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Well-illustrated, 1677 second French edition (reviewed and corrected from the first) René Descartes L'Homme (The Man) et la Formation du Foetus (Formation of the Fetus); and (added to this edition) Le Monde, ou Traité de la Lumiere (The World, or Treatise on the Light). This copy with the provenance of a noted scientist. A lot to unpack here; might I suggest that you review the Wikipedia articles on the Descartes works "Treatise on Man" and "The World". In extreme short (and, therefore, a poor description), there are three works of Descartes here, which blended science and philosophy. The treatise on The Man (and The Fetus) he didn't feel confident to publish after Galileo's condemnation, so they are here published only for the second time (corrected from the first edition) and they are not finished as Descartes didn't every prepare them for publication. They delve into Descartes theories on the body, it's mechanisms, and how the psychosomatic affects it. About 50 corresponding illustrations (hard to count, as some pages may be two plates). The third work (again, a poor brief description), The World, was added to this second edition. "Descartes espoused mechanical philosophy, a form of natural philosophy popular in the 17th century. He thought everything physical in the universe to be made of tiny corpuscles of matter. Corpuscularianism is closely related to atomism. The World presents a corpuscularian cosmology in which swirling vortices explain, among other phenomena, the creation of the Solar System and the circular motion of planets around the Sun. The World rests on the heliocentric view, first explicated in Western Europe by Copernicus. Descartes delayed the book's release upon news of the Roman Inquisition's conviction of Galileo for "suspicion of heresy" and sentencing to house arrest. Descartes discussed his work on the book, and his decision not to release it, in letters with another philosopher, Marin Mersenne." About the Provenance - Bookplate of the scientist Herbert Mclean Evans, who is credited with discovering Vitamin E. Bibliographic Details - OCLC numbers 1323309050, 71707841, 457690626; held at the BNF, Bibliotheek Universiteit van Amseterdam, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, New York Public Library and Universidad de Navarra Physical Attributes - Measures approx. 25.5 x 19 x 4 cm. Signed in 4. Leather binding. Spine with five raised bands; five compartments richly decorated in gilt with central floret medallion and corner leafing florets, one compartment with "LHOMME DE DESCART" in gilt. Rebacked; older repair. Edges sprinkled. Illustrated. I count 49 plates in "The Man", and 32 plates in "The World". All pages checked, by gatherings, all present. Pages - xxxii prefatory leaves, 511, 8 pages table, 1 page royal privilege Collation - a4,e4,i4, o4, u4, aa4, ee4, ii4, A-Z4, Aa-Zz4, Aaa-Ttt4 Condition - See pictures. Binding has been rebacked, but it was long ago; still with wear to corners, edges, rubs to boards, etc. Some cracking along joints. Some loss to gilt of spine. A few tiny wormholes entering the leather. Chip at very base of spine that will likely fall off and expose bottom endband. Still, nice that they retained the earlier binding and the book is holding together well. Lots of bibliographic notes on endpapers, and ex libris ticket (and Rome bookseller); a few holes at gutter of free front endpaper. Toning and some fox spots throughout. Occasional moisture mark, thumb, page edge chip, dog-eared ear, candle ember mark, etc. Title page deckled at bottom edge; wide margins it seems. Top corner of first five leaves repaired (old), no text affected. Several tiny wormholes in bottom margin. N2 with several dark stains (not mold; ink maybe). Worm track at bottom margin sometimes tissue repaired. Several annotations rear endpaper. Despite notes, a solid and honest book, cared for (once repaired, long ago), with wide margins. 2000. Seller Inventory # 628
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