Edité par Augustus M.Kelley/ Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer, New York/London, 1967
Vendeur : Douglas Books, Tunbridge Wells, Royaume-Uni
EUR 58,79
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierGrey Cloth. Etat : Fine-. Rep.of 1878 version of 1869 2nd ed. The 1st ed. appeared in 1829, the 2nd in 1869, then reissued with the Bain etc. material in 1878. Vol.1: xxiv+453; Vol.2: vi+403; small green Roger Smith stamps to front endpapers, otherwise virtually flawless inside and out. A facsimile reprint with no additional reprint. Note: quoted non-UK shipping rates are calculated for 500-700 gram net weight, cost will be modified up or down as appropriate outside this range. Size: 15 Cm x 22 Cm.
Date d'édition : 1869
Vendeur : Maggs Bros. Ltd ABA, ILAB, PBFA, London, Royaume-Uni
Manuscrit / Papier ancien Edition originale
EUR 444,47
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierFirst edition thus (second overall). Two volumes. 8vo. xxiv, 453, [1]; 403, [1], 24 [publisher's advertisements dated 'March, 1873'] pp. Original red cloth, spine lettered in gilt and ruled in blind, covers panelled in blind, brown coated endpapers, top edges untrimmed (spotting to endpapers, some light wear to extremities, spines slightly darkened and rubbed at tips, notwithstanding a very good set). London, Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer. The principal philosophical work by James Mill, father of John Stuart Mill, originally published in 1829. The publication of the present edition was the initiative of John Stuart Mill, who greatly expanded the text in the hope to reintroduce what he saw as his father's neglected work. John Stuart Mill was heavily influenced by his father's works and it can been said that 'many of J.S. Mill's logical and ethical doctrines are evidently suggested by the attempt to solve problems to which his father's answers appeared unsatisfactory' (DNB). In the Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind, James Mill sought to demonstrate 'how all mental activity can be explained by the ways in which the sensations obtained through sense receptors, such as ears, eyes and nose, associate with each other in an organised way, and form more complex emotions, ideas and capacities. It is largely an exercise in logical construction rather than a psychological account. The result is what Mill intended to produce: a small set of general principles derived from an examination of the structure of the human mind, a set that we can then use to formulate practical measures for the improvement of human welfare' (Mander & Sell, The Continuum encyclopaedia of British philosophy, pp. 790?91). From the library of Ernest Thorp, Professor of Modern and Political Thought at the London School of Economics, with his neat ownership inscriptions dated '1960' to the half titles of both volumes.