilt spine, titlelabel with gilt lettering. Glt borders on covers. XVI,650 pp. Fine and clean. On both covers in gold the large monogram of Trinity College, Oxford ""Coll. Trin. Oxon"". A fine, weel-preserved copy.
London, John W. Parker, 1843. 8vo. 2 uniform contemporary half calf bindings with five raised gilt bands to gilt spines. Marbled edges. A nice and tight set with only minor wear to extremities. Vol. 1 with tiny damp-stainin to upper margin, barely affecting but a little bit of the end-papers and the first three leaves - here only the top blank margin, far from affecting any text. Blank leaves a bit brownspotted, otherwise also internally very nice and clean. (2), XVI, 580" (2), XII, 624 pp. Bookplate of ""Reginald Dykes Marshall"" to inside of both front boards.
The scarce first edition of what is probably Mill's greatest book, an epochal work in logical enquiry, not only for British philosophy, but for modern thought in general. ""Mill's most important work in pure philosophy was his ""System of Logic"", which he began at the age of twenty-four and completed thirteen years later"" (D.S.B. IX:383).By the first quarter of the 19th century, the theory of logic had been almost overlooked in the English speaking world for centuries. Logic was practiced merely as an academic study on traditional lines, with Aristotle as the great master, but with Mill and some of his contemporaries this was about to change, and Mill's theory of terms, propositions, the syllogism, induction etc., greatly affected 19th century English thought. The many years that Mill allowed himself to work on his ""System of Logic"" allowed him to be inspired by a number of important steps that were made towards the development of the theory of logic in order to fulfill his groundbreaking work. Mill's main concern as a philosopher was to overrule the influence of the sceptical philosophers and provide science with a better claim to truth. A main breakthrough in Mill's Logic was thus his analysis of inductive proof, and his originality on this point cannot be denied. ""We have found that all Inference, consequently all Proof, and all discovery of truths not self-evident, consists of inductions, and the interpretation of inductions: that all our knowledge, not intuitive, comes to us exclusively from that source. What Induction is, therefore, and what conditions render it legitimate, cannot but be deemed the main question of the science of logic - the question which includes all others. It is, however, one which professed writers of logic have almost entirely passed over. The generalities of the subject have not been altogether neglected by metaphysicians, but, for want of sufficient acquaintance with the processes by which science has actually succeeded in establishing general truths, their analysis of the inductive operation, even when unexceptionable as to correctness, has not been specific enough to be made the foundation of practical rules, which might be for induction itself what the rules of syllogism are for the interpretation of induction... "" (A System of Logic, Vol. 1, p. 345) . With his demonstrative theory of induction, Mill reduced the conditions of scientific proof to strict rules and scientific tests. He provided the empirical sciences with formulae and criteria that played as important a role to them as the formulae of syllogism had done to arguments that proceeded from general principles. The laws that Mill established are discovered with his famous ""eliminative methods of induction"", which later figured prominently in controversies about scientific method.Mill's Logic came to found a new strand in the theory of logic, logic as incorporated in a general theory of knowledge, where the whole is rendered more precise by its definite reference to the question of proof. According to Mill the ultimate elements of knowledge are subjective entities, however, knowledge does have objective validity. ""Logic alone can never show that the fact A proves the fact B"" but it can point out to what conditions all facts must confirm, in order that they might prove other facts. To decide whether any given fact fulfils these conditions, or whether facts can be found which fulfil them in any given case, belongs, exclusively, to the particular art or science, or to our knowledge of the particular subject."" (Introduction, 3, p. 11). The work underwent several editions, and Mill kept changing it considerably. The first edition is said to have been printed in a small number, less than 1.000.
1893 In-12, pleine toile moderne, (4), 200 p. et 16 p. de catalogue éditeur, qqs soulign. au crayon. Paris, Alcan, 1893.
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University of Toronto Press, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981, gr. in-8vo, LIV + 766 p., clothbound with orig. jacket / reliure en toile originale avec jaquette.
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Petit in-12, pleine percaline sous jaquette éditeur illustrée, xx, 343, 16 p. Londres, Milford, 1936.
Index. Très bon exemplaire.
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