4 918 résultats
1984157297-1Caen Cedex, Centre de philosophie (Vrin) 1984. 155, (5) S. Original-Kartonband
5052Amsterdam, chez Neaulme, 1744 – in-12, t.4: 418 pp, t.5: 352 pp, t.6: 382 pp, t.7: 346 pp – rel. basane raciné, tr. colorées
19322020Wien, Selbstverlag, 1932. 80 S., Original-Broschur. ZUSTAND -1, braunrandig.
169944075Leipzig, Grosse & Gleditsch, 1699. 4to. In: ""Acta Eruditorum Anno MDCIC"". The entire volume offered in contemporary full vellum. Hand written title on spine. A yellow label pasted on to top of spine. Two small stamps to title-page and free front end-paper. Library label to pasted down front free end-paper. As usual with various browning to leaves and plates. Pp. 12-20. [Entire volume: (2), 582 pp. + ten engraved plates.].
0578709651.Gperfect. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
172041467London, J. Bettenham, 1720. 8vo. Nice contemporary English Cambridge-style full calf binding with five raised bands and gilt title-label to spine. Neat minor repair to extremities. A bit of overall wear, but a nice and tight copy. Internally nice and clean with only some occasional soiling that is very light. Engraved title-vignette (36 - i.e. title-page + dedication), XXIV (i.e. ""The Character of Mr. Locke"" by Peter Coste), (2 - i.e. contents), 362, (18 - i.e. index), (4 - i.e. errata + advertisements) pp. + one plate (""The Solar System"").
175540283Amsterdam et Leipzig, J. Schreuder & Pierre Mortier, 1755. 4to. Contemp. full mottled calf. Raised bands, richly gilt spine, titlelabel with gilt lettering. A tiny nick to lower spine end and very light wear to top of spine. Engraved portrait of Locke. Title printed in red a.black with engraved vignette. (2),XXXVII,(3),603,(18) pp. Faint browning to the last leaves, otherwise fine and clean, broadmargined.
170651322London, Printed for W.B. and J. Churchill, 1706. 8vo. Nice contemporary brown full calf, very neatly rebacked. Title-page and second leaf strengthened at fore-margin. A bit of brownspotting to last quire, otherwise very nice. (4), 336 pp.
17242570# AUTEUR: Locke John # ÉDITEUR: Du Villard & Jaquier - Genève # ANNÉE ÉDITION: 1724 # COUVERTURE: Plein vélin - dos rond - pièce de titre rouge décor doré # DÉTAILS: In 12° relié 4ff (pdt et avertissement) + 365pp.+ 2ff. Nouvelle édition, traduit de l'Anglois. Le gouvernement civil de la véritable origine, de son étendue, de la fin. 1er traité du gouvernement civil (1690), qui est un des temps forts de l'histoire théologico-politique du XVII ème siècle. # PHOTOS visibles sur www.latourinfernal.com
Y09J-00161Octopus Bks. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates stamps limited notes and highlighting or a few light stains. Octopus Bks. unknown
2 voll. in 16, pp. XXIV + 265 + (3); (4) + 292 + (2). Piena pelle coeva con fregi al d. Danni riparati alle cerniere e piccole manc alle cuffie. Angoli dei piatti con segni d'uso. Edizione originale di questa importante opera filosofica, la prima pubblicata e che raccoglie molti temi in seguito sviluppati in altre opere. In quest'opera Condillac rimane molto vicino alle posizioni del suo maestro Locke e accetta con riserve l'idea che la nostra conoscienza derivi da due fonti: la senzazione e la riflessione e il ruolo di quest'ultima e' di trasformare le senzazioni elementari in idee.- L'opera e' suddivisa in due parti, la prima che si occupa delle sensazioni dell'anima, 'des materiaux de nos connoissances' ecc. la seconda parte, poi, si occupa del linguaggio e del metodo. Cioranescu, 20327.
1928588537Philadelphia: The American Academy of Political and Social Science 1928. Hardcover. Very Good. Tall octavo. 359pp. Red cloth boards with gilt spine lettering with neat ink owner name and initials. Very good or better with wear to the edges some light bumping and a bit of fraying at the spine ends. A full issue of The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science devoted to The American Negro. Contributors include W.E.B. Du Bois "Race Relations in the United States" E. Franklin Frazier "The Negro Family" James Weldon Johnson "Legal Aspects of the Negro Problem" Horace Mann Bond Kelly Miller Walter White Alain Locke Monroe Work Charles S. Johnson and others. Reprinted on a couple of occasions the first edition is scarce. The American Academy of Political and Social Science hardcover
1928429813Philadelphia: The American Academy of Political and Social Science 1928. Softcover. Very Good. Tall octavo. 359pp. Printed gray wrappers. Small tears and chips on first couple of leaves modest tidemark on spine very good or better. A full issue of The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science devoted to the American Negro. Contributors include W.E.B. DuBois "Relations in the United States" E. Franklin Frazier "The Negro Family" James Weldon Johnson "Legal Aspects of the Negro Problem" Horace Mann Bond Kelly Miller Walter White Alain Locke Monroe Work Charles S. Johnson and others. Reprinted on a couple of occasions the first edition is scarce. The American Academy of Political and Social Science unknown
1931205937New York: Harmon Foundation Incorporated 1931. First edition. Softcover. 47 pages. Exhibition catalog for a show that ran February 16 - 28 1931. Features text contributions by AA. Schomburg Alain Locke Ernestine Rose James V. Herring and Alon Bement. Includes a checklist brief biographies and illustrations of works by: James Lesene Wells Lillian A. Dorsey Sargent Claude Johnson Albert Alexander Smith Archibald John Motley Jr. James Latimer Allen Malvin Gray Johnson William Arthur Cooper Richmond Barthe and numerous others. A near fine copy in stapled wrappers. A very nice copy of an early catalog on the work of African American artists. Uncommon. Harmon Foundation Incorporated unknown
1860377692New York: Horace Greeley & Co 1860. 32pp. 8vo. Disbound. 32pp. 8vo. An early campaign biography of future president Abraham Lincoln written by John Locke Scripps of the New York Tribune. Scripps reports on the life of Abraham Lincoln in eight chapters touching on the major events of his life and career beginning with his early life and his move to Illinois through his transition from merchant to lawyer and legislator and covering his time in Congress with accounts of Lincoln's opposition to the Mexican-American War his support of the Wilmot Proviso and his involvement with the organization of the Republican Party. <br /> <br /> Wessen states that this edition was printed by Horace Greeley "from plates cast from the same type forms" as the 1860 Chicago edition which is considered the first published biography of Lincoln. An advertisement for the Tribune and the Tribune Almanac fills the bottom two thirds of the last page. <br /> <br /> "Most authentic of Lincoln campaign biographies" - Howes. Howes S247a "aa"; Managhan 79 note; Wessen Campaign Lifes of Abraham Lincoln 12 ref; Miles 418a; Abraham Lincoln: His Life in Print p. 85 Horace Greeley & Co unknown
1927616800New York: The Arts Publishing Corporation 1927. Softcover. Very Good. Volume 11 Number 2. Quarto. iv 57-110 v-xii ads pp. Wrappers worn and soiled with a tiny bit of loss at the spine ends corners gently bumped very good. Prints Alain Locke's illustrated 11-page essay "A Collection of Congo Art" an article on the Ethnological Museum of Berlin and a 2-page essay on painting musculature by Thomas H. Benton among other material. The Arts Publishing Corporation unknown
192881592Cambridge: Printed for the Class / The University Press 1928. Hardcover. Very Good. Class report. Cloth and papercovered boards. Corners bumped a trifle soiled very good. A survey of the Class of 1908 including autobiographical statements from most of the class members. Signed by the editor and class secretary Guy Emerson. This was poet John Hall Wheelock’s copy and is signed by him by his statement. It also includes autobiographical statements from author Van Wyck Brooks African-American scholar and author Alain Locke historian Samuel Eliot Morison and world-renowned cardiologist Paul Dudley White. Printed for the Class / The University Press hardcover
193381596Cambridge Massachusetts: Privately Printed for the Class by the Cosmos Press 1933. Hardcover. Near Fine. Class report. Red cloth gilt. Light wear near fine. A survey of the Class of 1908 including relatively long autobiographical statements by the class members. This was poet John Hall Wheelock’s copy and is signed by him by his statement. It also includes autobiographical statements from author Van Wyck Brooks African-American scholar and author Alain Locke historian Samuel Eliot Morison and world-renowned cardiologist Paul Dudley White. This issue of the class report also includes photos of the students as undergraduates and as they were when this volume was printed. Privately Printed for the Class by the Cosmos Press hardcover
192381593Cambridge: Harvard University Class of 1908 1923. Hardcover. Very Good. Class report. Black cloth gilt. A bit of wear to the cloth at the spine ends very good. A survey of the Class of 1908 including autobiographical statements from most of the class members. This was poet John Hall Wheelock’s copy and is Signed by him by his statement. It also includes autobiographical statements from author Van Wyck Brooks African-American scholar and author Alain Locke historian Samuel Eliot Morison and world-renowned cardiologist Paul Dudley White. (Harvard University Class of 1908) hardcover
1945527667Albany New York: Albany Institute of History and Art 1945. Softcover. Good. Exhibition catalog. Forward by John Davis Hatch Jr. Introduction by Alain Locke. Tall octavo. vii 77pp. Illustrated with halftone portraits and images of artworks. Owner name "Alma H. Powell" possibly the African-American Michigan librarian Alma Harrod Powell on the title page. Ms. Powell has filled portions of four blank pages with relevant inked or penciled notes and newspaper clippings along with one brief inked note in the text. Most of the spine held together with tape and with a chip at the crown and the split at the base topedge and first page of the foreword ink-stained the foreword is still legible wartime publication label tipped on the front fly with a bit of loss affecting a couple of words sound but good only. Includes brief biographies of the artists. Albany Institute of History and Art unknown
1676650788London: C. Smith for Sampson Evans 1676. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good. 507 pages in very good condition. Pages are aged and worn. Some pages are re-margined to repair significant edge-wear many are darkened creased lightly stained. Pen markings on the title page. Previous owner's signature on the first page of the preface. Page edges are darkened. Rebound in half-leather with marbled paper on the boards. 5 raised bands and gilt titles on the spine. Worn and scuffed around the edges and spine. Very good for its age. 1ST EDITION VG <br/> <br/> C. Smith, for Sampson Evans hardcover
185230702New York: Bunnell and Price 1852. First hardcover edition and first printing of this text. Foxing to end papers a few stains to text block corners and spine ends with slight rubs and bumps a nearly fine copy 30702. 12mo pp. 1-3 4-143 144: blank flyleaves at front and rear original decorated black cloth front and rear panels stamped in blind spine panel stamped in gold and blind. This work prepared by a close acquaintance of Locke provides a biographical sketch of Locke; anecdotes about the reception of Locke's report; appendices presenting an authentic description of the Moon; and the text of Locke's successful hoax perpetrated in the NEW YORK SUN in August 1835 which pretended to reveal a discovery that men and animals existed on the Moon. The revelations supposedly reprinted from the actually defunct EDINBURGH JOURNAL OF SCIENCE were so cleverly wrought that for a short time the report was given credence in scientific circles in the United States and Europe. The report was soon denounced as a hoax by the public press and Richard Adams Locke 1800-1871 a reporter for the SUN was identified as the perpetrator of the "ingenious astronomical hoax." Interest in the lunar discoveries increased the SUN'S circulation to more than nineteen thousand the largest of any daily of that time. According to William Gowans who reprinted the story in 1859 Locke's account created such public interest that the owners of the SUN published sixty thousand copies of it in pamphlet form. The pamphlet was published in September 1835 and every copy was sold in less than a month. Nevertheless the 1835 printings are rare and only a handful of copies survive. Reference: See Anatomy of Wonder 1976 1-23; and 1981 1-137. Bleiler Science-Fiction: The Early Years 1348 and 1349. Clute and Nicholls eds The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction 1993 p. 728. Howgego Encyclopedia of Exploration: Invented and Apocryphal Narratives of Travel L44. Locke A Spectrum of Fantasy p. 142. Locke Voyages in Space 130. Bleiler 1978 p. 125 citing earlier editions. Reginald 09129B. Wright I 1704a citing an earlier undated 11-page edition probably published in 1835. Bunnell and Price unknown
28049Stockton: September 15 1858. Pages Single sheet of blue paper printed on one side.8 x 10.5 inches. Printed application form completed in ink by photographic "artist" I. S. Locke. Locke had a daguerreian wagon on Main Street in Stockton in the 1850s & early '60s. It burned in fire of 1865. The application sponsors and signatories are all prominent Stockton pioneers. A few creases with tiny closed tears at the edges. Some darkening. Else a fine a bright document from the personal papers of an early California photographer. Also a fine example of early Stockton printing & document design. Stockton: September 15, 1858. unknown
1699117837Amsterdam : Chez Jaques Menassion 1699. 150x90mm. 9 ff. Avertissement - PrÂŽface du traducteur - Indice du Contenu des Sections - 484 pages bandeaux reliure plein veau avec titre fleurons fleurs de lys et caissons ornÂŽs dorÂŽs au dos ˆ quatre faux-nerfs. Coiffe infÂŽrieure abimÂŽe. CharniÂre supÂŽrieure fendue. IntÂŽrieur propre. Barbier III-574. TroisiÂme traduction franÂaise de Coste.Revue Dix-septiÂme siÂcle 2011/4 n.¡ 253 article LÕoeuvre des premiers traducteurs franÂais de John Locke : Jean Le Clerc Pierre Coste et David Mazel : Ã’Locke ne semble pas avoir trouvÂŽ que les commentaires ajoutÂŽs par Coste dans la prÂŽface de la traduction de ses Thoughts concerning Education ÂŽtaient dÂŽplacÂŽs ; au contraire il trouva son conseil ˆ propos de la nÂŽcessitÂŽ de bien ma”triser sa langue maternelle si perspicace quÕil dÂŽcida de lÕinsÂŽrer non pas dans le paratexte mais dans le texte mÂme de lՎdition anglaise revue et augmentÂŽe qui suivit ce dont Coste ne fut pas peu fier. Le transfert culturel eut donc un effet boomerang. En dÕautres termes lÕadaptation culturelle ˆ laquelle Coste fut contraint de procÂŽder pour traduire Some Thoughts concerning Education en franÂais fut ensuite adoptÂŽe par lÕauteur anglais pour son texte source qui fut ainsi enrichi de lÕidÂŽe du traducteur franÂaisÓ. Ã’dans lÕavertissement ˆ la deuxiÂme ÂŽdition franÂaise de De lÕeducation des enfans Coste signala quÕau rang des Ã’articles tout nouveauxÓ dont Locke avait grossi la version originale de lÕÃuvre figurait le sien sur lÕimportance dÕune bonne ma”trise de sa langue maternelle il prÂŽcisa ÂŽgalement que le texte original avait gagnÂŽ en exactitude. . Ë en croire Coste cÕest gr‰ce ˆ lui et ˆ son travail de traduction que Locke en vint ˆ Ã’exprimer en Anglois quantitÂŽ dÕendroits dÕune maniÂre plus prÂŽcise & plus distincte quÕil nÕavoit fait dans les trois premiÂres ƒditions de son LivreÓÓ. 235 Chez Jaques Menassion unknown
117837Amsterdam, Chez Jaques Menassion 1699, 150x90mm, reliure plein veau avec titre, fleurons (fleurs de lys) et caissons ornés dorés au dos à quatre faux-nerfs. Coiffe inférieure abimée. Charnière supérieure fendue. Intérieur propre. Barbier III-574. Troisième traduction française de Coste.Revue Dix-septième siècle 2011/4, n.° 253, article L’oeuvre des premiers traducteurs français de John Locke : Jean Le Clerc, Pierre Coste et David Mazel : “Locke ne semble pas avoir trouvé que les commentaires ajoutés par Coste dans la préface de la traduction de ses Thoughts concerning Education étaient déplacés ; au contraire, il trouva son conseil à propos de la nécessité de bien maîtriser sa langue maternelle si perspicace qu’il décida de l’insérer non pas dans le paratexte mais dans le texte même de l’édition anglaise revue et augmentée qui suivit, ce dont Coste ne fut pas peu fier. Le transfert culturel eut donc un effet boomerang. En d’autres termes, l’adaptation culturelle à laquelle Coste fut contraint de procéder pour traduire Some Thoughts concerning Education en français fut ensuite adoptée par l’auteur anglais pour son texte source qui fut ainsi enrichi de l’idée du traducteur français”... “dans l’avertissement à la deuxième édition française de De l’education des enfans Coste signala qu’au rang des “articles tout nouveaux” dont Locke avait grossi la version originale de l’œuvre figurait le sien, sur l’importance d’une bonne maîtrise de sa langue maternelle, il précisa également que le texte original avait gagné en exactitude. (...) À en croire Coste, c’est grâce à lui et à son travail de traduction que Locke en vint à “exprimer en Anglois quantité d’endroits, d’une manière plus précise & plus distincte qu’il n’avoit fait dans les trois premières Éditions de son Livre””.