Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016
ISBN 10: 1537235982 ISBN 13: 9781537235981
Anbieter: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA
Paperback. Zustand: As New. No Jacket. Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2014
Anbieter: Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat Zorn, Marburg, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
X, 230 Seiten. Original hardcover (cloth) in a dust jacket. Clean book in good condition. Book from a non smoking environment. Sprache: Englisch Original-Leinenband mit Schutzumschlag.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2014
Anbieter: Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat Zorn, Marburg, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
X, 230 Seiten. Gutes Exemplar mit nur leichten Gebrauchsspuren. Textsauber und aus einem Nichtraucherhaushalt. // Original hardcover (cloth) in a dust jacket. Clean book in good condition. Book from a non smoking environment. Sprache: Englisch Original-Leinenband mit Schutzumschlag.
Sprache: Französisch
Verlag: Librarie Philosophique J. Vrin, 1995
ISBN 10: 2711612252 ISBN 13: 9782711612253
Trade Paperback. Zustand: NEAR FINE. 292pp.
Verlag: Minerva [Herder'sche Verlagshandlung / Herder], 1960
Hardcover. Zustand: NEAR FINE. ca. 1960 quality facsimile of the 1882 Herder edition. xviii, 330pp. 8vo, sewn binding in orange cloth. Critical text of the original Arabic with German translation followed by a critical text of the Latin commentaries, all preceded by a lengthy German introduction. Spine faintly sunned, very clean and sharp otherwise with tight binding and fresh pages.
Verlag: [Legacy] C. Hitch and L. Hawes? 1761 / [Master Piece] printed and sold by the Booksellers., London, 1792
Anbieter: Alexandre Antique Prints, Maps & Books, Toronto, ON, Kanada
Full speckled calf boards. Spine with 4 raised bands, gilt-lettered morocco label in second compartment. , Aristotle's Masterpiece, also known as The Works of Aristotle, the Famous Philosopher, is a sex manual and a midwifery book that was popular in England from the early modern period through to the nineteenth century. It was first published in 1684 and written by an unknown author who falsely claimed to be Aristotle. As a consequence the author is now described as a Pseudo-Aristotle, the collective name for unidentified authors who masqueraded as Aristotle. Some claim that the book was banned in Britain until the 1960s, although there was no provision in the UK for "banning" books as such. However, reputable publishers and booksellers might have been cautious about selling Aristotle's Masterpiece, at least in the wake of the 1857 Obscene Publications Act., Size : Thick 12mo.(155 x 90 mm), Very good example of this work on health, sex, and gender. Illustrated with 6 plates, including one folding plate showing the child in the womb, plus in-text woodcuts. , (P) Frontispiece, 1. Frontispiece, 2. Title. Publisher?s advertisement. Reader?s preface, (v)-viii. Pp. 9-144. Blank. Frontispiece to Compleat and Experience?d Midwife. Title. Blank. Note to the midwife, (i)-iv. Pp. 1-156. Table of Contents (4). Blank. Frontispiece to Aristotle?s Book of Problems. Title. Reader?s note. Pp. 5-156. Blank. Frontispiece to Artistotle?s Legacy. Title. Blank. Introduction, v-(viii). Pp. 9-120. Repairs to spine, occasional marginal tears or losses, occasionally affecting text.
Verlag: (Burgos, Andrés de Burgos, 26 June 1505)., 1505
Anbieter: Antiquariat INLIBRIS Gilhofer Nfg. GmbH, Vienna, A, Österreich
EUR 35.000,00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb4to (156 x 200 mm). (88) pp. With woodcut printer's device in the colophon. - (Bound after) II: Köbel, Jacob. Astrolabii declaratio, eiusdemque usus mire iucundus, non modo astrologis, medicis, geographis, caeterisque literarum cultoribus multum utilis ac necessarius [.]. Mainz, Peter Jordan, 1532. (44) pp. With woodcut title-page and several woodcut illustrations in the text. - (Bound with) III: [Sacrobosco, Johannes. Sphaera Mundi]. Venice, Giacomo Penzio, 1519. 46 (instead of 47), (1 blank) ff. With woodcut illustrations throughout. - IV: "Quatuor plagas mundi Ubi fint feire". (100) pp. Latin manuscript on paper. Contemporary limp vellum with four later leather straps. All edges red but faded. Rare Spanish edition of one of the most widely read texts of the High Middle Ages - the pseudo-Aristotelian "Secret of Secrets", purportedly a letter from Aristotle to his student Alexander the Great on an encyclopedic range of topics, including statecraft, ethics, physiognomy, astrology, alchemy, magic, and medicine, supposedly based on a tenth-century Arabic text. The present edition is one of only seven works attributable to the printer Andrés de Burgos, only briefly active in Burgos between May 1503 and June 1505. - Modern scholarship assumes the text to date from after the Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity and before the work of Ibn Juljul in the late tenth century. The section on physiognomy may have circulated as early as AD 940. The Arabic text was translated into Persian (at least twice), Ottoman Turkish (twice), Hebrew, Spanish, and twice into Latin. The Hebrew edition also formed the basis for a translation into Russian. The first partial Latin version was prepared for the Queen of Portugal in ca. 1120 by the converso John of Seville; it is now preserved in about 150 copies under the title "Epistola Aristotelis ad Alexandrum de regimine sanitatis" ("Aristotle's letter to Alexander on good health"). The present second translation, and the first of the whole work, was done at Antioch ca. 1232 by the canon Philip of Tripoli for Bishop Guy of Tripoli. - II: First edition of Jacob Köbel's famous treatise on the astrolabe, including a full-page woodcut of a muse holding the sphere of the universe on the reverse of the title-page. Essentially an instruction on the use of the astrolabe, it demonstrates how to calculate time, location, and hours, including various explanatory diagrams and charming illustrations. - III: Rare Venice edition of one of the most influential works of pre-Copernican astronomy in Europe, Johannes de Sacrobosco's "De Sphaera Mundi" from ca. 1230, which introduced the fundamental elements of astronomy. Drawing heavily on Ptolemy's Almagest and Arabian astronomical concepts, it was one of Europe's most influential works on astronomy before Copernicus. The first edition was printed in Ferrara in 1472, and over 90 editions were published in the following two centuries. - IV: An anonymously composed Latin manuscript on astronomy, geometry, trigonometry and arithmetics, drawing on the works of Bohemian astronomer Christian of Prachatice (ca. 1360-1439) and Johannes von Gmunden (ca. 1380-1442), founder of the Vienna School of Astronomy, as well as other scholars. The text elaborates on astronomical calculations and the use of the astrolabe, including some trigonometric sketches for measuring height and angles. Prepared by at least three hands, the manuscript forms two distinct parts (the first comprising 44 pp., the second one 56 pp.) with Sacrobosco and Aristotle bound in between. - Binding somewhat spotted, chipped and frayed. - I: A7 has two burn holes, one repaired, causing some text loss. Marginal manuscript annotations throughout. - II: Small marginal tears to title-page, A2 and A3. Some waterstaining. - III: Lacks title-page (supplied in facsimile). - Some more waterstaining to final manuscript section. - I: Cranz 107.722. Norton 315. Palau I, 114. - II: VD 16, K 1591. DSB VII, 419. Adams I, 611. Cf. BM-STC German 474 (1535 ed.). - III: Cf. DSB XII, 60-63. This edition not in BM-STC Italian or Adams.
Hardcover. Zustand: NEAR FINE. lxxxvii, 903pp. B/W facsimile frontispiece. Thick 8vo, sewn binding in black cloth with gilt stamped lettering. Some very trivial shelfwear and spine just faintly faded, exceedingly clean and sharp otherwise with tight binding. Out of print with the publisher, though Brill will sell you a pdf for $475, and quite scarce in trade. 'A first edition of the Arabic text and the Hebrew text of the Problemata Physica, ascribed to Aristotle, which has been elaborated in later Antiquity in Greek. The text, corresponding with the first 15 books of the existing Greek text, contains chiefly medical problems, but also biological and mathematical ones. Therefore this volume deals with a comparison of the existing Greek text and the lost extended Greek version, only transmitted in this Arabic translation and in this Hebrew translation of the Arabic version. The authorship of the famous translator Hunain Ibn Ishaq has been discussed. The role of the Problemata Physica in Arabic literature has not been omitted. Interesting for Semitic linguistics is the description of the language used by ?unain ibn Ish?q and Moses ibn Tibbon, and of the influence of Arabic on the Hebrew of the translators. Glossaries have been added to give the reader the opportunity to compare the Arabic text with the Greek and the Hebrew ones.' (Publisher's blurb).
Anbieter: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Dänemark
London, Miller, Law, and Cater, n.date, (Ca.1800). Small 8vo. Contemp. full calf., spine gilt, titlelabel with gilt lettering. Hinges weakening, corners bumped. A bit of leather lacks on backcover. IV,317,(1) pp., 8 textillustrations in woodcut. A few brownspots. A very popular work containing medical extracts from various writings, first published in 1690 and published in more than 40 editions onwards. (Wellcome II, p. 56, listing many editions, but not this one.
Verlag: Lorenzo Torrentino,, Florence,, 1548
Anbieter: ASHER Rare Books, T Goy Houten, Niederlande
EUR 12.500,00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbFirst edition of one of the earliest printed books about colour, translated from the Greek into Latin and with commentary by the Neapolitan physician and philosopher Simone Porzio (1497-1554). Usually attributed to Aristotle, it is now thought to be the work of the peripatetic scholar and pupil of Aristotle, Theophrastus.''As the author states at the end of the treatise, it is intended rather to supply data for a detailed examination into the scientific theory of colour than to expound a complete thesis. He has realized that the development of colour in animals and plants depends to some extent on heat, and he seems to suggest that heat and moisture are the controlling factors. It is of more value as a collection of observed facts than for any theory of the origin and development of colour in physical life'' (Aristotle, Minor Works, Cambridge and London, Loeb Classical Library, 1936, p. 3).With some spotting on the title-page and some marginal tears, not approaching the text, but otherwise in very good condition and with large margins. Binding with the sewing supports broken, a tear in the backstrip and some small stains. An important treatise on colour and one of the earliest.l Adams P1958; Caillet 8881; EDIT16, CNCE 16133; Hoffman I, 289 ("rare and very important"); Kemp, The science of art, p. 264; Schwab, Bibliographie d'Aristotle 3503; USTC 803281. Contemporary limp sheepskin parchment, straight sewn on 3 wittawed thongs laced through the joints, manuscript title down the spine, with 4 fragments of a Latin manuscript in an upright humanistic hand on vellum used as spine lining. With 2 large woodcut historiated initials, and a vine leaf ornament by Granjon (Vervliet 178: 1st recorded in this year). Set in roman types with whole paragraphs in Greek (2 sizes) and the dedication and some end matter in italic. Pages: 197, [3] pp.
Verlag: Ex Officina Henrici Stephani, Geneva, 1557
Anbieter: Phillip J. Pirages Rare Books (ABAA), McMinnville, OR, USA
172 x 105 mm. (6 3/4 x 4 1/8"). 4 p.l., 17-168 [i.e., 152] pp. (mispaginated but complete). Edited by Henri Estienne. Simple but appealing 18th century tan calf, covers with triple gilt fillet border, smooth spine divided into panels by plain and dotted gilt rules, gilt starburst centerpiece, gilt titling, marbled endpapers. Printer's device on title page. Renouard 116:3; Schreiber 142; Dibdin II, 500; Hoffmann I, 287-88; Hoffmann III, 524; USTC 450450. âJoints and extremities lightly rubbed, minor offsetting from turn-ins to endpapers and flyleaves, leaves with a touch of browning to head edge, isolated small marginal spots or minor smudges, but still an extremely pleasing copy, clean and fresh internally, in a well-preserved binding. Rarely seen in the marketplace, this collection of Greek texts printed in the exquisite Estienne "grecs du roi" type includes four parts: the 23 "Characters" of Theophrastus, along with that author's essay on the senses and perception; the pseudo-Aristotle "De Mirabilibus Auscultationibus" ["On Marvellous Things Heard"]; and an essay on springs, rivers, and pools by the first century A.D. Greek philosopher Sotion. In "Characters," Theophrastus (ca. 371 - ca. 287 B.C.) delineates such human foibles as gossiping, grumbling, and boasting, while the text once attributed to Aristotle is a series of anecdotes about inexplicable phenomena in the natural world, a genre of classical literature known as paradoxography. The classical texts are followed by the critical notes of Henri Estienne (1528 or 1531-91), who rivaled Aldus Manutius in combining publishing with scholarship. In discussing this work, Dibdin says, "whatever H. Stephen did is worth consulting." Henri also contributed to the typography used here, the smallest size of the "grecs du roi" cut for his father Robert by Claude Garamond--it is based on the Greek script written by the precocious Henri when he was 10 years old.