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1936460235London : Chatto & Windus 1936. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good cloth copy in a very good slightly dust-dulled and edge-torn dust-wrapper. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong. Physical description; 619 pages ; 22 cm. Subjects; Religion Philosophy. Experience. politics. History. Statesmen France. Biography. Monks France. social issues. Upper class. Social change. Social theory. Political Reform. Pacifism ; Fiction. Mysticism ; Fiction. London : Chatto & Windus hardcover
3660LONDON CHATTO 1924. FIRST EDITION VERY GOOD. F. LONDON, CHATTO, 1924 unknown
897Slight spine lean minor wear with light hinge breaks at pages 161 and 176. Very good. CDK-897. Aldous Huxley. Point Counter Point. London: Chatto & Windus 1928. First British edition. <br /> Octavo. 601pp. Publisher's red cloth spine lettered in gilt red top-stain.<br /> <br /> . <br /> <br /> . unknown
19287404London: Chatto & Windus 1928. First Edition. 1 vols. 8vo. Original orange cloth lacking dust jacket. Very minor shelf wear to bottom of spine and boards else fine. First Edition. 1 vols. 8vo. NCBEL IV 610. NCBEL IV 610 <br/><br/> Chatto & Windus hardcover
1927540414London: Chatto & Windus 1927. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. First edition. Small octavo. xix 299pp. Green cloth with gilt spine. Foredge trifle foxed with slight foxing on some pages light bumping at the foot of the spine near fine in a very good or better dust jacket with tiny chips and tears and a modestly toned spine. Chatto & Windus hardcover
19252393Oxford: Basil Blackwell 1925. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. Octavo. Author John Bowles copy with his name and date on front free endpaper. 63pp Bound in decorative paper covered boards paper spine label couple of chips to spine; light foxing on some leaves. In all a very good copy. <br/><br/> Basil Blackwell hardcover
dola3032London: Chatto & Windus 1954. First Edition Third Impression. 12mo. pp. 62 2. cloth bit spotted a bit musty. dola3032 London: Chatto & Windus, 1954 hardcover
1936460238London : Chatto & Windus 1936. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good cloth copy in a very good slightly dust-dulled and edge-torn mylar-sleeved dust-wrapper. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong. Physical description; 303p ; 21 cm. Subjects; Religion Philosophy. Experience. politics. History. social issues. Upper class. Social change. Social theory. Political Reform. Pacifism. Fiction. Mysticism ; Fiction. Literature and society. London : Chatto & Windus hardcover
1945138775London: Chatto & Windus 1945. First British edition of Huxley’s complex and powerful novel. Octavo original light blue cloth. Very good in the rare original dust jacket which is in good condition. First published in 1944 by Harper & Brothers in New York Huxley's Time Must Have a Stop follows the story of Sebastian Barnack a young poet who holidays with his hedonistic uncle in Florence. Many of the philosophical themes discussed in the novel are explored further in Huxley's 1945 his comparative study of mysticism The Perennial Philosophy. The book's title derives from Hotspur's death speech in Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1 Act V Scene 4: "But thought's the slave of life and life time's fool; and time that takes survey of all the world must have a stop." Chatto & Windus hardcover
194033618New York: Harper and Brothers 1940. Hardcover. Very Good. First American edition. Slightly cocked and a little soiling to the boards very good or a little better in an attractive very good dustwrapper that has been reinforced internally with brown paper. Author's third mystery a thriller set in Africa. Harper and Brothers hardcover
1957D20702London: Chatto and Windus 1957. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. 8vo. Cloth in dustwrapper. A fine association copy of this novel set in Africa INSCRIBED by Elspeth Huxley to American born conservationist Esmond Bradley Martin. Martin settled in Kenya as an adult and spent the balance of his life there courageously fighting on behalf of the elephant and the rhinoceros and the illegal trading of ivory and rhinoceros horns. <br/><br/> Chatto and Windus hardcover
B39030-SCHarper & Brothers. Collectible - Good. LONDON: George Allen & Unwin 1942. 1st edition. Hardcover 8vo 645 pgs. Near very good in near good dust jacket. Lime green cloth. Spine ends bumped. White color to bottom edge of covers. Ink owner's name top of front endpaper. Contents clean and binding sound. Errata slip bound in at pg 343. Jacket edgeworn chipped soiled and spine is toned and rubbed. Evolution Biology Inquire if you need further information. Harper & Brothers hardcover
1961500London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. 1961. First edition stated. <br /><br /><b>HUMANISM AND EVOLUTION--SIGNED FIRST EDITION COLLECTION OF ESSAYS BY 20TH CENTURY LUMINARIES ASSEMBLED BY JULIAN HUXLEY.</b> <br /><br />9 1/2 inches tall hardcover black cloth binding with publisher's gilt logo to cover gilt title to spine decorative endpapers signed on title page "Julian Huxley/ Cleveland/ May 10 1962" 432 pp. Faint water stain bottom edge of endpapers otherwise very good no dust jacket in archival mylar cover. <br /><br /><b>FROM PREFACE</b>: "This book is an attempt to present Humanism as a comprehensive system of ideas. It is no sudden venture but the natural outcome of a long process of gestation and development begun more than half a century ago in an attempt to reconcile or integrate various aspects of my life- my biological training my twin loves of nature and poetry my wrestlings with the problems of morality and belief and continued in the effort to extend the concept of evolution over the widest possible range of phenomena. The gist of the book can be summed up in a few sentences. There have been two critical points in the past of evolution points at which the process transcended itself by passing from an old state to a fresh one with quite new properties. The first was marked by the passage from the inorganic phase to the biological the second by that from the biological to the psychosocial. Now we are on the threshold of a third. As the bubbles in a cauldron on the boil mark the onset of the critical passage of water from the liquid to the gaseous state so the ebullition of humanist ideas in the cauldron of present-day thought marks the onset of the passage from the psychosocial to the consciously purposive phase of evolution. A prerequisite for the safe passage of this critical threshold and for the efficient working of the evolutionary process in its new self-conscious State will be the emergence of a new comprehensive pattern or system of ideas beliefs and guiding principles which are of general validity for the entire human community. I hope that this book will help in indicating the outline of that pattern and in laying foundations on which that system can later be erected." <br />0<br /><b>SIR JULIAN HUXLEY </b>1887 - 1975 was an English evolutionary biologist eugenicist and internationalist. He was a proponent of natural selection and a leading figure in the mid-twentieth century evolutionary synthesis. He was Secretary of the Zoological Society of London 1935-1942 the first Director of UNESCO a founding member of the World Wildlife Fund and the first President of the British Humanist Association. <br /><br /><b>WALTER RUSSELL BRAIN </b>1895 - 1966 was a British neurologist. He was principal author of the standard work of neurology Brain's Diseases of the Nervous System and longtime editor of the homonymous neurological medical journal titled Brain. He is also eponymised with "Brain's reflex" a reflex exhibited by humans when assuming the quadrupedian position. <br /><br /><b>CONRAD HAL WADDINGTON </b>1905 - 1975 was a British developmental biologist paleontologist geneticist embryologist and philosopher who laid the foundations for systems biology. He had wide interests that included poetry and painting as well as left-wing political leanings. In his book The Scientific Attitude 1941 he touched on political topics such as central planning and praised marxism as a "profound scientific philosophy". <br /><br /><b>JACOB BRONOWSKI </b>1908 - 1974 was a British mathematician biologist historian of science theatre author poet and inventor. He is best remembered as the presenter and writer of the 1973 BBC television documentary series The Ascent of Man and the accompanying book. <br /><br /><b>EDWARD FRANCIS WILLIAMS </b>1903 - 1970 was a British newspaper editor. He worked on the Bootle Times and then the Liverpool Courier and was convinced of socialism by the conditions he saw. He then moved to London to take up a post as a financial journalist on the Evening Standard but soon moved to the Daily Herald a paper with views closer to his own. In 1936 he accepted the editorship of the Daily Herald serving until 1940. In 1941 he became Controller of Press Censorship and News at the Ministry of Information and for his work he was awarded a CBE in 1945. He then became the public relations advisor to Labour Party Prime Minister Clement Attlee for two years. From 1951 to 1952 he was a governor of the BBC. Williams served as Regents' Professor at the University of California Berkeley in 1961 and Kemper Knapp Visiting Professor at the University of Wisconsin from 1967 until his death. <br /><br /><b>MORRIS GINSGERG </b>1889 - 1970 was a British sociologist who played a key role in the development of the discipline. He served as editor of The Sociological Review in the 1930s and later became the founding chairman of the British Sociological Association in 1951 and its first President 1955-1957. He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1942 to 1943 and helped draft the UNESCO 1950 statement titled <i>The Race Question</i>. <br /><br /><b>HAROLD JOHN BLACKHAM </b>1903 - 2009 was a leading British humanist philosopher writer and educationalist. He has been described as the "progenitor of modern humanism in Britain". Joining the Ethical Union Blackham drew the organisation further away from religious forms and played an important part in its formation into the British Humanist Association becoming the BHA's first Executive Director in 1963. He was also a founding member of the International Humanist and Ethical Union IHEU IHEU secretary 1952-1966 and received the IHEU's International Humanist Award in 1974 and the Special Award for Service to World Humanism in 1978. In addition he was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto. His book Six Existentialist Thinkers became a popular university textbook. <br /><br /><b>ERIK HOMBURGER ERIKSON </b>1902 - 1994 was a German-born American developmental psychologist and psychoanalyst known for his theory on psychosocial development of human beings. He may be most famous for coining the phrase identity crisis. His son Kai T. Erikson is a noted American sociologist. Although Erikson lacked even a bachelor's degree he served as a professor at prominent institutions such as Harvard and Yale. Erikson is also credited with being one of the originators of Ego psychology which stressed the role of the ego as being more than a servant of the id. According to Erikson the environment in which a child lived was crucial to providing growth adjustment a source of self-awareness and identity. <br /><br /><b>FRANCIS HUXLEY </b>1923 - 2016. A botanist he was the son of the biologist Sir Julian Sorell Huxley nephew of the writer Aldous Huxley half-nephew of the Nobel laureate Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley grandson of the writer Leonard Huxley and great-grandson of "Darwin's bulldog" Thomas Henry Huxley and the literary professor Thomas Arnold the Younger. He traveled widely particularly in the Americas as an anthropologist working for various universities and institutions. He undertook major field work among a tribe of Brazilian Indians exploring 17000 miles of the Amazon basin and studying its native populations; he did early work with Humphrey Osmond in Canada has reported on the use of psychedelic snuff by Yanomamo Indians and documented the early use of LSD in the West and in the third world. <br /><br /><b>MORTON HUNT </b>1920-2016 was a science writer who has notably written for The New Yorker The New York Times Magazine and Harper's. Educated at Temple University and the University of Pennsylvania he worked as a freelance writer from 1949 specializing in the social and behavioral sciences; he wrote at least 18 books and more than 450 articles. <br /><br /><b>WILLIAM GRAHAM HOLFORD </b>1907 - 1975 was a British architect and town planner. Holford was heavily involved with the development of post-World War II British town planning and was largely responsible for drafting the Town and Country Planning Act 1947. <br /><br /><b>SIR MICHAEL KEMP TIPPETT </b>1905 - 1998 was an English composer who rose to prominence during and immediately after the Second World War. In his lifetime he was sometimes ranked with his contemporary Benjamin Britten as one of the leading British composers of the 20th century. Among his best-known works are the oratorio A Child of Our Time the orchestral Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli and the opera The Midsummer Marriage. Having briefly embraced communism in the 1930s Tippett avoided identifying with any political party. A pacifist after 1940 he was imprisoned in 1943 for refusing to carry out war-related duties required by his military exemption. <br /><br /><b>SIR STEPHEN HAROLD SPENDER </b>1909 - 1995 was an English poet novelist and essayist who concentrated on themes of social injustice and the class struggle in his work. He was appointed the seventeenth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the United States Library of Congress in 1965. In 1936 he became a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Harry Pollitt head of the CPGB invited him to write for the Daily Worker on the Moscow Trials. In 1937 during the Spanish civil war they sent him to Spain. His mission was to observe and report on the Soviet ship Komsomol which had sunk while carrying Soviet weapons to the Second Spanish Republic. <br /><br /><b>OLIVER LESLIE REISER </b>1895 - 1974 was an American philosopher known for his pseudoscientific views on evolution. Reiser is most well known in humanist groups because of his book Promise of Scientific Humanism 1940. He also founded the International Committee on Scientific Humanism in the 1950s. Reiser had used the term "Cosmic humanism" influenced by the work of Albert Einstein to define what he termed a pantheist philosophy of science. The main belief of Reiser was that geomagnetic forces were directing evolution of species based on a very specific complex cyclical process. He also advocated the view that a "memory field" existed around the earth which could also influence the evolution of organisms he called this field the "psychosphere". <br /><br /><b>PATRICK MEREDITH </b>1904- was a physicist mathematician and psychologist. His liffe-long interests were astronomy and language. <br /><br /><b>HERBERT LIONEL ELVIN </b>1905 - 2005 was an eminent educationist. Elvin was the son of Herbert Henry Elvin General Secretary of the National Union of Clerks and brother of George who became General Secretary of the Association of Cinematograph Television and Allied Technicians. <br /><br /><b>MICHAEL YOUNG </b>1915 - 2002 was a British sociologist social activist and politician who coined the term "meritocracy". Young served under the Labour Party government led by Clement Attlee but left in 1950. He began studying for a PhD at the London School of Economics in 1952. <br /><br /><b>ROBIN MARRIS </b>1924-2012 worked closely with the Labor party and when in 1964 Harold Wilson's incoming government established a Ministry of Overseas Development Robin was recruited to advise its first two ministers Barbara Castle and Anthony Greenwood. Robin was best known to economists for his major contribution to our understanding of corporations. <br /><br /><b>SUDHIR SEN </b>1916-1989. was an economist who specialized in agricultural development and rural electrification in India and on behalf of the United Nations. From 1947 to 1954 Dr. Sen was the chief executive officer of the Damodar Valley Corporation a dam builder in India. From 1956 to 1966 he served as United Nations residential representative in Ghana and Yugoslavia and as a director in the United Nations Development Program. He was also a director of the Great Eastern Shipping Company in Bombay a visiting economics professor of Brown University and the New York correspondent of the Economic Times of India. <br /><br /><b>HARRY KALVEN JR. </b>1914 - 1974 was an American jurist regarded as one of the preeminent legal scholars of the 20th century. He was the Harry A. Bigelow Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School. Kalven is the coauthor of "The Contemporary Function of the Class Suit" one of the most heavily cited articles in the history of American law and widely considered to be the foundation of the modern class action lawsuit. <br /><br /><b>HANS ZEISEL </b>1905-1992. A sociologist and lawyer Hans Zeisel was a pioneer in social science research and in the empirical study of legal institutions. His most famous works focused on juries capital punishment and survey techniques often ingeniously using what he termed "half a loaf" methods-study designs that were perforce less than ideal but well adapted to cope with the constraints encountered in studying the law in operation. <br /><b><br />BARBARA WOOTTON </b>1897 - 1988 was a British sociologist and criminologist. She was one of the first four life peers appointed under the Life Peerages Act 1958. She was President of the British Sociological Association 1959-1964. Ethically she was a supporter of utilitarianism. She supported an "Incurable Patients Bill" in the 1970s which would have allowed doctor-assisted suicide. Her views on abortion which were pro-life but without any religious basis led her to be removed from her position as Vice-President of the British Humanist Association. <br /><br /><b>ROBERT PLATT </b>1900-1978 was a British physician. His research was on kidney diseases but he is remembered for the 1940-1950s Platt vs. Pickering debate with George White Pickering over the nature of hypertension. Though Platt's view was favored during his lifetime Pickering's view ultimately dominated and is the basis of current understanding and treatment policies. Platt held the salaried position of head of the Central Manchester Health Authority and he later 1957-1962 became the president of the Royal College of Physicians. <br /><br /><b>G. COLIN L. BERTRAM </b>1911-2001 father or modern sirenology--published on Arctic and Antarctic seals. <br /><br /><b>EDWARD MAX NICHOLSON </b>1904 - 2003 was a pioneering environmentalist ornithologist and internationalist and a founder of the World Wildlife Fund. In 1947-1948 with the then director general of the United Nations' scientific and education organisation UNESCO Julian Huxley he was involved in forming the International Union for the Protection of Nature IUPN now International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN. <br /><b><br />HERMANN JOSEPH MULLER </b>1890 - 1967 was an American geneticist educator and Nobel laureate best known for his work on the physiological and genetic effects of radiation X-ray mutagenesis as well as his outspoken political beliefs. Muller frequently warned of the long-term dangers of radioactive fallout from nuclear war and nuclear testing helping to raise public awareness in this area. <br /><br /><b>ALDOUS LEONARD HUXLEY </b>1894 - 1963 was an English writer philosopher and a prominent member of the Huxley family. He was best known for his novels including Brave New World and for non-fiction books such as The Doors of Perception which recalls experiences when taking a psychedelic drug and a wide-ranging output of essays. Huxley was a humanist pacifist and satirist. By the end of his life Huxley was widely acknowledged as one of the pre-eminent intellectuals of his time. George Allen & Unwin Ltd. hardcover
1999250419002BLACKWELL SCIENCE 1999-03-22. hardcover. Good/GOOD. 7x1x10. 1998 LARGE HARDCOVER WITH JACKET. JACKET HAS SLIGHT EDGEWEAR. BOOK HAS SOME HIGHLIGHTING. FULLY USABLE. BLACKWELL SCIENCE hardcover
18733431baGNew York: D. Appleton 1873. Book. Very good- condition. Hardcover. First Edition. Octavo 8vo. xiv 317 pages of text and 4 pages of advertisements. Hardcover binding; original blind stamped purplish-maroon cloth slightly rubbed with moderate fading to spine. Soiled spot and owner marks on front flyleaf. Huxley lived 1825-1895. Science; philosophy education. First American edition. D. Appleton Hardcover
18591664<p>London: Ray Society 1859. First edition.</p><p><strong>FINE FOLIO ENGRAVINGS OF TH HUXLEY'S DISCOVERIES DURING THE VOYAGE OF THE HMS RATTLESNAKE. </strong></p><p>25x32 cm folio hardcover tan cloth binding cancelled library bookplate to front paste-down i-x 143 pp 12 engraved plates by J Basire after Huxley's drawings each with an explanatory letterpress leaf.</p><p><strong>THOMAS H. HUXLEY </strong>1825-1895 "Charles Darwin's champion was ship's surgeon on the voyage of the 'Rattlesriake' to the Torres Straits off Australia however the natural history work he conducted on his own time. . . Through extensive shipboard dissections and through library work in Sydney Australia. Huxley was able to bring some order to these minute organisms which had been simply lumped together in those two great zoological lumber rooms Linneaus' Vermes and Cuvier's Radiata. .Working out the details and relationships of the delicate marine animals he studied set the pattern for his career and gave him a firm grasp of major zoological problems." D.S.B. Freeman 'Brit. Natural History Books' no. 1854.</p> Ray Society hardcover
1893242859London and New York: Macmillan and Co 1893. First edition. 57 i pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original blue wrappers front cover detached. Contemporary ink signature on cover and a few penciled notes within. First edition. 57 i pp. 1 vols. 8vo. <br/><br/> Macmillan and Co unknown
193212442London: William Heinemann Ltd 1932. First Edition. Original Wraps. Very Good. First Edition. Original Wraps. Previously owned by Oliver Sacks. A lengthy selection of Lawrence's correspondence edited and with an introduction by Aldous Huxley. From the library of Dr. Oliver Sacks the renowned neurologist author and educator. He was in his life celebrated for his contributions to the understanding of the human brain and his ability to communicate complex scientific concepts to a broader audience. In doing so he highlighted the profound impact of neurological disorders on human identity and experience. His library is a reflection of this remarkable polymath's questing mind. Moderate shelf wear toning at textblock edge cracking at lower spine outer and verso and through gutter else intact upper split and bumped corners else tight bright and unmarred. Lacking dj. Brown cloth with titling and decorative elements. 8vo. xxxvi 889 3pp. with portrait frontispiece and 17 plates of illus b/w color. William Heinemann Ltd unknown
1932010291London: William Heinemann Ltd 1932. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. First Edition. Large Thick Octavo. xxxiv 889 pp 18 unpaginated b&w plates. Indexe 6.1" x 9.25" brown clothed boards gilt letters & design in unclipped DJ with acetate protector. Light aging spots on a few pages and plates else Bindingtight pages clean unmerked. Boards with lower forecorners bumped esp fr. DJ unclipped with slight age-toned spine minor edgewear. In polyester protector. Letters to many people - famous and not-so famous. . William Heinemann Ltd Hardcover
1932020914Heinemann/Viking Press 1932. First Edition . Hard Cover in Slipcase. Very Good. Limited edition in slipcase no. 87 of 525 printed copies. Book is solidly bound and unmarked; cream-colored vellum boards feature mild amount of smudging. One internal page is torn paper quality is very fine. Slipcase is very solid overall though lacking a bottom panel. <br/> <br/> Heinemann/Viking Press hardcover
186367690Robert Hardwicke 1863. 1st. Hardcover. Used good. Rated only "good" condition despite being in very nice condition due to a library withdrawn stamp inside the front cover and on reverse of title page otherwise no indication of library ownership. Small format 7.5x5" bound in dark green cloth with elaborate blindstamped design on covers and spine gold lettering on spine 1863 no additional printings indicated 156pp 4 pages of ads. Cover has only very slight wear gold lettering clear and bright prior owner's bookplate inside front cover a little writing on false title page including name in neat old script dated April 1863; sound binding. Nice condition. Robert Hardwicke, hardcover
194032500NY: Harper & Brothers. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1940. First Edition. Hardcover. Green cloth titled in red. Stated first edition with I-O and L-O codes. Cloth lightly rubbed corners lightly bumped crease to spine PO name blindstamped to ffep. Sound and square. The DJ in mylar is chipped and edgeworn lightly soiled. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Harper & Brothers hardcover
197312822Park Ridge N.J.: Noyes Press 1973. First U.S. Edition. Hardcover. Fair. 1973 First U.S. Edition. Hardcover. Fair. Dust Jacket. DJ fair small creases & tears front and back. Bumped corners. Edgeworn. Pencil notes in margins throughout. Complete with all maps & plates present. Noyes Press hardcover
2015x-110750242XCambridge University Press 2015. Paperback. New. reissue edition. 514 pages. 8.25x5.25x1.25 inches. Cambridge University Press paperback
1995Q-0807569348Albert Whitman & Co 1995-04-01. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Albert Whitman & Co hardcover