736 résultats
Thèse - In-4 - Tapuscrit - 1959 - 56 pages
134pp., 21cm., softcover, good condition, F105533
Wraps a bit tanned. Light shelfwear. ; 134 pages
142pp., in the series "Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien. Philosophisch-historische Klasse" Sitzungsberichte 202-2, 25cm., softcover, pages still uncut, good condition, F105546
48pp., 23cm., publisher's hardcover in blue cloth with gilt lettering on spine, very good condition, F105525
197pp., 25cm., publisher's hardcover in red cloth, text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, F105502
235pp., 21cm., brochure originale, bon état, F05355
xii + 199pp., 24cm., publisher's hardcover in cream cloth, dustwrapper (with few signs of wear), text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105449
Minor shelfwear. ; Wadsworth Studies in Philosophical Criticism; 123 pages
Minor shelfwear. Very light pencilling to a few pages. ; Wadsworth Studies in Philosophical Criticism; 123 pages
x + 345pp., 1st edition, in the series "Cambridge Classical Studies", 23cm., publisher's hardcover, dustwrapper, text and interior clean and bright, very good, F105434
DJ spine has minor browning. DJ has light edgewear with one chip to top corner of wraps. Light pencil underlining and marginalia on a few pages. Former owner's name to ffep. ; Contents: Romantic Beauty in Plato; Sense of Beauty; Plato's evaluation of Art and Poetry; the Poetic Process; Aristotle on Art and Beauty; Mimesis and Rhythm; Catharsis. ; 168 pages
Book has minor shelfwear and rubbing. DJ spine and section of back panel are browned. Small closed tear to bottom of front panel (1"). ; Contents: Romantic Beauty in Plato; Sense of Beauty; Plato's evaluation of Art and Poetry; the Poetic Process; Aristotle on Art and Beauty; Mimesis and Rhythm; Catharsis. ; 168 pages
Very light shelfwear to book. Else fine. DJ spine is sunned. DJ has very minor shelfwear. ; Waterlow proposes a new solution to the exegetical problem in Aristotle. ; 174 pages
34pp., 22cm., Doctoral dissertation, spine reinforced, text in Latin, good condition, F105762
xiii + 279pp., 23cm., softcover, very good, F105470
Armand Colin, U, 1966, 255 pp., broché, couverture légèrement défraîchie, dos un peu bruni, quelques passages signalés au stylo, état général très correct.
Reprint of the 1910 Paris ed. xii, 371pp.; Greek & Roman Philosophy Volume 44; 371 pages
xii + 283pp., 22cm., publisher's hardcover with dustwrapper (corners bit bumped, dustwrapper with few traces of use), previous owner's name on first titlepage, text clean and bright, in the series "Oxford Theological Monographs", ISBN 0-19-826731-2, good condition, R101264
xv + 337pp., 23cm., in the "Stanford series in philosophy", previous owner's name on front endpaper, hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, VG
A biography of the English physician and scientist William Harvey. With 8 plates. 269 pages, Index.
Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Some scratches to spine label. ; Vol. I: 381 pp; Vol. II: 482 pp; reprinted in 1 volume; 2 Volumes Bound in 1 Book; 863 pages
Edgewear with light chipping to wraps. Chipping to spine ends. Wraps are browned. Former owner's name on ffep. ; 216 pages
Front hinge starting to crack but holding. Pages browned. A couple of minor stains to boards. ; 231 pages
Phoenix Supplementary Volume XXXVIII; 336 pages; <p>Aristotle was the first philosopher to provide a theory of autonomous scientific disciplines and the systematic connections between those disciplines. This book presents the first comprehensive treatment of these systematic connections: analogy, focality, and cumulation.</p><p>Wilson appeals to these systematic connections in order to reconcile Aristotle's narrow theory of the subject-genus (described in the Posterior Analytics in terms of essential definitional connections among terms) with the more expansive conception found in Aristotle's scientific practice. These connections, all variations on the notion of abstraction, allow for the more expansive subject-genus, and in turn are based on concepts fundamental to the Posterior Analytics. Wilson thus treats the connections in their relation to Aristotle's theory of science and shows how they arise from his doctrine of abstraction. The effect of the argument is to place the connections, which are traditionally viewed as marginal, at the centre of Aristotle's theory of science.</p><p>The scholarly work of the last decade has argued that the Posterior Analytics is essential for an understanding of Aristotle's scientific practice. Wilson's book, while grounded in this research, extends its discoveries to the problems of the conditions for the unity of scientific disciplines.