414 résultats
1793042673Paris: Joseph de Boffe 1793. First Edition. Hardcover Half Leather. Very Good Condition. Volumes 17-20 1793-1797 of the crucial French scientific journal still published today. Half leather over marbled boards general wear at edges chipped and wear at corners and spine ends bindings tight and intact. Stamp on title pages browning to endpapers. Volume 19 with a dark dampstain all along the top margin not touching the text.<br /> <br /> 335pp two folding plates; 328pp 1 folding plate; 384pp; 396pp 1 folding plate.<br /> <br /> Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Science & Technology; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 042673. Joseph de Boffe hardcover
1791042651Paris: Fuchs 1791. First Edition. Hardcover Half Leather. Very Good Condition. Half contemporary leather over marbled boards. Worn at corners hinges slightly cracked stamp to title page. Tome 10 of the first series. 336pp folding plate at rear. Contents include: Investigations on the chemical history of the tepid springs of Buxton Refining of metal for clocks Chemical examination of skate liver etc. Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Science & Technology; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 042651. <br/><br/> Fuchs hardcover books
1791042651Paris: Fuchs 1791. First Edition. Hardcover Half Leather. Very Good Condition. Half contemporary leather over marbled boards. Worn at corners hinges slightly cracked stamp to title page. Tome 10 of the first series. 336pp folding plate at rear. Contents include: Investigations on the chemical history of the tepid springs of Buxton Refining of metal for clocks Chemical examination of skate liver etc. Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Science & Technology; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 042651. <br/><br/> Fuchs hardcover
178773124Chez Cuchet | à Paris 1787 | 13.50 x 21 cm | broché
3633515 "leçons" en un volume in-4, cartonnage marbré à la Bradel, pièce de titre en long (rel. moderne), pagination séparée par leçon, (1) f., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., (2) p., (2) p., 4 p., 2 p., 2 p., (2) p. S.l.n.d. [Paris, Imprimerie du Comité de salut public, février-mars 1794].
15 "leçons" en un volume in-4, cartonnage marbré à la Bradel, pièce de titre en long (rel. moderne), pagination séparée par leçon, (1) f., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., 4 p., (2) p., (2) p., 4 p., 2 p., 2 p., (2) p. Édition originale du recueil des quinze "cours révolutionnaires" organisés au sein de l'École polytechnique nouvellement crée, afin de propager auprès d’auditeurs venus de toute la France, les nouvelles méthodes de fabrication du salpêtre, de la poudre et des canons, fruit des recherches communes des signataires de ces cours. La rédaction est due à Guyton de Morveau. Contient deux séries de leçons. La première a pour titre de départ: "Cours révolutionnaire de la fabrication du salpêtre et de la poudre". La seconde: "Fabrication des canons de fer coulé". La première série compte neuf leçons, huit numérotées de 1 à 8, datées du 1er au 8 ventôse de l'an II [du 19 au 26 février 1794], suivies d'une dernière non numérotée, dite "supplémentaire" et datée du 19 ventôse de l'an II [9 mars 1794]. Si Lavoisier, emprisonné, ne put participer à ce travail, on y trouve sa marque à toutes les pages sans que son nom ne soit jamais cité. On y retrouve également ses trois co-auteurs de la 'Méthode de nomenclature chimique': Guyton de Morveau, Fourcroy et Berthollet. (Duveen, 'Bibliotheca Chimica', p. 486. Martin & Walter, 'Anonymes', 14623). Dos frotté. La page de titre est roussie et montée sur onglet, restauration à un coin de la page 1 avec de perte de trois mots reproduits à la plume.
1787EBS100301Chez Cuchet Paris 1787. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. A landmark publication in chemistry where four French scientists presented a new systematic way of naming chemical substances laying the foundation for modern chemical nomenclature still used today. <br /> <br /> The late 18th century witnessed considerable debates over the theory and practice of chemistry. The chief theoretical shift was the identification of oxygen in place of the hypothesized phlogiston which led many contemporaries to view the existing chemical terminology as outdated and confused. <br /> <br /> This move was largely driven by Lavoisier 1743-1791 and his fellow authors of the Méthode Louis Bernard Guyton de Morveau 1737-1816 Claude-Louis Berthollet 1748-1822 and Antoine-François de Fourcroy 1755-1809. In the Méthode they develop a systematic nomenclature largely derived from oxygen theory arguing that chemical substances should be named according to their constituents. Simple substances should receive simple names and compounds should receive complex names deriving from their constituents. "The new terms were soon translated and adapted into other languages and became the basis of the modern nomenclature of inorganic chemistry. In the purely pragmatic terms of the terminology used modern chemistry therefore starts in 1787" Crosland p. 411. There were two issues of the first edition: this second is identified by misnumbering pages 258-9 262-3 266-7 and 270-1. <br /> <br /> The first edition itself there were two in 1787 is identified by the woodcut on the title page depicting a cherub supervising distillation. Duveen & Klickstein 126; Norman 1291. Maurice Crosland "Chemistry and the chemical revolution" in The Ferment of Knowledge: Studies in the Historiography of Eighteenth-century Science 1980. <br /> <br /> BOOK DESCRIPTION AND CONDITION: First Ed First Printing Second Issue Duveen and Klickstein pp 119-126 8vo 314pp huge folding table of Nomenclature six folded tables of chemical symbols; cherub & distillation apparatus on title page colophon p. 314. Mod. marbled boards. Very good condition throughout. The folding tables outline the first taxonomic system of chemical substances arranged according to their composition a system which proved immediately influential; even established figures like Priestley felt obliged to adopt the new terminology.<br /> <br /> PROVENANCE: From the Arthur C. Greenberg Chemical History Library. Presentation copy to Thomas Wedgwood Junior the eldest son of Thomas Wedgwood and older brother of the more well-known Isaiah Wedgwood from his cousin Thomas Byerley in 1787; T. Wedgwood Jr. and Byerley manufactured their own line of porcelain. Chez Cuchet (Paris) hardcover
178773124à Paris: Chez Cuchet 1787. Fine. Chez Cuchet à Paris 1787 13.50 x 21 cm broché Second printing of the first edition: pages 257 to 272 are misnumbered 241-256 Duveen and Klickstein. Illustrated with a large chart and 6 folding plates at rear. Library stamp of Laboratoires Lumière on the half-title title page and several other pages. Another stamp ""G. Chicanuard"" appears on the half-title; we have found no information about this person. Temporary binding in full marbled paper. Handwritten title on spine. Some small paper losses in places and joint on second board cracked but still sound. Copy as issued with full margins. The Méthode forms a manifesto for a revolution in the world of chemistry and the birth of modern chemistry a chemistry that resolutely turns its back on the past by becoming scientific. It was Lavoisier the most influential scientist at the Academy of Sciences who brought together around his theory and to support it decisively the greatest French chemists: Fourcroy Berthollet Adet Hassenfratz and Guyton de Morveau whom the already formed group welcomed to Paris in February 1787. The latter joined them with an advanced chemical nomenclature which would be revised by Lavoisier who demanded that Morveau abandon his phlogistic theory principle of a combustible element in air dating from the 17th century since he had discovered the role of oxygen. It was at this price that he was entrusted with presenting the new nomenclature. It was in the session of May 2 1787 at the Academy of Sciences that the terms ""oxygen"" ""hydrogen"" and ""carbon"" were pronounced for the very first time. Adet and Hassenfratz were responsible for proposing symbols for ""new characters to be used in chemistry"" which would not have much success but was destined for a great future. The entire project was placed under the authority and will of Lavoisier and the decision that Morveau should carry the project was a political decision intended to ensure better reception among foreign scientists. No one was deceived because it was Lavoisier who would be attacked by Western science. Very important work that marks the birth certificate of scientific chemistry. Chez Cuchet unknown
188835166Paris, Ancienne Librairie Germer Baillière & cie, Félix Alcan, 1888. Avec dix gravures hors texte VII, 398 S. (24 cm) priv. schwarzer Halbleinen / gebundene Ausgabe
189687863Félix Alca, 1896 In-8. Reliure demi-chagrin violine à coins, dos à nerfs encadrés de petits fers dorés, fer du Lycée Carnot sur le premier plat, IX-404 pp., 10 gravures hors-texte sous serpentes dont le frontispice, notes en bas de page. Bon exemplaire.
3164P., Alcan, 1888, un volume in 8 relié en demi-chagrin vert (reliure de l'époque), (dos passé), 1 frontispice, 7pp., 398pp., (1), 10 planches h.t. (y compris le frontispice)
In-8, pleine percaline éditeur (original cloth), vii, 231 p. Edition originale. Bon exemplaire. A very good copy.
6704Lefort Lefort, imprimeur à Lille et à Paris 1879. In 12 broché , couverture imprimée bleue titrée en noir, rousseurs, 144 pages , bon état par ailleurs.
1784513931784. <p>Franklin Benjamin 1706-90; Antoine Lavoisier 1743-94 Jean-Sylvain Bailly 1736-93 et al. Exposé des expériences qui ont été faites pour l'examen du magnétisme animal lu à l'Académie des Sciences . . . 16pp. N.p. 1784. 212 x 141 mm. uncut. Original plain wrappers. Paper flaw in last leaf but fine otherwise.</p> <p> Early Octavo Edition issued in the same year as the official quarto edition printed by the Imprimerie Royale. OCLC records two octavo editions one with imprint reading "A Paris: Chez Moutard Imprimeur-Libraire de la Reine . . . M.DCC.LXXXIV" and the other simply dated "1784" with no place or publisher information as in our copy. The typesetting also differs between the two editions: The Moutard edition has 15 pages with blank page 16 while our edition has 16 printed pages. </p> <p> After the Franklin commission issued its official report on animal magnetism a shorter précis of its findings was read by Bailly before the Académie des Sciences on 4 September 1784; this was then published under the title Exposé des expériences . . . As noted above the Exposé was issued in both quarto and octavo format. Not in Duveen Bibliography of the Works of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier which records only the Moutard edition. </p> . unknown
196032505Librairie Marcel Rivière & cie 1960 in-8° ouvrage publié avec le Concours du CNRS
1528042255.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
320252 volumes in-4, reliure éditeur bleue sous jaquettes imprimées, nombreux fac-similés et illustrations hors texte.
2 volumes in-4, reliure éditeur bleue sous jaquettes imprimées, nombreux fac-similés et illustrations hors texte. Edition originale des deux volumes de la bibliographie de référence des oeuvres de Lavoisier. Très bon exemplaire, complet du volume de supplément publié en 1965, complet de ses jaquettes. A fine set, in fine dust jackets. Complete with the supplement volume published in 1965. Copie of Professor Pierre Dejours (1922-2009), a Lavoisier specialist, with his signature on each volume.
1965101397W.M. Dawson and Sons, Ltd, London - Dawson of Pall Mall, London Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1965 Book condition, Etat : Bon hardcover, under editor's clear blue printed dust-jacket fort et grand In-8 2 vol. - 706 pages
in-8°, 316 pages, -, broche, couverture illustree Couv. lEg. us. Bel exemplaire. [CA32-3]
18601142541860 Editions Ad Mame et Cie, Imprimeurs-Libraires, Tours, "Bibliothèque de la jeunesse chrétienne" - 1860 - Cinquième édition - In-8, percaline vert foncé, dos richement décoré, pièce de titre, 4 "faux" nerfs - 388 p. - Illustration de Lavoisier en frontispice en N&B hors-texte
8941suivis de notions de manipulation et d’analyse chimiques. Mention de 4ème édition. In 8 pleine toile lie de vin de l’éditeur, guirlande dorées sur le premier plat et petit décor doré au deuxième plat, frise à froid en encadrement, décor doré en long au dos, portrait gravé de LAVOISIER, sous serpente, en frontispice. Titre, 388 pages. A. Mame & Cie 1855. Très bon état, pratiquement sans rousseurs.
1971RO30004897L'or du Temps. 1971. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 372 pages; bords frottés; quelques notes au crayon sur page de garde.. . . . Classification Dewey : 704.948-Erotisme
197136248Paris, Regine Deforges, L'or du temps, 1971, in-8, Broché, 372 pages. Marque de mouillure sur la 4e de couverture. Intérieur bon.
1995101553Lavoisier Tec et Doc , Institut de France - Académie des Sciences Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1995 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur noire, illustrée une figure ronde crème grand In-8 1 vol. - 346 pages