René DESCARTES
[DISCOURS DE LA METHODE] Principia philosophiae [suivi de] Specimina philosophiae
apud Ludovicum Elzevirium [Elzevir], Amstelodami (Amsterdam) 1644, 15,4x20,3cm, 1 f. bl. [22], 1 f. bl., 310 p. ; 1 f. bl., [16] 331 p., relié.
First Appearance of “Cogito Ergo Sum”
[Discourse on the Method] Principia philosophiae [with]
Specimina philosophiae Apud Ludovicum Elzevirium [Elzevir] ◇ Amstelodami (Amsterdam) 1644 ◇ 15,4 x 20,3 cm ◇ full calf
Two works bound in one volume: first edition of
Principia philosophiae followed by the first Latin edition of
Specimina philosophiae. Complete with blank leaves b4 and 2Q4. Printer's mark representing Minerva and her owl, as well as the motto “Ne extra oleas” on the title page. Numerous in-text engravings.
Bound in full calf, spine with five raised bands framed in gilt, elaborately decorated in gilt, gilt arms of the Society of Writers to the Signet at center of boards framed in blind, marbled endpapers, speckled edges. Library shelfmark glued to the pastedown endpaper, additional penned shelfmarks on the pastedown, and a manuscript ex-libris of the Signet Library, “Ex Lib: | Bibl: Scribar | Sig: Reg:” on the title page. Joints, spine-ends and corners restored, more foxing on the first six leaves, on the title page of the Specimina and the last four leaves of the volume. Some spots to the boards. Unusual paper defect around the author's name on the title page of Principia, present in other copies (Library of Congress, BnF), small wormhole to the lower margin of this same page, burrowing to p. 129 of the “Specimina”. A few faded letters on 4 lines where two pages were joined together (pages 296–297).
First Latin edition of the Discourse on the Method containing the first occurrence of the famous “cogito ergo sum”.This Latin translation of the
Discourse on the Method and its two essays, the mathematical-philosophical Dioptrique and the Meteors is the work Descartes' friend Étienne de Courcelles and revised by Descartes himself. As evidenced by the universal appeal of the cogito, this edition acts as “The first significant dissemination of the
Discourse and its essays (the first 1637 French edition was a commercial failure), published at the same time as the
Principia, aimed at an academic audience capable of a true reception of the work as a whole” (Frédéric de Buzon). In addition to the
Discourse, the work is of particular importance for its addenda applying his cogito to various fields of science, including optics and meteorological phenomena. His work on light refraction, vision and the phenomena of rainbows and winds, are illustrated by visually stunning in-text woodcuts depicting cloaked figures peering through pinholes of camera obscura, elegantly dressed silhouettes admiring rainbows, and throws of balls illustrating the trajectory of light rays.
The
Discourse is preceded by the
Principia Philosophiae in first edition, from Descartes' unpublished manuscript The World or Treatise on Light, contemporary with Galileo's condemnation of heliocentrism. As his theory was based on the same postulate of the movement of the Earth around the Sun, Descartes preferred to delay its publication and had it published through different works. In the
Principia, Descartes aims to clarify and establish a rigorous foundation for philosophy, envisioned as a universal science.
It contains the first full description of his Vortex Theory explaining the structure and movement of the universe – abundantly illustrated with fine woodcuts showing celestial matter in constant motion, as well as striking vignettes illustrating the Earth's genesis.
Provenance: arms of the Society of Writers to the Signet, association of Scottish lawyers founded at the end of the 16th century, one of the oldest professional associations in the world.
A superb copy containing the founding texts of modern rationalism at the origin of our scientific method. Guibert, 118 & 104.
8 000 €
Réf : 86378
Order
Book