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Dezallier d'Argenville, Antione-Joseph.
Antikvariat Faust
fau65068
Chez Pierre Mortier, Su le Vygendam, Amsterdam 1711. (6), 208 pp. + 32 double-page plates. Illustrations in text. Contemporary full calf. 27x21,5 cm. Some old markings in the margins. Crisp and clean interior. Some wear to boards. A good copy.
Sundman, G.
Antikvariat Faust
fau82984
G. W. Hedlunds Förlagsaktiebolag, Helsingfors 1883-1893. Title page with photo illustrations + title page with woodcut vignette, 41 chromolithographed plates + front cover to booklet I,III, IV, VII & XI. Bright green half calf. Folio 43x31 cm. Bookplate (Karin och Herbert Jacobsson). Some minor wear to boards. 4 plates browntoned, due to paper quality.
Döblin, Alfred.
Antikvariat Faust
fau73915
ASY-Verlag, Barcelona 1937. 335 pp. Soft cover. Wrapper chipped. Interior in good condtion. Illustrated.
Bourbaki, Nicholas.
Antikvariat Faust
fau79819
Paris 1951-1975. 38 volumes. Printed wrapper. Minor wear to 1 volume. Owner signatures. Éléments de mathématique (English: Elements of Mathematics) is a series of mathematics books written by the pseudonymous French collective Nicolas Bourbaki. Begun in 1939, the series has been published in several volumes, and remains in progress. The series is noted as a large-scale, self-contained, formal treatment of mathematics. The members of the Bourbaki group originally intended the work as a textbook on analysis, with the working title Traité d'analyse (Treatise on Analysis). While planning the structure of the work they became more ambitious, expanding its scope to cover several branches of modern mathematics. Once the plan of the work was expanded to treat other fields in depth, the title Éléments de mathématique was adopted. Topics treated in the series include set theory, abstract algebra, topology, analysis, Lie groups and Lie algebras. The unusual singular "mathématique" (mathematic) of the title is deliberate, meant to convey the authors' belief in the unity of mathematics. A companion volume, Éléments d'histoire des mathématiques (Elements of the History of Mathematics), collects and reproduces several of the historical notes that previously appeared in the work.
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Kropotkin, P.
Antikvariat Faust
fau80318
William Heinemann, London 1902. xix, (1), 348 pp. Publisher's cloth. Lettering in gold. Good condition. Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution is a 1902 collection of anthropological essays by Russian naturalist and anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin. The essays, initially published in the English periodical The Nineteenth Century between 1890 and 1896,[1] explore the role of mutually beneficial cooperation and reciprocity (or "mutual aid") in the animal kingdom and human societies both past and present. It is an argument against theories of social Darwinism that emphasize competition and survival of the fittest, and against the romantic depictions by writers such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who thought that cooperation was motivated by universal love. Instead, Kropotkin argues that mutual aid has pragmatic advantages for the survival of human and animal communities and, along with the conscience, has been promoted through natural selection. Mutual Aid is considered a fundamental text in anarchist communism.[2] It presents a scientific basis for communism as an alternative to the historical materialism of the Marxists. Kropotkin considers the importance of mutual aid for prosperity and survival in the animal kingdom, in indigenous and early European societies, in the medieval free cities (especially through the guilds), and in the late 19th century village, labor movement, and impoverished people. He criticizes the State for destroying historically important mutual aid institutions, particularly through the imposition of private property. (Wikipedia).
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