Gollancz. 2007. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 350 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Reference : RO60142973
ISBN : 0575082275
Novel. A forbidden secret, wrapped in a musical enigma, bound up in cosmic mystery... Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
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Eden Fisher & Co. 1901. In-18. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 1400 pages. Titre doré au dos. Texte en anglais. Trois photos disponibles.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
5e édition Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
EDEN FISHER & Co. 5th edition. 1901. In-8. Cartonné. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. XX + 1400 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 423-Dictionnaire anglais
For the Financiers, Merchants, Shipowners, Underwritters, Engineers, Brokers, Agents ... Classification Dewey : 423-Dictionnaire anglais
Eden Fisher & Co. Ltd.. 1901. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 1400 pages. Titre doré sur le dos. Texte sur plusieurs colonnes. Mors gauche légèrement abîmé.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
5th edition. Specially adapted for the use of Financiers, Merchants, Shipowners, Underwriters, Engineers, Brokers, Agents, etc. Suitable for Everyone. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
"CRICK, F. H. C., BARNETT, L., BRENNER, S. & WATTS-TOBIN, R. J.
Reference : 59907
(1961)
London, Macmillian & Co, 1961. Royal8vo. Bound in contemporary half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Nature"" Vol. 192, October - December, 4797-4809, 1961. Entire volume offered. A stamp on title page. A fine and clean copy. Pp. 1227-1232. [Entire volume: CVII, 1322 pp.].
First printing of this seminal paper in which they described a very elegant series of genetic experiments by which they proved that the genetic code for protein was a triplet code. ""In February 1961, Crick began a series of experiments based on an idea he had about the manner in which a mutation can be ""suppressed"" by a further mutation. The results led him to support Brenner's suggestion that such ""suppressions"" are due not to substitution of a different base in a sequence of bases on the DNA molecule, but to addition or deletion of a base. After conducting extensive experiments for some five months, Crick attended a meeting in the Alps. There he mentioned this idea, and the hypothesis ""that the code is read in short groups, starting from one end of the gene. The exact starting point is supposed to determine which group is read"" (Crick, 1961a, p. 188).Back in Cambridge Crick carried out further experiments to clinch the case for the ""short groups"" being composed of three bases or a multiple thereof. In their classic paper summarizing this work, the Cambridge group claimed that the genetic code ""is of the following general type"": three bases (or a multiple of three) codes for one amino acid. It is not an overlapping code, ""probably 'degenerate'"" that is, in general, one particular amino-acid can be coded by one of several triplets of bases,"" and ""the sequence of the bases is read from a fixed starting point.… There are no special 'commas' to show how to select the right triplets"" (Crick et al., 1961, 1227)."" (DSB) Garrison-Morton.com 752.7. Norman 534
Paris, Firmin Didot, 1822. 8vo. Uncut in the original printed wrappers. Front wrapper slightly soiled and a bit of light dampstaining throughout. Upper corner worn. Six leaves with contemporary neat annotations, scholarly notes and drawings have been inserted at the front and the back - one double-leaf in front of the title-page (with one page of annotations with references to other works by Champollion), two leaves between plates III and IV (with two and a half pages of Greek-ancient Greek-Latin correspondence alphabet) and three leaves at the end, before the final blank (with five pages of an alphabet of the first Egyptian letters - very neatly drawn - and an alphabet-correspondence at the end). A very charming and interesting copy in the exceedingly rare original wrappers. Housed in a half morocco slipcase with gilt lettering to spine. (4), 52 pp. + 4 folded plates + 1 blank leaf.
The scarce first edition, in the even scarcer original printed wrappers, of Champollion's milestone work, which announced for the first time the deciphering of the Rosetta Stone, provided the key to reading Egyptian hieroglyphs, and gave birth to the entire field of modern Egyptology. This seminal work arguably constitutes the single most important philological work ever written. ""[...] in the actual state of Egyptian studies, when the monuments stream out from all sides and are collected by the rulers as by amateurs, and when also the scientists of all countries are eager to engage in serious research of their subject matter and are eager to penetrate deeply into the knowledge of these written monuments which must be used to explain all the others, I do not think I should wait till another time to bring to the scientists' attention and under your honourable auspices a short but important series of new developments, which naturally belong to my Memory on HIEROGLYPHIC writing, and which will doubtlessly save you the trouble that I have taken to establish what may be very serious errors about the different periods in the history of Egyptian art and the general administration of Egypt: for this is about the series of hieroglyphs that, making an exception to the general nature of the signs of this writing, have been equipped with the ability to EXPRESS THE SOUNDS of the words, and which are used in the inscriptions of the public monuments of Egypt, the TITLES, the NAMES, and the EPONYMS OF THE GREEK OR ROMAN SOVEREIGNS, who rule Egypt one after the other. Many certainties in the history of this celebrated piece of land must arise from this new result of my research, to which I have been led quite naturally."" (pp. 2-3) (*) says Champollion on the opening pages of the present letter to Mr. Dacier. And thus was laid the foundation of modern Egyptology. Jean Francois Champollion (1790-1832), known as the father of Egyptology, was by no means exaggerating when he stated the above - his letter to Mr. Dacier upon his new discoveries and the decipherment of the Egyptian hieroglyphs did change the study of Egypt and Egyptology more profoundly than any work before or after. Ever since the publication of the present work, Champollion has been credited with being the first to correctly and fully decipher the inscription on the famous Rosetta Stone, translating it, and breaking the mystery of the ancient hieroglyphic script"" it is in the present work that this milestone event in the history of modern man is announced first time, and it is due to this discovery that he is accepted as the founder of Scientific Egyptology. The Rosetta Stone, which dates back to 196 B.C was found in 1799 by French Troops and was immediately brought to England, where it has been ever since. The stone was (and is) of the utmost importance to the understanding of the Egyptian language, the principles of which were totally unknown up until this point. Because the hieroglyphic inscription on the stone is accompanied by a Greek and a Demotic one with the same contents (the commemoration of Ptolemy V's accession to the Egyptian throne), Champollion was able to crack the code of the hieroglyphs and to read a language that had not been read for far more than a millennium. Other very skilled linguists had worked on the decipherment of the hieroglyphic inscription simultaneously with Champollion, but they had all given up by the time that Champollion finally had his first true breakthrough. It came in 1822, when he successfully deciphered two Egyptian names, Ramses and Thutmos, written in hieroglyphic characters in temple cartouches. Champollion's discovery pointed to the fact that the Egyptian hieroglyphs functioned as an alphabet, a phonetic language and a system of symbols that could stand for words or concepts. ""And if the resembling signs of the two names render THE SAME SOUNDS on both cartouches, it is due to their ENTIRELY PHONETIC character."" (p. 7). (**) He succeeded in showing that the Egyptian hieroglyphic writing system was a combination of phonetic and ideographic signs, and using his new discovery as a foundation, Champollion next turned his attention to common nouns, and deciphered the phrase ""birthday celebrations"" from the Rosetta Stone.""It is a complex system, writing figurative, symbolic, and phonetic all at once, in the same text, the same phrase, I would almost say in the same word"" says Champollion about the hieroglyphs, in the present work, after having established their meaning. He had finally cracked the code and was sure of it. He was so excited by this monumental discovery that he immediately ran to his brother's house, into his office, shouting the famous words ""Je tiens l'affaire!"", i.e. ""I've got it!"". It is said that he then fainted and spent the next five days in bed recovering. Shortly after his recovery, he began writing the letter for Mr. Dacier, outlining the discovery that laid the foundation for deciphering hieroglyphs, which was published later the same year, and a condensed version of which he presented as a speech at the Academie des Inscriptions. When he presented the speech, Thomas Young, who had given up breaking the code four years earlier, was also in the audience.In 1824, Champollion published a more comprehensive explanation of the hieroglyphic system, his famous ""Précis du Système Hieroglyphiques des Anciens Egyptiens"".Champollion was an extraordinary philologist, who, by the age of sixteen, besides Greek and Latin, mastered six ancient Middle Eastern languages, among these Coptic, the knowledge of which, unlike that of Egyptian, was never lost. As the first, Champollion realized the connection between the Coptic and the Egyptian language, and was able to identify many of the Egyptian words on the Rosetta Stone, as he could read them with their Coptic equivalents. He was the first to believe that both Demotic and Hieratic represented symbols, and not sounds as earlier presumed. After that he quickly realized that each single hieroglyph could represent a sign, and he began compiling a hieroglyphic alphabet. When publishing his letter to Mr. Dacier, he presented the fact that the hieroglyphs represented sounds as well as concepts, according to context. Champollion is thus the constructor of our present code of the hieroglyphic alphabet. ""Further study enabled him to discover the values of a number of syllabic hieroglyphic signs, and to recognize the use of hieroglyphs as determinatives. In cases where the Greek text supplied him with the meaning of hieroglyphs of which he did not know the phonetic values, his knowledge of Coptic enabled him to suggest values which he found subsequently to be substantially correct. Further reference to determinatives and the importance of parallel passages and texts will be made later on in his work. Between 1822-24 CHAMPOLLION worked incessantly, and was enabled to modify much of his earlier views, and to develop his Alphabet, -and he evolved some rudimentary principles of Egyptian Grammar..."" (Wallis Budge, The Rosetta Stone in the British Museum, pp. 224-25). ""We have only been able to locate 4 auction records of the work within the last 40 years (ABPC & JAP), none of them in original wrappers.________________________________________________________________________________ORIGINAL FRENCH TEXT OF THE QUOTATIONS ABOVE (WHICH ARE IN OWN TRANSLATION):(*) ""[...] dans l'etat actual des études égyptiennes, lors-que de toutes parts les monuments affluent et sont recueilles par les souverains comme par les amateurs, lorsqu'aussi, et a leur sujet, les savants de tous les pays s'empressent de se livrer à de laborieuses recherches, et s'efforcent de pénétrer intimement dans la connaissance de ces monuments écrits qui doivent servir à expliquer tous les autres, je ne crois pas devoir remettre à un autre temps d'offrir à ces savants et sous vos honorables auspices, une courte mais importante série de faits nouveaux, qui appartient naturellement à mon Mémoire sur l'écriture HIÉROGLYPHIQUE, et qui leur épargnera sans doute la peine que j'ai prise pour l'établir, peut-être aussi de graves erreurs sur les époques diverses de l'histoire des arts et de l'administration générale de l'Égypte: car il s'agit de la série ges HIÉROGLYPHES qui, faisant exception à la nature générale des signes de cette écriture, étaient doués de la faculté d'EXPRIMER LES SONS des mots, et ont servi à inscrire sur les monuments publics de l'Égypte, les TITRES, les NOMS, et les SURNOMS DES SOUVERAINES GRECS OU ROMAINS qui la gouvernèrent successivement. Bien des certitudes pour l'histoire de cette contrée célèbre doivent naître de ce nouveau résultat des mes recherches, auquel j'ai été conduit très-naturellement."" (pp. 2-3).(**) ""et si les signes semblables dans ces deaux noms exprimaient dans l'un et l'autre cartouche LES MÊMES SONS, ils devaient constater leur nature ENTIÈREMENT PHONÉTIQUE."" (p.7).