Published by Printed for Sam. Smith and Benj. Walford, Printers to the Royal Society, at the Prince's Arms in St. Paul's Church-Yard, London, 1704
First Edition
First edition. THE EARLIEST OF THE SIX KNOWN AUTHOR'S PRESENTATION COPIES. First edition, first issue, and a superlative copy, presented by Newton to his close friend and collaborator Nicolas Fatio de Duillier, with an inscription recording the gift in Fatio's hand and with his ink and pencil annotations in the text. This is the earliest of the six known presentation copies of the Opticks, none of which is inscribed in Newton's hand - the presentation inscription in this copy is dated five days earlier than that in the copy Newton presented to the Royal Society, of which he was then President. Only one other author's presentation copy of Opticks has sold at auction, that copy presented to Edmond Halley (lot 918, Robert S. Pirie sale, Sotheby's New York, December 4, 2015, $1,330,000). Of Newton's three greatest contributions to science - his theory of gravity, his theories of light and colour, and the invention of calculus - the first was published for the first time in the Principia (1687), and the other two in the present work. "Newton's Opticks did for light what his Principia had done for gravitation, namely, placed it on a scientific basis" (Babson, p. 66)."One of the supreme productions of the human mind" (Andrade), the Opticks "summarized Newton's discoveries and theories concerning light and color: the spectrum of the sunlight, the degrees of refraction associated with different colors, the color circle (the first in the history of color theory), the invention of the reflecting telescope, the first workable theory of the rainbow, and experiments on what would later be called 'interference effects' in conjunction with Newton's rings. His discovery of periodicity in Newton's rings . led Newton to postulate that periodicity was a fundamental property either of light waves or of waves associated with light. Nevertheless, Newton preferred the corpuscular theory of light, with which he is usually associated, because of its explanatory value for certain optical phenomena and because it allowed him to link the action of gross bodies with the action of light" (Norman). "All previous philosophers and mathematicians had been sure that white light is pure and simple, regarding colors as modifications or qualifications of the white. Newton showed that the opposite is true . Natural white light, far from being simple, is a compound of many pure elementary colors which can be separated and recombined at will" (PMM). "Newton's Opticks dominated the science of optics for over a century . the experimental approach adopted in the Opticks was lauded and widely followed in optical science and served as a model for other experimental sciences" (Shapiro, p. 166). The two appended tracts, Tractatus de quadratura curvarum and Enumeratio linearum tertii ordinis, are the first of Newton's purely mathematical works to be published. De quadratura is Newton's first publication of his method of fluxions, or calculus, which he developed in terms of 'prime and ultimate ratios', an early version of the theory of limits; it includes the first published statement of the general binomial theorem and of 'Taylor's theorem' on series expansions. Fatio de Duillier, the recipient of this copy of the Opticks, was an accomplished mathematician in his own right. After working in the Netherlands, where he befriended Christiaan Huygens, he came to England in 1687, became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1688, and made the acquaintance of Newton. Fatio became the leading intermediary between Newton and Huygens; the exchanges between these two great scientists did much to shape and modify Newton's theories on optics and other matters. In the 1690s, as Newton's closest confidant, Fatio became the most likely person to oversee a revised edition of the Principia, discussing corrections with Newton and exchanging letters. Fatio championed Newton against his Continental rivals in his Lineae brevissimi descensus investigatio geometrica duplex (1699), the work that ignited the priority dis.
Published by Smith & Walford, London, 1704
Seller: Argosy Book Store, ABAA, ILAB, New York, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
hardcover. Condition: very good(+). First. 4 parts in 1 volume. Title page printed in red & black within a double-ruled border. Illustrated with 19 folding copperplate engravings.[4], 144, 211, [1] pages. (In the second sequence, p. 120 is marked 112, and there are blank pages between 137-8 and 138-9). Thick 4to, contemporary blind-tooled paneled calf, well-worn and now expertly re-backed in sympathetic leather (contemporary signatures on title dated 1704, and rear endpaper; last several pages have marginal dampstains, otherwise a remarkably clean crisp copy). London: Smith & Walford, Printers to the Royal Society, 1704. First edition, first issue - with the author not named on title page. "Newton's Opticks expounds his corpuscular theory of light and summarizes his experiments concerning light and colour. It also prints two important mathematical treatises (omitted in later editions) describing his invention of the fluxional calculus, the grounds for his claim of priority over Leibniz. Newton arrived at most of his unconventional ideas on colour by about 1668, and Opticks was largely complete by 1692. However, when he first partially expressed his theories in public, in 1672 and 1675, they provoked hostile criticism, especially on the continent. As a result, Newton delayed the publication of Opticks until his most vociferous critics - especially Robert Hooke - were dead. Unusually for Newton, and in what was probably a further defensive move, the work was first published in English rather than Latin, becoming a major contribution to the development of vernacular scientific literature. By about 1715, Opticks established itself as a model for interweaving theory with quantitative experimentation. Newton's aim was not to "explain the properties of light by hypotheses, but to propose and prove them by reason and experiments" (p. 1). The great achievement of the work was to show that colour was a mathematically definable property." The work contains: The First Book of Opticks, The Second Book of Opticks, The Thrid Book of Opticks (Tertii Ordinis: Enumeratio Linearum), Tractatus de Quadratura Curvarum. The main work is in English, the 2 treatises (pages 138-211) are in Latin. Babson 132; Gray 174; Horblit 79b; PMM 172; Norman 1588; Dibner 148; Wallis 174.
Published by W. and J. Innys, printers to the Royal Society
Seller: George Robert Minkoff, Inc., ABAA, Great Barrington, MA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Illustrated with 12 folding engraved plates of optical/geometrical diagrams and a few woodcut diagrams and tables in text; large woodcut decorative tail-pieces, head-pieces and initials 8vo Contemporary full speckled calf; boards with double-fillet gilt-ruled borders; spine with five raised bands and gilt-lettered (faded) morocco label; edges speckled red London: Printed for W and J Innys, printers to the Royal Society, 1718 Second English Edition revised and enlarged by Newton First Octavo Edition Second issue, with the title-page dated 1718 (the very rare first issue is dated 1717) The first edition appeared in 1704 in quarto For this second edition the plates were newly engraved to fit the new octavo format The most important feature of this second edition is that the number of Queries at the end was increased from 16 to 31, including the celebrated Query 28 on the nature of light The Queries in the initial set were rather brief, but the later ones became more substantial, written as short essays filling many pages (Babson 134; Gray 176; Wallis 176)The particular importance of the series of Queries included at the end of Book III of the Opticks has been emphasized by numerous researchers and bibliographers The Queries contain Newton's thoughts and insights on the future directions of scientific inquiry on the nature of matter, and had a profound influence on the development of modern science The Second Edition contains, in particular, the first appearance in print of the celebrated Query 28 on the nature of light and Query 31 which presents Newton's only chemical writings (apart from the De natura acidorum), making this edition especially desirable Query 31 proved immensely influential, as, among other things, it launched affinity chemistry and inspired the dozens of affinity tables that were made in the 18th century, based on Newton's description of affinity gradientsOpticks contains Newton's summarization of his discoveries and theories concerning light and color, from his first published paper onward, and include his work on the spectrum of sunlight, the degrees of refraction associated with different colors, the color circle, the rainbow, "Newton's rings," and his invention of the reflecting telescope Other subjects include questions of gravitation, metabolism and digestion, sensation, the circulation of blood, moral philosophy, the inductive method, and the vivid images haunting the dreams of madmenWith armorial bookplate of Richard Pryce of Gunley, high sheriff of Montgomeryshire; with 2 small stamps for the private library of Hugh Selbourne, MD Binding slightly rubbed with a few minor scuffs; spine label slightly chipped and faded; ends of spine slightly chipped; short crack to top of front joint Interior near fine with only occasional minor spotting, mainly marginal; a few small rust-spots; a few plates slightly misfolded In all, a fine, wide-margined copy with the publisher's advertisements at the end. Scarce.
Seller: Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller Inc., New York, NY, U.S.A.
Twelve folding engraved plates. 4 p.l., 382 pp., one leaf of ads. 8vo, cont. calf (small portions of ends of spine & one corner carefully repaired), spine gilt, red morocco lettering piece on spine. London: W. Innys, 1730. Fourth edition, and the final edition to be revised by Newton, of this great classic. It contains the complete set of 31 Queries which reveal some of Newton's most influential and speculative writing. Fine crisp copy. Contemporary armorial bookplate of Edward Powell. ? Babson 136.
Published by William Innys, London, 1730
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. 4th Edition. New Calf Spine And Tips Over Marbled Paper Covered Boards, New Endpapers. Two Preliminary Blanks, Title, Advertisements To First, Second And Fourth Editions382 Pp + 12 Folding Plates And Two Pages Of Publisher's Ads At Rear. Page Block 19.5 Cm (Text Block 6.5" X 3 1/2" From Top To Bottom Of Printed Area, Including Page Running Headings) Tall. Top Edge Of Page Block Is Dark (Grey Or Black), Fore Edge And Bottom Edge Red, All Polished. Leaves 7 5/8" Tall; Binding 7 3/4" X 5 3/16". The Last And Best Edition Prepared By Newton, Corrected From The Third Edition By Newton; In This Fourth Edition Of 1730, There Are 31 Queries, And It Is The Famous "31St Query" That, Over The Next Two Hundred Years, Stimulated A Great Deal Of Speculation And Development On Theories Of Chemical Affinity. The Publishers Have Added To This Edition Several Citations From The Lectiones Opticae (1669-1671) To Show Where Demonstrations, Omitted From The Opticks, May Be Found. Unusually Well Preserved, Binding Fine, Contents Clean, Some Tiny Foxing Spots Mainly In Margins And Mainly Towards Beginning Of Book; Very Slight Wear To Edges Of Page Block. .
Published by Printed for B. Creake, . . . J. Sackfield . . .; And sold by W. Mears, . . . 1719., London:, 1719
Seller: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Switzerland
First Edition
Sm. 4to. [xxii], 201, [5] pp. 10 folding engraved copperplates, 5 figs. (pp. 24, 54, 75, 112), half-title is a publisher's ad for Boerhaave, rear publisher's ads [2 ff.], head and tail-pieces; title edges chipped. With errata. Title (+ p.101) perforated stamp and with a rubber stamp on verso, of the John Crerar Library, eight plates with the ex-library rubber stamp on versos; waterstained throughout. WITH FREQUENT EARLY INK CORRECTIONAL NOTES. Modern half blind-stamped dark calf, gilt spine title, raised bands, marbled paper over boards, new endleaves, bindery ticket at rear: Pat M. Bruno. Inscription on recto of front blank (verso is ad for Boerhaave book), "W. --- 1720 Power." SPURIOUS EDITION OF DESAGULIERS' FAMOUS PRIVATE LECTURES CONTAINING NOTES ON BOYLE'S AIR PUMP AND NEWTON ON COLOR THEORY. FIRST ENLARGED EDITION, early issue, without "All carefully Examined and Corrected by Mr. Desaguliers" on title [which otherwise is re-titled, "Lectures of Experimental Philosophy"]. Includes: Sir Isaac Newton's Colours. Proposition. Lights which differ in Colour, differ also in Degrees of Refrangibility. Initially published without the author's permission and then, by evidence of the printed Preface, agreed to issue the book with an erratum. / There are multiple forms of this edition as different copies collate differently (Andrade, Kenney, Honeyman copies). The Honeyman copy, called a second edition, has two title-pages, and the Preface by Desaguliers, with an imprint of 1719. There are also differences in the title-pages. The fiasco of the unauthorized edition is the cause of the various issue differences. "Perhaps Dawson hoped . . . to ingratiate himself with his patron, but instead he incurred the wrath of the lecturer. Immediately Desaguliers became aware of the book, which he called 'ill put together, sadly transcrib'd and worse corrected', he approached the booksellers. He found that two-thirds of the imprint had already been sold by Messrs Mears, Creake and Sackfield, but they paid him ten guineas 'to pacifie me'. They also promised to insert into all remaining copies a preface that Desaguliers would write, together with a substantial errata. The preface follows the Dawson dedication in some copies of the book entitled, A System of Experimental Philosophy, but precedes it in another version called Lectures in Experimental Philosophy." See: Carpenter, pp. 34-5, 119. / Contents: Mechanical experiments, Mechanical powers & definitions; How to make a heavy Body seem to rise it self; gravity, balance, leaver, pulley, wheel axle, wedge, screw, laws of nature, hydrostatics; Description of Robert Boyle's Air-Pump (uses & experiments); How to make an air vacuum; Barometers, Thermometers, Hydrometers; Catoptrichs; Dioptrichs; Sir Isaac Newton's Colours; Condensing Engine; "Rowley's Horary being a machine to represent the Motion of the Moon about the Earth, and the Earth, Venus and Mercury about the Sun." / The preface, written by Desaguliers himself, explains that this volume of lectures was released "before I designed to publish them." He then retells how Paul Dawson "took a copy of the lectures . . . that they may be service to him when he went thro' my courses, and they were afterwards sold and published without my knowledge." He obtained a copy of the text and made numerous corrections :: thus the micro-print 1 ý page errata. The he invites the owner to annotate the book throughout "before he begins to read the lectures." And indeed, the owner named Powers did annotate this copy :: clear evidence he read that Preface. (A2-3). / The DNB asserts that Desaguliers, "held in great esteem by Sir Isaac Newton," "is said to have been the first to deliver learned lectures to general audiences. Lectures by him, at his London house were widely attended and were made attractive by experiments." In addition it mentions that Paul Dawson was responsible for the work and that Desaguliers himself "disavowed" himself of the edition. :: DNB (pp. 850-1). / Nicholas A Hans describes the types of persons attending Desaguliers' lectures: "merchants, craftsmen and clerks, and his private audiences consisted of gentlemen and courtiers and included ladies as well." :: Nicholas A Hans, New Trends in Education in the Eighteenth Century, (1951), p. 141. / Westfall says of Desaguliers, he "became a fixture at the meetings [of the Royal Society], where he carried out sets of experiments intimately related to various aspects of Newtonian natural philosophy. Some of his experiments, such as the transmission of heat through a vacuum, influenced Newton's views, and other found their way into the third edition of the Principia." :: Never at Rest, pp. 685-6. / Writing for the DSB, A. Rupert Hall, points out that Desaguliers did not produce his own version of these lectures until 1734, "when he took occasion to denounce this unauthorized version. . ." :: DSB, IV, pp. 43-6. / John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683-1744), born at La Rochelle, emigrated to England in 1685 [as a Huguenot refugee, hidden in a tub at 2-years of age], studied at Oxford, he became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1714. As the Society's experimenter and a close friend of Newton he often verified Newton's theories through experimentation. "In 1717 he published Physico-Mechanical Lectures, an eighty-page abstract of the twenty-two lectures of his course. Although not authorized by Desaguliers, the present work is the first full account of his lectures, edited by his student Paul Dawson. Primarily of interest as a textbook of Newtonian physics, many chemical topics are included. The first issue appeared with the title A System of Experimental Philosophy." / REFERENCES: Bakken [title: "Lectures of experimental philosophy . . . 1719"] pp. 52-3; Goodison, English Barometers 1680-1860, p. 369; Keynes, Boyle, 366, pp. 122-9; Roy G. Neville, I, p. 354 [second issue]; Poggendorff, I, 554; Wellcome II, p. 451; Wheeler 249. Not in Babson, Barchas, Gray, or Verne L. R.
Published by Prometheus, 2003
ISBN 10: 1591020956 ISBN 13: 9781591020950
Seller: The Book Spot, Sioux Falls, SD, U.S.A.
Condition: New.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Collectors Bookstore, Antwerpen, Belgium
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. The Optical Papers Of Isaac Newton: Volume 2, The Opticks (1704) And Related Papers, 1688-1717 by Isaac Newton. Published by Cambridge University Press in 2021. Hardcover ISBN:9780521302180. Collectible item in very fine condition.
Published by (Bruxelles, Culture et Civilisation 1966)., 1966
Seller: Buch + Kunst + hommagerie Sabine Koitka, Basel, Switzerland
fester Einband. 4°. 211 S. Mit zahlreichen Figuren auf 8 Tafeln. Kunstlederbd. mit golgepr. Rückentitel. Faksimile der Ausgabe London, Smith and Walford 1704. - Aufgrund seiner Leistungen, vor allem auf den Gebieten der Physik und Mathematik gilt Sir Isaac Newton als einer der bedeutendsten Wissenschaftler aller Zeiten. Vorliegendes Werk erläutert seine Leistungen auf dem Gebiet der Optik: Die von ihm verfochtene Teilchentheorie des Lichtes und die Erklärung des Lichtspektrums. Lang en.
Published by G. Bell and Sons, Ltd, London, 1931
Seller: johnson rare books & archives, ABAA, Covina, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very good. Reprinted from the Fourth Edition (1730), with a foreword by Prof. Albert Einstein, Nobel Laureate, and an introduction by Prof. E.T. Whittaker, F.R.S. Small octavo: xxviii, [2], 414 p. with textual figures. Original blue cloth binding, with gilt titles. Mild foxing along the edges, with some light edgewear to the dust jacket; otherwise very good. First published in 1704, Newton's Opticks provides not only a survey of 18th century knowledge about all aspects of light, but also countless number of the author's unique scientific insights.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Kennys Bookstore, Olney, MD, U.S.A.
Condition: New. 2021. Bilingual. hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Newton's Opticks is the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century. This final volume of The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton contains manuscripts that document the evolution of the Opticks through its three principal published editions. It shows how Newton constructed the book that for over a century was the leading treatise on optics, a fecund source of natural philosophical speculations, and which is now considered a classic of science. The volume opens with the manuscript of the first edition (1704) and the first draft of the Opticks in Latin, which he soon abandoned for English. This is followed by the manuscripts of the queries that Newton added to the Latin translation in 1706 and the second English edition in 1717. Other, shorter manuscripts are included, as are copious notes and commentary, making this a valuable resource for historians and philosophers of science, and historians of philosophy. Shapiro documents, through its three principal published editions, the evolution of Newton's Opticks - the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century - together with related material, including the queries. It is an essential resource for historians and philosophers of science, as well as historians of philosophy. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Published by Cambridge Univ Pr, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Brand New. 423 pages. 10.00x7.50x1.00 inches. In Stock.
Published by Cambridge Univ Pr, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Brand New. 423 pages. 10.00x7.50x1.00 inches. In Stock.
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Grand Eagle Retail, Wilmington, DE, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Newton's Opticks is the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century. This final volume of The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton contains manuscripts that document the evolution of the Opticks through its three principal published editions. It shows how Newton constructed the book that for over a century was the leading treatise on optics, a fecund source of natural philosophical speculations, and which is now considered a classic of science. The volume opens with the manuscript of the first edition (1704) and the first draft of the Opticks in Latin, which he soon abandoned for English. This is followed by the manuscripts of the queries that Newton added to the Latin translation in 1706 and the second English edition in 1717. Other, shorter manuscripts are included, as are copious notes and commentary, making this a valuable resource for historians and philosophers of science, and historians of philosophy. Shapiro documents, through its three principal published editions, the evolution of Newton's Opticks - the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century - together with related material, including the queries. It is an essential resource for historians and philosophers of science, as well as historians of philosophy. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Kennys Bookshop and Art Galleries Ltd., Galway, GY, Ireland
Condition: New. 2021. Bilingual. hardcover. . . . . .
Published by London, G. Bell, (1931)., 1931
Seller: Alexanderplatz Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
First modern edition. Title page continues: Reprinted from the Fourth Edition with a foreword by Prof. Albert Einstein and an introduction by Prof. E. T. Whittaker. Small 8vo. Cloth with dust jacket. Title page followed by facsimile of title page of original edition and semi-facsimile setting of text. Very good copy in good dust jacket, prior owner's name in upper right corner of front free endpaper. One-page foreword by Albert Einstein. Very scarce, especially in dust jacket.
Published by Cambridge University Press Feb 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany
Buch. Condition: Neu. Neuware - The definitive scholarly edition of Newton's Opticks, its precursors and related material, along with copious notes and commentary.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
Condition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: GreatBookPricesUK, Castle Donington, DERBY, United Kingdom
Condition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: moluna, Greven, Germany
Condition: New. Shapiro documents, through its three principal published editions, the evolution of Newton s Opticks - the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century - together with related material, including the queries. It is an essential r.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: Biblios, Frankfurt am main, HESSE, Germany
Condition: New.
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
Seller: CitiRetail, Stevenage, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Newton's Opticks is the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century. This final volume of The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton contains manuscripts that document the evolution of the Opticks through its three principal published editions. It shows how Newton constructed the book that for over a century was the leading treatise on optics, a fecund source of natural philosophical speculations, and which is now considered a classic of science. The volume opens with the manuscript of the first edition (1704) and the first draft of the Opticks in Latin, which he soon abandoned for English. This is followed by the manuscripts of the queries that Newton added to the Latin translation in 1706 and the second English edition in 1717. Other, shorter manuscripts are included, as are copious notes and commentary, making this a valuable resource for historians and philosophers of science, and historians of philosophy. Shapiro documents, through its three principal published editions, the evolution of Newton's Opticks - the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century - together with related material, including the queries. It is an essential resource for historians and philosophers of science, as well as historians of philosophy. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Published by Cambridge University Press 2021-04-30, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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HRD. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0521302188 ISBN 13: 9780521302180
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