Paris, Maloine, 1908 (quatrieme edition). Format 14x23 cm, broche, 405 pages. Quelques pages en fin d'ouvrage presentent une mouillure tres claire dans la marge. Bon etat.
Reference : 29584
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Editions Masson, Paris 1904. Exemplaire broché, couverture usagée d'éd. (manque 1 plat), in-8, VI + 406 pages avec figures et annexes.
P., Masson, 1903, in-8, bradel cart. vert marbré, pièce de titre noire, tr. mouch. (rel. mod.), (4)-II-400 pp., 20 figures in-texte. (GF22D)
Édition originale. "Ce livre, d'une originalité incontestable [...] cherche à nous enlever la crainte de la mort, et à nous réconcilier avec l'idée de l'anéantissement. [...] Les consolations que nous offre M. Metchnikoff sont extrêmement curieuses; il ne croit, ce me semble, à aucune espèce de survivance; je dirai plus : pour traiter un pareil sujet, il n'a fait appel à aucune des ressources qu'auraient pu lui procurer les phénomènes psychiques. Il est resté tout naturellement dans son domaine, qui est celui du naturaliste, domaine où il semble qu'à première vue la philosophie optimiste ne doit pas trouver beaucoup d'arguments. [...] Malgré toutes les objections qu'on pourrait faire à cette philosophie optimiste, nous nous plaisons à reconnaître toute la hardiesse de son originalité. Voilà bien le livre d'un homme sincère." (Alfred Binet, in L'Année psychologique, 1903, vol. 10, n° 1, pp. 548-549).
Masson & Cie, Libraires de l'Académie de Médecine, Paris. 1904. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, 1er plat abîmé, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 405 pages. Illustré de gravures en noir et blanc dans le texte. Etiquette de code sur la couverture. Quelques tampons de bibliothèque. Annotations en page de faux-titre (ex-libris). Quelques annotations au crayon dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
2e édition. Les désharmonies de la nature humaine. Tentatives pour atténuer le mal résultant des désharmonies de la nature huamaine. Ce que peut faire la science... Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
Paris, Masson 1903 vi + 405pp.+ quelques figures dans le texte, 2e édition, br.orig. (dos renforcé), 23cm., bon état, F80670
Paris, 1903. 8vo. Nice contemporary half calf with raised bands and gilt lettering to spine. Inner hinge a bit weak, but still tight. 3 leaves with a tear, no loss. Otherwise a nice and clean copy. Inscribed by the author to half-title, to the preeminent Russian Byzantinist F.I. Uspenky. (6), II, 399 pp.
First edition, first issue, presentation-copy, of the groundbreaking work, in which Metchikoff coins ""gerontology"" and establishes the field, which today is considered more important than ever, namely the study of the social, psychological and biological aspects of aging.Earlier on, Metchnikoff had made pioneering studies in immunology, and these led him on to the problems of biological ageing. His first work on the subject is the present, in which he coins the term ""gerontology"" and advances the idea that senile changes result from the toxins produced by bacteria in the intestine. In order to prevent these ""unhealthy fermentations"", Metchnikoff advocates the inclusion of sour milk on one's diet. As his ideas of ""right living"" were so closely connected with the consummation of large amounts of fermented milk or yoghurt made with a Bulgarian bacillus, his name actually came to be associated with a popular commercial preparation of yogurt (although he received no royalties). His studies into the potential life-lengthening properties of lactic acid bacteria, inspired Japanese scientist Minoru Shirota to begin investigating the causal relationship between bacteria and good intestinal health, which eventually led to the worldwide marketing of Kefir and other fermented milk drinks or probiotics, still extremely popular today.Apart from the consummation of yoghurt, Metchnikoff warned of eating uncooked foods, claiming that the bacteria present on them could cause cancer. Metchnikoff claimed he even plunged bananas into boiling water after unpeeling them and passed his silverware through flames before using it.""In his ""Nature of Man"" Metchnikoff argued that when diseases have been suppressed and life has been hygienically regulated, death would come only with extreme old age. Death would then be natural, accepted gratefully, and robbed of its terrors."" (D.S.B. IX: 334-35).He continued writing on ageing and death until 1910. In 1908 he shared the Nobel Prize for medicine with Ehrlich for his work on immunity.The interesting presentation-inscription reads: ""Dorogim Naste I Fedoru/ Ivanovich Uspenskim/ na dobruyu panijat ot Il. Metchnikova."" [In Russian, i.e.: For dear Nastya and Fyodor/ Ivanovich Uspenski/ in good memory from Il. Metchnikov."" Fyodor Ivanovich Uspensky or Uspenskij (1845-1928) was the preeminent Russian Byzantinist in the first third of the 20th century. His works are considered to be among the finest illustrations of the flowering of Byzantine studies in Tsarist Russia.Uspensky was educated at the University of St. Petersburg, with his first thesis (1872) dedicated to Nicetas Choniates. For two decades (1874-94) he read lectures at the Novorossiysky University in Odessa. This position allowed him to spend considerable time abroad.Uspensky's doctoral thesis (1879) dealt with the foundation of the Second Bulgarian Empire. Although he specialized in the Byzantine-Bulgarian relations and investigated the Slavic influence on the Byzantine economy, Uspensky also researched and wrote extensively on the Crusades.In 1894 Uspensky, who shared Slavophile ideals, decided to move to Constantinople in order to study and protect the surviving monuments of Byzantine antiquity, which had been neglected by the Ottoman authorities for centuries. He founded the Russian Archaeological Institute (headquartered at Studion) and presided over its pioneering archaeological research in Constantinople, Asia Minor, Macedonia and Bulgaria. In 1900, he was elected into the Russian Academy of Sciences. With the outbreak of World War I, Uspensky was forced to abandon his work and flee Turkey.Back in Petrograd, the 70-year-old professor was invited to edit the organ of Byzantine studies, ""Vizantiysky Vremennik"". After the October Revolution, he delivered lectures at the Leningrad University (1922-27) and, enduring criticism of the Bolshevik authorities, prepared for publication the results of a lifelong study - a monumental three-volume account of the history of the Byzantine Empire.Uspensky died in Leningrad in 1928. The posthumous publication of his magnum opus, based on numerous unpublished sources and unprecedented in scope, demonstrated the wide range of his scholarship. His book about the Trapezuntine Empire also appeared posthumously.