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Verlag: Marzorati, 1969
Anbieter: Librodifaccia, Alessandria, AL, Italien
Zustand: Buone. italiano Condizioni dell'esterno: Discrete con difetti, segni d'uso Condizioni dell'interno: Discrete con Difetti, firma di appartenenza bruniture.
Verlag: Ertz,, In Venezia,, 1711
Anbieter: Studio Bibliografico Benacense, Riva del garda, Italien
Cm. 17, pp. (12) 497 (3). Con 3 tavole incise fuori testo. Leg. coeva in cart. alla rustica con nervi passanti e titoli ms. al dorso. Esemplare in eccellente stato di conservazione. A fogli chiusi.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1716
Anbieter: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin, Paris, Frankreich
Buch
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Assez bon. ITALIE Giornale de' letterati d'Italia.Tomo ventesimo quarto, anno 1715.Soto la protezione del serenissimo Gio Gastone, principe di Toscana.Venezia, 1716, in-12, rel. pl. bas., dos à nerfs, orné, pièce de titre, coiff. sup. émoussée, mors lég. fendus, tranches rouges, signet, portr. de J. Valletta. 300 gr.
Anbieter: Libreria Oreste Gozzini snc, Firenze, FI, Italien
In Modena, presso la Societa Tipografica, [1773], un volume in-12, br. muta coeva (mancanze al dorso), pp. [8], 422, [2], l'ultima c. bianca. Solo il volume di marzo - aprile 1773. Esemplare a pieni margini.
Verlag: Stamperia di Jacopo Vallarsi, 1737-38, In Verona,, 1737
Anbieter: Studio Bibliografico Benacense, Riva del garda, Italien
Due volumi di cm. 17,5, pp. xxiv, 358 (2); 379 (1). Ritratti entro medaglioni ai frontespizi e 7 belle tavole incise in rame fuori testo (anche ripiegate). Leg. coeva in cart. alla rustica con nervi passanti e titoli ms. Bell'esemplare, fresco, marginoso e stampato su carta forte. Raccolta di scritti di vario argomento cui spiccano vari testi d'interesse scientifico e storico: Osservazioni astronomiche; Osservazioni sulla cometa. fatte nella Specola di Bologna; ecc.
Verlag: Cornell University Press. 1988., 1988
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Ovidius, Bredevoort, Niederlande
Zustand: Gebraucht / Used. Paperback. Very good. Xi,198pp.
Verlag: Naples Felice Mosca -1712, 1709
Anbieter: Shapero Rare Books, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Buch Erstausgabe
First editions; four works in one volume, 12mo, (15.5 x 9.5 cm); small woodcut device to titles, woodcut headpieces and initials, some leaves browned, scattered light foxing; later quarter brown morocco, gilt lettering to spine, raised bands, some wear to boards and extremities, corners slightly rubbed, marbled endpapers, overall a good firm copy; 126, [2]; 130, [2]; 48; 93, [3]pp. An exceedingly scarce Vico sammelband, comprising four first edition works. De nostri temporis studiorum ratione, or 'On the Study Method of Our Times', is an oration comparing classical political-philosophical thought with the modernists, especially modern jurisprudence, drawing attention to what the two can learn from each other. It is described by Healey as 'perhaps the most brilliant defence of the humanities ever written' (p294) and is rich with Vico's reflections about educative methods. Notably, this volume includes Vico's first major publication, Liber Primus Metaphysicus, which contains the fullest statement of the verum factum principle. The principle states that truth is verified through creation and not, as per Descartes, through observation. This anti-Cartesian philosophical standpoint in De antiquissima sapientia was to continue for a further two books, the Liber Secundus Physicus and Liber Tertius Moralis, yet these were never completed. In response to criticism of De antiquissima sapientia by the Giornale dei letterati d'Italia in 1711, Vico published two Replies in 1711 and 1712 (bound here). In these, he defends and clarifies his views on the theory of knowledge and metaphysics, with the second taking an even stronger stance against Descartes' methodology than the first. This exchange between Vico and the Giornale was considered by both parties to be the natural completion of the De antiquissima sapientia. Despite having been relatively unknown in the eighteenth century, and read only in his native Naples, the ideas of Vico are predecessors to the ideas of the intellectuals of the Enlightenment. Moreover, recognition of Vico's intellectual influence began in the nineteenth century, and his works would go on to influence the likes of Karl Marx, W.B. Yeats, and James Joyce.
Verlag: Brunati, Trento, 1717
Anbieter: Coenobium Libreria antiquaria, Asti, Italien
In 24, pp. (16) + 272. cart. coeva. Buon esemplare della quinta ediz. di questa fortunata opera stampata in ed. orig. postuma l'anno precedente (1716) a Venezia e in seguito piu' volte ristampata. L'A., medico di Verona, mori' a 54 anni nel 1715. A Verona fondo' l'Accademia degli Aletofili: 'Conviene nel sentimento di taluni che gl'infermi muojano non meno sovente per causa de' rimedj che delle malattie ed insegna a far senza medici. L'autore non era certamnete pagato dalla salutifera facolta' per prestarle questo bel servigio' ('Nuovo dizionario istorico ovvero istoria in compendio.', XII, Napoli, 1793, p. 154). ITA.
Verlag: Naples: Felicis Mosca, 1710, 1710
Anbieter: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
A superb Vico nonce collection, comprising four early works, each in first edition and exceedingly rare. Liber Primus Metaphysicus, Vico's first major publication, is bound with his two important Replies to the Giornale dei letterati d'Italia (1711 and 1712), and De nostri temporis (1709), "perhaps the most brilliant defense of the humanities ever written" (Healey, p. 293). Liber Primus Metaphysicus contains Vico's fullest statement of the verum factum principle ("the true is precisely what is made"). It is the first book in the unrealised series of three outlining his anti-Cartesian philosophical system, and the 1710 edition is rare. It "remained virtually unknown for over a hundred years, although during Vico's lifetime it was widely read in Neapolitan academic circles" (Palmer, p. x). It was not translated from Latin into Italian until 1816, and it was only reprinted in 1828. The second and third books, Liber Secundus Physicus and Liber Tertius Moralis, were never completed for unknown reasons. In Vico's two uncommon Replies, he defends and elucidates his views on the theory of knowledge and metaphysics, in response to the criticisms levied against De antiquissima sapientia by the Giornale dei letterati d'Italia in 1711. The first contains Vico's answer to an anonymous reviewer, which Benedetto Croce suggests was Bernardo Trevisano, a contemporary Venetian scholar of philosophy. The second work is another "risposta", this time addressed to the entire editorial staff of the Giornale, written in response to their printed answer to his first Reply. In this essay, longer and more detailed than its predecessor, Vico takes an even stronger stand against Descartes' methodology. The Giornale proposed (and Vico agreed) that this exchange be considered "a kind of completion of the De antiquissima sapienta" (Marshall, p. 143). One of Vico's duties as the professor of rhetoric at the University of Naples was "to open the academic year with a Latin oration, and Vico carried out this responsibility by giving the introductory lectures between 1699 and 1708. The last one, printed in 1709 under the title De Nostri Temporis Studiorum Ratione ('On the Method of the Studies of Our Time'), is rich with his reflections about pedagogical methods. This work was followed almost immediately by the publication of Vico's great metaphysical essay, De antiquissima italorum sapientia" (Ency. Brit.). Vico's writings gained popularity during the 19th century, and his impact on the modern philosophy of history, culture, and mythology cannot be understated. Marx cites Vico in Das Kapital and Trotsky quotes him on the first page of his History of the Russian Revolution; Coleridge and Yeats were enthusiastic disseminators of Vichian ideas; and Joyce composed Finnegans Wake using Vico's four-part cyclical theory of civilisation. Provenance: from the library of Neapolitan nobleman Giovanni Domenico Berio, marchese di Salza (d. 1791) and subsequently his son, the author and librettist Francesco Maria Berio (1765-1820), with their Marchionis Salsae armorial bookplate on the front pastedown. The majority of their famous library was purchased after Francesco Maria Berio's death by William Ward, 3rd Viscount Dudley and Ward (1750-1823), for his son John William Ward, later 1st Earl of Dudley (1781-1833); the younger's armorial bookplate bearing the motto "Comme je fus" is on the rear pastedown. Robin Healey, Italian Literature Before 1900 in English Translation: An Annotated Bibliography, 1929-2008, 2011; David L. Marshall, Vico and the Transformation of Rhetoric in Early Modern Europe, 2010; Lucia M. Palmer, trans., De Antiquissima Italorum Sapientia Ex Linguae Latinae Originibus Eruenda, 1988. Four works bound in one volume, duodecimo (145 x 82 mm). Contemporary vellum, later red paper spine label imitating earlier gilt-ruled design beneath, edges sprinkled blue, green silk book marker. Woodcut title page devices, headpiece in first work, initials. Engraved armorial bookplates on pastedowns (see note). Vellum soiled, spine wormed in places with some loss to vellum at head, cords remaining firm, spine label a little chipped at edges; contents browned (more so in the last two works) and sporadically marked, small red paper remnant adhered to front free endpaper. In very good condition overall.
Verlag: Jacopo Vallarsi 1737-1740, Verona, 1737
Anbieter: Attic Books (ABAC, ILAB), London, ON, Kanada
Leather bound. Zustand: Very good. 6 vols.: 359; 380; 323; 392; 405; 454 p. 17 cm. Title vignettes, headpieces and tailpieces. 17 fold-out pages. Full leather. Scuffing, labels chipped or missing, hinges delicate, corners bumped. Bookplates for Wilmot, Earl of Lisburne on front pastedowns. Foxing on edges, but pages are remarkably bright and clean. Small ink notation on title page of vol. I. Francesco Scipione, marchese di Maffei, was a critic, playwright and antiquarian with a specialty in Etruscan antiquities. Italian text.
In Verona, dalla stamperia di Jacopo Vallarsi, 1737-1739, voll. 3, in-12, cartonatura coeva, pp. XXIV, 358, [2] - 379, [1] - 392. Con 8 tavv. f.t. Solo 3 volumi sui 6 complessivi dell'opera. Affrontati argomenti di astronomia, antiquaria e letteratura.