(N.Y., Wiley & Sons), 1960). 8vo. Orig. olive green full cloth w. gilt and black lettering and blindstamped seal to front board, and in orig. d.-j. Binding w. a bit of sunning and soiling to spine, and minor bumping to capitals and corners, otherwise nice and clean. With the rare original dust-jacket, in excellent condition, w. a tear to upper front hinge, no loss, and a few other small nicks and tears w. almost no loss. Some underlinings and marginalia in pencil. XV, (1), 294 pp.
First edition, presentation-copy, of Quine's main work, in which he introduces the notorious indeterminacy of translation thesis. This is the most philosophical of all of Quine's works, and it has greatly affected the development of logic, philosophy of language and mathematics, and analytic philosophy in general.The presentation-inscription to front free end-paper reads as thus: ""To Rod Firth/ with best regards./ Van"". Roderick Firth was Quine's colleague as professor of philosophy at Harvard. He was chairman of the philosophy department at Harvard from 1957 until 1963. He earned a doctorate at Harvard in 1943, joined the faculty in 1953 and became Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity in 1962.It is in his ""Word and Object"" that Quine propounds his ""indeterminacy of translation""-thesis, which became central in the development of philosophy of language. ""Language is a social art. In acquiring it we have to depend on intersubjectively available cues such as to what to say and when. Hence there is no justification for collating linguistic meanings, unless in terms of men's dispositions to respond overtly to socially observable stimulations."" (Preface p. IX).Quine bases his main thesis on his consideration of the linguist, who attempts to translate a hitherto unknown language. There are different methods that the linguist could apply as to the breaking down of sentences and distribution of function among the words. Quine reaches the conclusion that if any hypothesis of translation needs to be defended, this can only be by appeal to context, by determining what other sentences the language user would utter in the language that is unknown to the linguist. But even here the indeterminacy of translation sets in, because, according to Quine, any hypothesis can be defended, if only enough other hypotheses of other parts of the language are adopted. This indeterminacy of language also applies to the known languages, and even one's own, and thus Quine implies that there are no such entities as ""meanings"" of right and wrong. Quine thus denies any absolute standards in translating one language into another, but he admits that there are good and bad translation, -this is just not philosophically or logically relevant. Translation can be inconsistent with behavioral evidence, however and thus Quine propounds his pragmatic view of translation. ""Neurath has likened science to a boat, which, if we are to rebuild it, we must rebuild plank by plank while staying afloat in it. The philosopher and the scientist are in the same boat. If we improve our understanding of ordinary talk of physical things, it will not be by reducing that talk to a more familiar idiom"" there is none. It will be by clarifying the connections, causal or otherwise, between ordinary talk of physical things and various further matters which in turn we grasp with the help of ordinary talk of physical things."" (P. 3 - 9).
(Wisconsin), The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1937. Lex8vo. Original printed wrappers, no backstrip. In ""The Journal of Symbolic Logic, Volume 3, 1938."" Entire issue offered. Internally very fine and clean. [Quine:] Pp. 37-40"" Pp. 125-39. [Entire issue: IV, 212 pp.].
First printing of these papers which include Kleene's milestone paper in which Kleene's O (Ordial numbers), a recursive function, is introduced. In set theory and computability theory, Kleene's is a canonical subset of the natural numbers when regarded as ordinal notations.""In the seventeenth century, Leibniz envisaged a universal language that would allow one to reduce mathematical proofs to simple computations. Then, during the nineteenth century, llgicians such as Charles Babbage, Boole, Frege and Peano tried to formalize mathematical reasoning by an ""algebraization"" of logic. Finally, [...] Gödel, Church and Stephen Kleene introduced the notion of recursive functions. (The Princeston Companion to Mathematics. P. 111).
London, Routledge & Kegan Paul (1952). 8vo. Original full cloth. Minor wear to extremities, otherwise fine and clean copy.. XVII, (5), 264 pp.
The book which resulted from the advanced undergraduate course in logic that the important analytic philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine (1908-2000) taught from the end of World War II until his retirement in 1978 at Havard University. Technically rather dated, it still contains much philosophical and linguistic insight, being a prime example of Quine's lucid thought.
Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1963. 8vo. In the original black cloth with the original dust jacket. Light wear to dust jacket and front hindge dettached, otherwise fine. 359 pp
Armand Colin. 1973. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. partiel. décollorée, Dos plié, Papier jauni. 295 pages. Ex libris à l'encre en page de faux titre. Livre légèrement gondolé.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
Trad. de Maurice Clavelin. Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
(No place), The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1955. Lev8vo. Bound in red half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Journal of Symbolic Logic"", Volume 20. Barcode label pasted on to back board. Small library stamp to lower part of 6 pages. A very fine copy. Pp. 141-149. [Entire volume: VI, 367 pp.).
First printing of Quine's important paper in which he present a proof procedure for quantification theory.Quine is one of the most important American and analytical philosophers of the 20th century. His contributions to analytic philosophy and philosophical logic have been immense.Journal of Symbolic Logic, together with Bulletin of Symbolic Logic and Review of Symbolic Logic, is the official journal of Association for Symbolic Logic. The Journal of Symbolic Logic was founded in 1936 and it has become the leading research journal in the field. It is issued quarterly.
P., Aubier, 1975, in 8° broché, 158 pages.
...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
(No place), The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1950. Lev8vo. Bound in red half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Journal of Symbolic Logic"", Volume 15. Barcode label pasted on to back board. Small library stamp to lower part of 6 pages. A very fine copy. Pp. 93-102. [Entire volume: IV, 316 pp.).
First edition. Quine is one of the most important American and analytical philosophers of the 20th century. His contributions to analytic philosophy and philosophical logic have been immense.Journal of Symbolic Logic, together with Bulletin of Symbolic Logic and Review of Symbolic Logic, is the official journal of Association for Symbolic Logic. The Journal of Symbolic Logic was founded in 1936 and it has become the leading research journal in the field. It is issued quarterly.
(No place), The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1953. Lev8vo. Bound in red half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Journal of Symbolic Logic"", Volume 18. Barcode label pasted on to back board. Small library stamp to lower part of 6 pages. A very fine copy. Pp. 119-124. [Entire volume: VI, 376 pp.).
First printing of Quine's reply to Rosser on the questions of the so-called axiom of infinity. Quine remarks that is it odd that that the axiom of ifinity has not yet been proven. He thought it intuitively clear that the axiom ought to hold, but proof was lacking. Quine is one of the most important American and analytical philosophers of the 20th century. His contributions to analytic philosophy and philosophical logic have been immense.Journal of Symbolic Logic, together with Bulletin of Symbolic Logic and Review of Symbolic Logic, is the official journal of Association for Symbolic Logic. The Journal of Symbolic Logic was founded in 1936 and it has become the leading research journal in the field. It is issued quarterly.
Paris. Aubier. 1975. Coll : Analyse et Raisons. In-8. br. 158 p. BE.
SEUIL. 1992. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 281 pages; ancien exemplaire bibliothèque tamponné, renforcé.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
Traduit de l'anglais par Dominique Goy-Blanquet et Thierry Marchaisse. Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
Aubier, "Analyse et raisons", 1977, 187 p., broché, légères traces d'usage, état correct.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
Wisconsin, The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1947. 8vo. In the original printed wrappers. In ""The Journal of Symbolic Logic, Volume 12, Number 4"". Entire issue offered. Authors and title of the present paper written to top right corner of front wrapper. Top 5 cm of spine loose. Otherwise fine and clean. Pp. 105-122. [Entire volume: Pp. 105-162, (4).
First printing of Quine and Goodman's important paper in which they set themself the ambitious task of rephrasing all scientific theories in a language with an ontology consisting of objects in space-time. They state that: ""We do not believe in abstract entities. No one supposes that abstract entities - classes, relations, properties, etc. - exists in space-time"" but we mean more than this. We renounce them altogether. We cannot use variables that call for abstract objects as value"". (From the introduction to the present paper).
Les Belles Lettres. 2019. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 157 pages - couverture contrepliée.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
"Collection "" Encre marine "". Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES"
Kimé. 2017. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 177 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
"Collection ""Philosophie en cours"". Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES"
Washington D.C., The Catholic University of America Press 1953 ix + 120pp., 23cm., softcover, Doctoral Dissertation (A Dissertation submitted to the faculty of the graduate school of arts and sciences of the Catholic University of America in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, F110468
Toronto, Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies 1973 981pp. + frontispiece, 26cm., in the series "Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. Studies and texts" volume 23, publisher's hardcover with gilt lettering on spine (corners and edges bit bumped), text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, ISBN 0-88844-023-5, weight: 2kg., F105615
Oxford, Clarendon Press 1978 ix + 166pp., hardback, 22cm., 2 library stamps, G
Oxford, Clarendon Press 2006 xii + 315pp., hardback, dustwrapper, 24cm., fine condition
Cambridge, 1994 xii + 255pp.+ portrait of author, reprint of 1994, 22cm., softcover, VG
Format moyen, couverture souple. 302 pages. En grande parti non coupé. Bon état 1955 éditions Charles Testaniere
Charles testanière 1955 in8. 1955. Broché.
Bon Etat de conservation couverture défraîchie ternissures intérieur propre qq rares annotations au crayon à papier
Paris, RBA/France, SARI, 2016. 16 x 24, 155 pp., quelques illustrations, reliure d'édition carton, très bon état.
Firmin Didot, Paris, 1855. In-16, relié, plein veau vert anglais, dos à 5 nerfs, titrage, éditeur et année dorés, toutes tranches dorées, signet rouge. Gardes marbrées et ornées. XLVI-299 pages. Nombreuses figures N&B. Exemplaire splendide. État irréprochable.
Parisiis [Paris], apud Fran. [François] Gryphium [Gryphe], 1539. Un vol. au format pt in-4 (288 x 177 mm) de 4 ff. n.fol., 228 (x 2) pp. et lxvi pp. Reliure XVIIIème de pleine basane mouchetée brune, plats jansénistes, dos à nerfs richement ornés de filets gras à froid, roulette dorée sur les nerfs, caissons d'encadrement dorés, filets en pointillés dorés, larges fleurons dorés, pièce de titre de maroquin miel, titre doré, palette dorée en queue, tranches mouchetées.
Rare impression exécutée par les soins de François Gryphe ; avec sa large marque portée en page de titre. ''L'ouvrage comprend douze livres et se propose de résumer tous les préceptes de la rhétorique des anciens. Dès sa publication, il devint le code des maîtres et des élèves, et lorsqu'au moyen âge, en 1419, le Pogge eut retrouvé, dans l'abbaye de Saint-Call, un manuscrit de ce chef-d'oeuvre depuis longtemps perdu, l'enthousiasme des savants du quinzième siècle dépassa encore l'admiration des contemporains de Quintilien. L'Institution oratoire n'est pas seulement le cours de rhétorique le plus complet que nous ait laissé l'antiquité : c'est en même temps un traité d'éducation, un véritable manuel de pédagogie.'' (Théodore Froment). Graesse V, Trésor de livres rares et précieux, p. 527. Coiffe de tête accidentée. Abrasions affectant les plats. Nettes surcharges d'encre en page de titre. Petit travail de ver en marge des 6 premiers feuillets (avec parfois perte d'une lettre sur une ligne pour trois d'entre-eux). Revers de la marge de la page de titre doublée. Quelques rousseurs ou tâches dans le corps d'ouvrage. Cerne (sas entrave pour la lecture) affectant plusieurs feuillets. Nombreuses marginalia du temps à l'encre. Malgré une foliotation parfois erratique, exemplaire collationné complet.