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Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2018
ISBN 10: 0270865667ISBN 13: 9780270865660
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Legare Street Press, 2022
ISBN 10: 1018386742ISBN 13: 9781018386744
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New.
Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2019
ISBN 10: 0353676942ISBN 13: 9780353676947
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Paris, Alcan 1900., 1900
Anbieter: Antiquariat Burgverlag, Wien, Österreich
2me. éd. revue et augmentée. 2 vols. gr.-8°. XXVIII, 820; 603 S. Vorderdeckel v. Bd. 2 geknickt. Pbde. d. Zt. m. goldgeprägt. Rückensch. Berieb. Gewicht in Gramm: 2000.
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2012
ISBN 10: 2012597408ISBN 13: 9782012597402
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: HACHETTE LIVRE, 2012
ISBN 10: 2012597416ISBN 13: 9782012597419
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: WENTWORTH PR, 2018
ISBN 10: 0341020427ISBN 13: 9780341020424
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Chez Jean Schreuder, Amsterdam,, 1765
Anbieter: FIRENZELIBRI SRL, Reggello, FI, Italien
Erstausgabe
Zustand: MOLTO BUONO. Avec une preface de Mr. Kaestner. cm.21,5x26, pp. [iv], xvi, [2], 540, [18]; frontespizio figurato con vignetta incisa, titoli in rosso e nero. Esemplare internamente in ottimo stato e completo. NOTA:PRIMA EDIZIONE. Legatura con dorso quasi totalmente staccato. / Amsterdam, Chez Jean Schreuder cm.21,5x26, pp. [iv], xvi, [2], 540, [18]; frontespizio figurato con vignetta incisa, titoli in rosso e nero. rilegatura settecentesca in mezza pergamena, la legatura ha il dorso quasi totalmente staccato. Esemplare internamente in ottimo stato e completo. rilegatura settecentesca in mezza pergamena, la legatura ha il dorso quasi totalmente staccato.
Amsterdam et Leipzig, Chez Jean Schreuder, 1765. 4to. Uncut in the original marbled boards. Professionally rebacked preserving almost all of the original back. The fragile orginal binding is here preserved in its entirety, and it has quite a bit of overall wear. Apart from a small hole to two leaves in the index, affecting ab. one work on each of the four pages, it is internally nice and clean. Title-page printed in red and black. Beautiful eng. title-vignette and a few other woodcut vignettes and initials. (4), XVI, (2), 540, (18) pp. First edition thus, being the first collected edition of Leibnitz' philosophical works in French and Latin, and containing the FIRST PRINTING of one of Leibnitz' most important philosophical works, his "Nouveaux essays sur l'entendement humain" (New Essays on Human Understanding), in which he attacks and refutes Locke and his "Essay on Human Understanding" and gives important testimony to his own philosophical ideas. With its 496 pages, this extensive work takes up most of this collection of philosophical works, and it also constitutes one of his largest and most important of his philosophical works. As explained by Raspe, the editor, in his preface to this publication, "LES NOUVEAUX ESSAIS SUR L'ENTENDEMENT HUMAIN, qui sont la partie principale de recueil, sont connûs trés imparfaitement par l'histoire de la Philosophie de Leibnitz, que Mr. Ludovici a publiée" (p. X), and the reason why the work was known, even though it had not been published, is because of a letter that Leibnitz had written in 1714, in which he explains why he did not wish to publish the work. Raspe quotes the letter (p. X), from which it becomes clear that Leibnitz had not wished to publish an attack on Locke and his work, because Locke had died in 1704 (the same year that Leibnitz had actually written the work), and because Leibnitz was against publishing refutations of dead authors: "Mais je me suis degouté de publier des refutations des Auteurs morts, quoiqu'elles dissent paroitre Durant leur vie & étre communiqués à eux memes". Raspe points to the nobleness of this decision, but he also points to what could be other reasons for Leibnitz not wishing to publish his seminal work, one of them being that towards the end of his life (he died in 1716), he did not wish to enter into any more controversies with the British, since he was already engaged in two very important ones that occuopied much of his time and energy: The first concerned the invention of the differential calculus, the second was against Mr. Clarke on liberty and important metaphysical and theological questions. Another reason could also be that he did not want to begin controversies with the friends of Locke, who at that time were many and important.Locke's "An Essay Concerning Human Understanding", which is the work here being refuted by Leibnitz, became the crucial groundwork for the future empiricists with David Hume in the foreground, and thus Leibnitz' work, though published posthumously, probably came to play a bigger role in the history of philosophy than it would have done had it been published just after he wrote it. Few philosophers of his time were susceptible to Leibnitz' ideas and his application of logic to the problems of metaphysics, as most of them were far more receptive to Locke's empiricism. However, when Leibnitz' "Nouveaux essays." was finally published here in his "Oeuvres philosophiques" in 1765, it became hugely influential and was also an important factor in the development of Kant's transcendental philosophy.The hugely famous work by Locke, in which he stated his famous theory that the mind of the newborn is like a blank slate (tabula rasa) and concluded that all ideas come from experience and that there are no such things as innate principles, was generally sharply criticized by the rationalists, the most important of them being Leibnitz. Leibnitz' response, his "Les nouveaux essays sur l'entendement humain" constitutes the most important of the rationalist responses and it is written in the form of a chapter-by-chapter refutation. He refutes the major premise of Locke's work, that the senses are the source of all understanding, primarily by adding to this "except the understanding itself", thus going on to distinguish between his three levels of understanding, which are part of the centre of his philosophy.For Leibnitz as well as for Locke the great inspiration was Descartes, but they chose two fundamentally different directions, Locke the materialistic one and Leibnitz the idealistic one. The present work represents the greatest clash between the two giants of late 17th century philosophy. The effect of Leibnitz' work was enormous, and among the Germans he invoked a great passion for philosophical studies. Leibnitz represents a striking contrast to both Locke with his empiricism and Spinoza. One earlier collection of some of Leibnitz' works had been printed before this one, but it did not contain his "New Essays on Human Understanding", and only consisted of his "Smaller Philosophical Works". This is the German 1740-edition "Kleinere philosohische Schriften". The other writings contained in this publication are "Examen du sentiment du P. Malebranche que nous voyons tout en Dieu", "Dialogus de connexione inter res & verba", "Difficultates quaedam Logicae", "Discours touchant la methode de la certitude & de l'art d'inventer", "Historia et commendatio charactericae universalis quae simul sit ars inveniendi".Graesse IV:152.
Verlag: Amsterdam et LeipzigChez Jean Schreuder ., 1765
Anbieter: Robert Frew Ltd. ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Buch Erstausgabe
FIRST EDITION THUS. Large 4to.(26 x 19.5 cm). pp.xvi+[2, Table & Errata]+540+[16,Table des Principales Matières]. Contemporary full mottled calf, sides ruled in blind, spine with raised bands and gilt-decorated with floral motifs, red morocco label lettered in gilt, marbled endpapers and edges. Title-page printed in red and black. Engraved vignette to title-page by O. de Vries, decorative woodcut head-pieces, culs-de-lampe and initials throughout. Lightly rubbed, a few tiny wormholes to foot of spine, occasional browning and light spotting, generally an excellent copy in a handsome contemporary binding. First edition thus, being the first collected edition of Leibnitz' philosophical works in French and Latin, and containing the FIRST PRINTING of one of Leibnitz' most important philosophical works, his "Nouveaux essays sur l'entendement humain", a riposte to John Locke's "Essay on Human Understanding" which Leibniz had read in Pierre Coste's celebrated French translation of 1704. "The New Essays.are a detailed commentary on Locke's Essay and thus represent an almost unique case in which one major philosopher produces a paragraph-by-paragraph critique of the principal work of another. Leibniz had practically completed the manuscript by 1704, but after learning that Locke had died he apparently lost interest in publishing it. He put it aside, and it did not appear in print until 1765, nearly fifty years after his death" (Benson Mates). Written directly in French, this extensive treatise (pp.1-496) comprises most of this collection and also constitutes one of the largest and most important of Leibniz's philosophical contributions, being, (in addition to the Theodicy), one of only two full-length works which Leibniz ever produced. Like many philosophical works of the time, it is written in dialogue form. The two speakers in the book are Theophilus ("lover of God"), who represents the views of Leibniz, and Philalethes ("lover of truth"), who represents those of Locke. The famous rebuttal to the empiricist thesis about the provenance of ideas appears at the beginning of Book II: "Nothing is in the mind without being first in the senses, except for the mind itself". All of Locke's major arguments against innate ideas are criticized at length by Leibniz, who defends an extreme view of innate cognition, according to which all thoughts and actions of the soul are innate. In addition to his discussion of innate ideas, Leibniz offers penetrating criticisms of Locke's views on personal identity, free will, mind-body dualism, language, necessary truth, and Locke's attempted proof of the existence of God. (The Encyclopedia of Philosophy IV, p. 431).
Verlag: Amsterdam und Leipzig, Schreuder 1765,, 1765
Anbieter: Antiquariat an der Uni Muenchen, München, Deutschland
Buch
8° , Halbleder. Leibniz, (Gottfried Wilhelm von). Oeuvres philosophiques latines & francoises. Publiées par R. E. Raspe. Préface de Mr. Amsterdam und Leipzig Schreuder, 1765. (24,5 x 19,5 cm). (4) XVI, 540 (17) S. Mit gestochener Titelvignette. Modernerer Halbpergament. Erste Gesamtausgabe der lateinischen und französischen philosophischen Schriften. - Enthält u.a. den Erstdruck der umfangreichen Streitschrift "Nouveaux essais sur l`entendement humain" gegen Lockes "Untersuchung über den menschlichen Verstand". Sie ist nach der "Théodicée" das wichtigste philosophische Werk von Leibniz in französischer Sprache, bereits 1704 ausgearbeitet, aber wegen Lockes Tod zunächst nicht veröffentlicht. - unbeschnitten Ravier 472 [Attributes: Hard Cover] mit dem Exlibris des berühmten Theologen JOSEPH COURBON PUY Sprache: Französisch Gewicht in Gramm: 850.
Verlag: Amsterdam und Leipzig Schreuder, 1765
Anbieter: Antiquariat Braun, Gengenbach, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Gut. 2 x 02 cm. (4) XVI (2), 540 (17) Seiten. Mit gestochener Titelvignette. *Erste Gesamtausgabe der lateinischen und französischen philosophischen Schriften von Leibniz. - Enthält u.a. den Erstdruck der umfangreichen Streitschrift "Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain" gegen Lockes "Untersuchung über den menschlichen Verstand". Sie ist nach der "Théodicée" das wichtigste philosophische Werk von Leibniz in französischer Sprache, bereits 1704 ausgearbeitet, aber wegen Lockes Tod zunächst nicht veröffentlicht. - Vereinzelt gerinfügig gebräunt, insgesamt sauber und ordentlich erhalten. Sprache: Französisch Gewicht in Gramm: 2000 Lederband der Zeit auf 5 Bünden mit Rückenschild und reicher Rückenvergoldung (Ecken etwas bestoßen, Deckel und Rückenkanten leicht berieben).
Amsterdam et Leipzig, Jean Schreuder, 1765 [Hanovre, Jérôme Michel Pockwitz, 1764]. In-4 (243 x 201 mm), demi-veau fauve de l'époque à petits coins, dos à 5 nerfs surlignés de filets gras dorés, pièce de titre de veau blond, tranches mouchetées, (4), xvi, (2), 540 p., (16) p. d'index et colophon, (1) f. d'errata, titre rouge et noir, grande vignette de titre emblématique gravée par O. de Fries. Première édition des oeuvres collectives de Leibniz. Elle contient l'édition originale de 'Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain' qui occupe la majeure partie du volume (pages 1 à 496), avec la 'Théodicée' l un des deux seuls ouvrages majeurs que Leibniz parvint à compléter. Composé en 1703 pour n être publié qu en 1765 dans ce recueil, l ouvrage se présente comme une réfutation systématique de 'l'Essai sur l'entendement humain' de John Locke sous forme d un dialogue imaginaire entre deux personnages: Philalète qui défend la position empiriste empruntée à Locke et Théophile qui soutient l'option rationaliste à l aide des arguments forgés par Leibniz. Commentant son Essai, Leibniz déclara: "j ai fort médité moi-même sur ce qui regarde les fondements de nos connaissances ( ). De toutes les recherches il n y a point de plus importante, puisque c est la clef de toutes les autres". L édition a été publiée sur les manuscrits originaux par l érudit allemand Rudolf Erich Raspe et préfacée par Abraham Gotthelf Kaestner, mathématicien, professeur à l'université de Göttingen. Contient: Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain - Examen du sentiment du P. Malebranche que nous voyons tout en Dieu contre J. Locke - Dialogus de connexione inter res et verba, et veritatis realitate -- Difficultates quaedam logicae - Discours touchant la méthode de la certitude et de l'art d'inventer pour finir les disputes ( ) - Historia et commendatio linguae charactericae universalis ( ). (Müller, 'Leibniz-Bibliographie', 2155. River, 472. Stojan, 56. Yolton, 'John Locke, a Reference Guide', C.1765-4). Bel exemplaire, très frais, grand de marges, très bien relié à l époque.
ISBN 10: 3487131897ISBN 13: 9783487131894
Anbieter: SKULIMA Wiss. Versandbuchhandlung, Westhofen, Deutschland
Buch
Oeuvres Philosophiques Latines & Françoises de feu Mr. De Leibnitz. Tirées de ses manuscrits qui se conservent dans la Bibliothèque Royale à Hanovre, et publiées par Rud. Eric [Rudolf Erich] Raspe. Avec une Préface de Mr. Kaestner Professeur en Mathématiques à Göttingue. Reprint der Ausgabe Amsterdam und Leipzig 1765. Mit dieser Publikation zuvor unbekannter Schriften von Leibniz, die Raspe während seiner Tätigkeit an der Bibliothek in Hannover entdeckte, leitete er fünfzig Jahre nach dessen Tod eine Leibniz-Renaissance ein. Aus dem Inhalt: Nouveaux Essais sur l'entendement humain. - Examen du sentiment du P. Malebranche que nous voyons tout en Dieu. - Dialogus de connexione inter res & verba. - Difficultates quaedam Logicae. - Discours touchant la methode de la certitude & de l'art d' inventer. - Historia & commendatio charactericae universalis quae simul sit ars inveniendi. XVI,540,[15] Seiten, Leinen (Olms Verlag 2006). Früher EUR 158,00 1108 g. Sprache: fr, la.
Verlag: Paris, Félix Alcan,, 1900
Anbieter: Buch & Cafe Antiquarius, Bonn, NRW, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
Buch
2. Aufl. 2 Bde. XXVIII, 820, 604 S. Edition francaise et originale. Lederbezug am Buchrücken von Band 1 mit größerer Fehlstelle, am unteren Kapital eingerissen, Band 2 am oberen Kapital mit kleinem Einriss, in den Deckeln etwas fleckig, sonst von guter Erhaltung. Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 0 8°, Originalhalblederbände / demi-chagrin.