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Editore: Uk: Oxford, 1975, Uk, 1975
ISBN 10: 0192717138ISBN 13: 9780192717139
Da: Book Express (NZ), Wellington, Nuova Zelanda
Libro
Hardcover. Condizione: Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. pp 180 light edge foxing otherwise nice & clean d/j.
Editore: UK: Oxford, 1975, UK, 1975
Da: Book Express (NZ), Wellington, Nuova Zelanda
Libro
Hardcover. Condizione: Good. illustrated.
Editore: Oxford UK. 1975. Oxford Univ. Press / At The Clarendon Press / The Clarendon Edition Of The Works Of John Locke, 1975
ISBN 10: 0198243863ISBN 13: 9780198243861
Da: Chris Fessler, Bookseller, Howell, MI, U.S.A.
Libro Prima edizione
dark grey, gilt lettered full cloth hardcover 8vo. (octavo). dustwrapper in protective plastic book jacket cover. vg cond. binding square & tight. covers clean. small faint stain on bottom, other edges clean. pages 583 ~ 718 have thin coffee~cola type stain along foredge & bottom corner, does not reach text, otherwise contents free of markings. dustwrapper in vg cond. missing 1" piece on rear, wrinkling, rubbing, soiling, not price clipped. nice vintage copy. no library markings, store stamps, stickers, bookplates, no names, inking, underlining, remainder markings etc~. first edition. first printing (same date on title & copyright page, no additional printings indicated). glossy b&w portrait frontis. liii+867p. 3 appendices. glossary. index. philosophy. epitemology. english history. history of philosophy. empiricism. ~ The success of Locke's Essay in winning the attention of the European public from the end of the seventeenth century onwards by its account of the origin, modes, and scope of human understanding was similar to the triumph of Newton concerning the physical world. Its message became deeply diffused among successive generations of philosophers, and of leaders of educated opinion, in Britain and abroad. It is the vital ancestor of all later empiricism, and of Psychology, and remains to this day the most widely studied of all his works. This is the first critical edition of the Essay. It establishes a complete unmodernized text that aims at being faithful to Locke's final intentions. Professor Nidditch has recorded below the text all changes of wording, and significant changes of punctuation, in the early editions, and noted many other less significant changes in a separate register. He has supplied sources of Locke's quotations; provided a translation of all Latin passages; and compiled an extensive glossary which explains outmoded, foreign, or ambiguous expressions. He has restored Locke's index and supplemented it by an index of names. The Introduction describes the stages of publication of the early editions, and together with an appendix discusses the methods of textual criticism applied in the present edition. For a note on the editor and on The Clarendon Edition of the Works of John Locke, of which this is the first volume, please see back flap.