An epitome of the Synthetic philosophy. With a preface by Herbert Spencer.
Book Description
First edition. Large 8vo, (228 x 160). Highly influential in the second half of the nineteenth century and virtually forgotten today, the English social philosopher Herbert Spencer used the word ‘evolution’ in a philosophical context in “The Genesis of science” (1854) and formulated the theory of evolution in his essay “Progress: its laws and causes” in 1857, i.e., two years before the publication of Darwin’s “Origin of species” in 1859.
Dealer Notes
The bare essence of Herbert Spencer's ten volume Synthetic philosophy without the illustrative material, mostly in his own words. "Before starting on a journey through an unknown region, study of a map is desirable; and a clear preliminary conception is more readily obtained from a small outline-map than from a large one full of details. In like manner, before commencing a series of volumes which, though all pervaded by certain organizing ideas, deal with various subjects, an introductory view presenting these organizing ideas in smaller space and freed from elaboration, can scarcely fail to facilitate comprehension. The epitome which Mr. Collins has prepared in the course of five years fulfils this purpose."--from the Preface by Herbert Spencer.
Author
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) & Frederick Howard Collins (1857-1910)
Date
1889
Binding
Original blue-green publisher's cloth spine lettered gilt
Publisher
London: Williams and Norgate
Condition
A tight and clean copy, minor foxing to endleaves, spine somewhat discoloured with slightest edge wear but in all very good.
Pages
pp. xviii, 571, includes index
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