Presses de la cite / collection un mystere n° 327 1957 poche. 1957. Broché. Etat Correct
Nürnberg, 1800. 8vo. In contemporary half calf with gilt lettering to spine. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. A fine copy. XII, 132 pp.
Rare first German translation of Pearson's work on smallpox translated by J. Fr. Küttlinger (originally published in 1798 under the following title: ""An Inquiry Concerning the History of the Cowpox, Principally with a View to Supersede and Extinguish the Smallpox""). Vaccination reached the European continent in 1800 and the present publication is one of the very earliest to describe this. Pearson was an early supporter of smallpox vaccination and endorsed Edward Jenner, promptly publishing his initial observations shortly after Jenner's Inquiry was released. In 1799, he played a key role in establishing the Original Vaccine Pock Institute in London, distributing vaccine samples. Unfortunately, some of these samples were contaminated with the smallpox virus, leading to a disagreement with Jenner, who felt overshadowed. As Jenner gained prominence, Pearson became envious. In 1802, when Jenner sought financial recognition from Parliament, Pearson presented a detailed account of his own contributions, challenging Jenner's sole credit for the discovery of vaccination. Pearson highlighted farmer Benjamin Jesty and others with prior claims. Despite Pearson bringing Jesty to London in 1805 to support his case during Jenner's second Parliamentary grant request, it proved unsuccessful. Not in Garrison & Morton
"PEARSON, KARL. - ESTABLISHING MODERN MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS AND BIOMETRICS.
Reference : 42461
(1894)
(London, Harrison and Sons, 1894, 1895, 1897, 1898, 1899 a. 1899. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"", Vol. 185 - Series A, pp. 71-110, textfigs. a. 5 plates. - Vol. 186 - Series A, pp. 343-414 a. 10 plates. - Vol. 187 - Series A, pp. 253-318 - Vol. 191 - Series A, pp. 229-311 - Vol. 192-Series A, pp. 169-244 a. 2 plates. - Vol. 192, Series A, pp. 257-330. All clean and fine.
First appearance of the founding papers of modern mathematical statistics, out of which grew Pearson's creation of Biometrics.""Founder of biometrics, Karl Pearson was one of the principal architects of the modern mathematical statistics. He was a polymath whose interests ranges from astronomy, mechanics, meteorology and physics, to biological sciences in particular, including...eugenics, evolotionary biology,heredity......Largly owing to his interests in evolutionary biology, Person created, almost single-handedly, the modern theory of statistics in his Biometric School at University College London.... In his creation of biometrics, out of which the discipline of mathematical statistics had develoiped by the end of the nineteenth century, Person introduced a new vernacular for statistics (including such termss as the standard deviation, mode, homoscedasticity, heteroscedasticity, kurtosis and the producct-moment correlation coefficient."" (Heyde in Statisticians of the Centuries).In the first paper offered here Person introduced the method of moments as a mean curve fitting assymetrical distributions (""point-binominals"") and he applies the theory to crabs and prawns. This is a general method for determining the values of the parameters of a frequency distribution.In the second paper offered here, Pearson develpoed the general formula to use for subsets of six types of frequency curves, now known as ""Pearson Type Curves"".In his seminal paper ""Regressin, Heredity and Panmixia"", the third papers offered here, Pearson introduced matrix algebra into statistical theory and also introducing 'eta' as a measure for curvilinear relationship, the standard error of an estimate, multiple regression and multiple and partial correlation, and devises the coefficient of variation as a measure of the ratio of a standard deviation to the corresponding mean expressed as a percentage.In the fourth paper he deals with the theory of probable erros and of correlations of errors...In the fifth paper he deals with the theory as involving multiple correlations...stature in biology is shown to be best reconstructed from measurements of long bones.The last paper offered deals with a variety of biological correlations, inheritance of characters etc. etc.G.M. Morant: A Bibliography ofthe Statistical and other writings of Karl Pearson Nos 2, 4, 6, 16, 17 and 20. - Eiasenhart in DSB, pp. 449-453.
[J.P. Migne] - Collectif ; Abraham Calov ; Johannes Piscator ; Jean Calvin ; Jacques Tirinus ; Saint Jérôme ; Willem Hessels Estius (Van Est) ; Ernst Friedrich Karl Rosenmuller ; Hugo Grotius ; Nicolas de Lyre ; Cornelius a Lapide ; François Watebled (Vatable) ; Augustin Calmet ; Sébastien Castalio ; Isidore Clario (Clarius) ; Jacques Cappel ; Lud. Cappellus ; Juan Maldonat ; Sébastien Munster ; Duclot ; Isaac Lemaistre de Sacy ; Gaspard Sanctius ; Jean-Etienne Menochius ; Juan de Mariana ; Johannes Drusius ; David Kimchi (Kimhi) ; Sébastien Castellion ; John Pearson ; Richard Pearson
Reference : 40790
(1841)
Ex. commentariis omnium perfectissimis ubique habitis, et a magna parte episcoporum necnon theologorum europe catholicae, universim ad hoc interrogatorum, designatis, unicè conflatus, plurimis annotantibus presbyteris ad docendo levitas pascendove populos altè positis. Annotavit vero simul et edidit J.P. Migne, 1 vol. in-4 reliure demi-basane bordeaux, Apud Editores, 1841, 1028 pp. Contient : Tome 19 : In Jeremiam , in Baruch et in Ezechielem commentarium. Vatablus : In Jeremiam commentarium ; Joannes et Richardus Pearson : Critici sacri, sive Badvelli, Castellionis, Clarii, et Grotii commentaria in Baruch ; Maldonatus : In Ezechielem commentarium ; Hieronymus - Cornelius a Lapide - Bible de Vence, Praefationes, instructiones, epinicia et doxologiae ; Duclot - Rosenmüller - Calmet - Sacy - Synopsis - Anglicanae annotationes - cornelius a Lapide - Lyranus - Sanctius - Tirinus - Munsterus - Menochius - Mariana - Estius - Clarius - Maldonatus - Drusius - Castelio - Calovius - Piscator - Calvinus - Grotius : Variae annotationes
Tome 19 seul. Agréable exemplaire de bibliothèque (anciens cachets d'institution religieuse et étiquette de cote en garde, bon exemplaire par ailleurs).
PEARSON EDUCATION (US) (12/2005)
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"PEARSON, KARL. - INTRODUCING THE ""CHI-SQUARED GOODNESS-OF-FIT TEST""
Reference : 47148
(1900)
London, Taylor and Francis, 1900. Contemp. hcalf, spine gone and covers loose. In: ""The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science"", Vol. 50, Fifth Series. VI,(2),624 pp. a. 5 plates. (Entire volume offered). Pearson's paper: pp. 157-175. A stippled stamp on titlepage. Internally clean and fine.
In this fundamental paper in statistics, Pearson introduced his chi-squared test, the statistical procedure whose results are evaluated by reference to the chi-squared distribution, or the formula yielding a measure of how well a set of observations fits a theoretical hypothesis, the test of goodness of fit. A founding seminal paper in statistical testing theory.""Pearson’s many contributions to statistical theory and practice, many contributions to statistical theory and practice, this X2 text for goodness of fit is certainly one of his greatest"" and in its original and extended forms it has remained one of the most useful of all statistical tests."" (DSB).Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"" 1900 M.
London, Printed by J.F. for Job. Williams and are to be sold by Richard Davis, 1669. Folio (315 x 205). In contemporary full calf. Light wear to extremities, boards with scratches. Small paper label pasted on to top of spine. Small stain to title-page but internally generally fine and clean. (8), 398 pp.
Third expanded edition of Pearson’s highly influential ‘Exposition of the Creed. First published in 1659 it remained on the the most influential works on the Apostles’ Creed in the Anglican Church throughout the 17th century. Pearson dedicated his work to his parishioners of St. Clement's, Eastcheap, where he had previously preached the essence of the work several years earlier. Regarding the Christian cross, he explained in his commentary on the Apostles' Creed that the Greek term stauros initially meant ""a straight standing Stake, Pale, or Palisador,"" but when additional transverse or prominent parts were added to form a perfect Cross, it still retained its original name. He asserted that ""The Form then of the Cross on which our Saviour suffered was not a simple, but a compounded, Figure, according to the Custom of the Romans, by whose Procurator he was condemned to die. In which there was not only a straight and erected piece of Wood fixed in the Earth, but also a transverse Beam fastened unto that towards the top thereof.""
London, Scott, 1892, un volume in 8 reldié en pleine toile éditeur, (défraîchie, avec traces de mouillures sur la partie supérieure du premier plat), 16pp., 493pp., figures dans le texte, 12pp. (catalogue de l'éditeur)
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- "In the 1890's the sole duty of the lecturer in geometry at Gresham College seems to have been to give three courses per year of four lectures to an extramural audience on topics of his own choosing. Pearson's aim in applying for the lectureship was apparently to gain an opportunity to present some of his ideas to a fairly general audience... These lectures, developed and enlarged, became the first edition of The grammar of science (1892), a remarkable book that influenced the scientific thought of an entire generation... The Grammar of science anticipated in many ways the revolutionary changes in scientific thought brought about by Einstein's special theory of relativity. Pearson insisted on the relativity of all motion, completely restated the Newtonian laws of motion in keeping with this primary principle and developed a system of mechanics logically from them...". (DSB X pp. 447/473)**4048/K2
Éditions J'ai lu 1994 1994. Michael Pearson: Une femme d'argent/ J'ai lu collection Amour et Destin 1994 . Michael Pearson: Une femme d'argent/ J'ai lu collection Amour et Destin 1994
Bon état
Éditions J'ai lu 1997 1997. Ridley Pearson: Le faiseur d'anges/ J'ai lu 1997 . Ridley Pearson: Le faiseur d'anges/ J'ai lu 1997
Bon état
London, Cambridge University Press, 1966-67. Original full cloth. Royal 8vo. VIII,429,VI,327,299 pp.
Reprints of more than 60 papers plus bibliography.
"PEARSON, KARL AND ALICE LEE. - COINING THE CONCEPTS 'MULTIPLE CORRELATION"" AND 'PARTIAL CORRELATION'.
Reference : 44863
(1897)
(London, Harrison and Sons, 1897). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" Year 1897, Volume 190 - Series A. - Pp. 423-469 and 9 plates. 1 textillustr.
First appearance of the statistical paper in which the authors introduced the conceptS of 'Multiple Correlation' and 'Partial Correlation'. ""Pearson did not pursue the theory of multiple and partial correlation beyond the point to which he had carried it in his basic memoir on correlation (1896). The general theory of multiple and partial correlation and regression was developed by his mathematical assistant, G. Udny Yule, in two papers published in 1897. Yule was the first to give mathematical expressions for what are now called partial correlation coefficients, whcih he termed ""net correlation coefficients."" What Pearson had called coefficients of double regression, Yule renamed net regressions"" they are now called partial regression coefficients. The expressions ""multiple correlation"" and ""partial correlation"" stem from the paper written Alice Lee and read to the Royal Society in 1897.""(DSB).
"PEARSON, KARL. - FORMULATING A STATISTICAL LAW OF HEREDITY.
Reference : 48323
(1898)
London, Harrison and Sons, 1898. 8vo. Later full blue buckram. Spine with gilt lettering. In: ""Proceedings of the Royal Society of London"", Vol. LXII. VIII,458 pp. a. 6 plates. Pearson's paper: pp. 386-417.
First appearance of this importent paper in which Pearson, expressed what he christened ""Galton’s Law of Ancestral Heredity"" in the form of a multiple regression equation of offspring on midparental ancestry. It is a statistical formulation of Galton’s law in the form of a multiple regression of offspring on ""midparental"" ancestry, with deductions therefrom of theoretical values for various regression and correlation coefficients between kin, and comparisons of such theoretical values with values derived from observational material. (DSB).The title ""Contributions to the Mathematical Theory of Evolution"" or ""Mathematical Contributions. . ."" was used as the general title of 17 memoirs, numbered II through XIX, published in the Philosophical Transactions or as Drapers’ Company Research Memoirs, and of 8 unnumbered papers published in the Proceedings of he Royal Society ""Mathematical"" became and remained the initial word from III(1896)on.
1976 xi, 744 p., 215 figs, cloth (dust jacket). Ex libris, library stamps, number pasted on spine dust jacket.
LAMBERT / PEARSON ..//.. Mike Lambert / Alan Pearson / Adaptation française de Claude Dovaz.
Reference : 5524
(1988)
Paris, Gründ, 1988, 1 volume, in-12, cartonnage rigide éditeur. 128 p.. Nombreux dessins en couleur, index en fin de volume.
A l'état de neuf. ************* Remise 20 % pour toute commande supérieure à 100 €, envoi gratuit en courrier suivi et assurance à partir de 30 € d'achat (France seulement).
PEARSON EDUCATION (US) (8/2015)
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London : C. Arthur Pearson, 1897 - un volume 12,5x19cm pleine percaline imprimée et illustrée doré et au palladium, 234 pages sur papier vergé avec 8 photographies hors texte sur papier couché - texte en anglais - mention manuscrite en page de titre sinon bel exemplaire - Edition originale -
Éditions J'ai lu 2004 2004. Allison Pearson: Je ne sais pas comment elle fait/ J'ai lu 2004
Bon état
, London, Ward, Lock & Co, 1957., Bound, cloth, dust jacket, 1st edition, 14x20cm, 160pp, illustrated.
This book puts before the raeder the information and experience of the five men who have gained, throughout the years, specialist knowlegde of their subject.
Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1990. Orig. full cloth with dustjacket. Portrait. VIII,142 pp. A few pencil underlinings.
First edition.
Lancaster, American Institute of Physics, 1949. Lex8vo. Volume 75, March 1, No. 5, 1949 of ""The Physical Review"", Second Series. Entire volume offered in the original printed blue wrappers. Previous owner's stamp to front wrapper. A fine and clean copy. Pp. 865-883. [Entire issue: Pp. 705-911].
First publication of Bardeen and Pearson's research on silicon as semiconductor.
"BARDEEN, J. (+) W. H. BRATTAIN (+) W. SHOCKLEY (+) W. L. PEARSON (+) TOMONAGA (+) G. GAMOW (+) R. P. FEYNMAN (+) J. SCHWINGER.
Reference : 47051
(1948)
Lancaster, PA & New York, American Physical Society, 1948. Royal8vo. Bound in contemporary black full cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Nature"", Vol. 74, 1948. Spine with a bit a wear and front hinge a bit loose, otherwise a fine and clean copy.
First printing of the single most important volume of The Physical Review containing an exceptional number of important papers - amongst other the first paper to describe the transistor: One of the most important inventions of the 20th Century which awarded them the Nobel Prize in physics in 1956.,The three first titles are the short letters in Physical Review which first announced the invention of the transistor. The following year Bardeen and Brattain published the more comprehensive report ""Physical Principles Involved in Transistor Action"". This paper was simultaneously published, the same month, in The Bell System Technical Journal (Number 2 volume 28). In 1956 Bardeen and Brattain shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with William Shockley ""for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect"". In 1972 Bardeen again received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his part in the development of the theory of superconductivity (BCS-theory), and thus became the only person, until this day, to receive the Nobel Prize more than once in the same field. ""The invention of the transistor would in time change the world by making possible the microchip and all the devices that followed from it, but the discovery ruined the spirit of the Bell Laboratories semiconductor group. Shockley, who had been uninvolved in the invention of the original transistor, stunned Bardeen and Brattain when he tried to patent the invention in his name, hoping to base it on his suggestion of the field-effect amplifier. Shockley's plan failed because the patent attorneys discovered that Julius E. Lilienfeld, a Polish-American inventor, had already patented the field-effect notion in 1930. Shockley further antagonized Brattain and Bardeen by preventing them from working on the consequences of their historic invention, a second transistor, known as the junction device, which could better be used commercially."" (DSB)The issue also contain two of the papers leading to Richard Feynman's 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics, (A Relativistic Cut-Off for Classical Electrodynamics & Relativistic Cut-Off for Quantum Electrodynamics) and the paper that led to Polykarp Kusch's 1955 Nobel Prize in Physics (The Magnetic Moment of the Electron)Also containing Maria Goeppert-Mayer paper that led to her 1963 Nobel Prize in Physics (On Closed Shells in Nuclei), the seminal P. A. M. Dirac paper on magnetic monopoles (A theory of Magnetic Poles) and three important papers on The Big Bang Theory by George Gamow, Ralph Alpher and George Herman (The Origin of the Elements and the Separation of Galaxies & Thermonuclear Reactions in the Expanding Universe & On the Relative Abundance of the Elements & A Neutron-Capture Theory of the Formation and Relative Abundance of the Elements).See Hook & Norman: Origins of Cyberspace, No. 450.