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pp. (ii), iii, (i), 61 [lithographed sheets of signatures, rectos only, including copy of a letter by MARC ISAMBARD BRUNEL], (63)-125 (text), (i). Early binder's cloth, slightly chewed by insects along the spine, last few signature sheets with faded damp-marking in the lower outer corner, otherwise joints intact and contents clean. *The foundation of the British Association resulted from the dissatisfaction with the position of science and of scientists in Great Britain in the first decades of the nineteenth century. Charles Babbage had attended the Berlin meeting of the Oken-founded Deutsche Naturforscher Versammlung in 1828, subsequently publishing his 'Reflexions on the Decline of Science in England' in 1830; this had been reviewed by David Brewster, who had taken that opportunity.himself to elaborate upon the meagre attention given to science in the United Kingdom. The first meeting, still somewhat informal, was held in York in 1831 - the model was that of the German Versammlung. By the time of the third, Cambridge, meeting in 1833, the organisation was in place and the meetings had attracted much support within the scientific community, though not unmoderated by opposition. J. G. Lockhart, editor of the Quarterly Review, incidentally the journal in which Brewster first reviewed Babbage's book above mentioned, wrote to Murchison before the inaugural meeting - 'I presume you are going to the colt-show at York. Don't make a fool of yourself among these twaddlers.'. Even Dickens ridiculed the early meetings in a series of articles for Bentley's Miscellany during 1837-1839, later collected as the Mudfog Papers - in these he described the meetings of the Mudfog Association for the Advancement of Everything, attended by Professors Snore, Doze and Wheezy. See HOWARTH The British Association - A Retrospect, 1931, with a facsimile of one page of signatures, p.31. N° de réf. du vendeur 51679
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