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Publicado por Mapel Pictures, 1935
Librería: AcornBooksNH, New Harbor, ME, Estados Unidos de America
No Binding. Lobby Card no #. A VG+ lobby card from the film "Forbidden Adventure". Size: 11" X 14". Poster.
Año de publicación: 2023
Librería: True World of Books, Delhi, India
Libro Impresión bajo demanda
LeatherBound. Condición: New. LeatherBound edition. Condition: New. Reprinted from 1777 edition. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Pages: 140 Language: English.
Publicado por London: Printed for F. C. & J. Rivington., 1819
Librería: John Price Antiquarian Books, ABA, ILAB, LONDON, Reino Unido
8vo, 173 x 102 mms., pp. 16, new boards and end-papers. A very good copy. Shortly after David Hume died 25 August 1776, Smith described Hume in a letter to William Strahan, the publisher, that "Upon the whole, I have always considered him, both in his lifetime and since his death, as approaching as nearly to the idea of a perfectly wise and virtuous man, as perhaps the nature of human frailty will permit." This assessment, published in 1777, in an edition of Hume's My Own Life, not only led to further attacks on Hume but on the blameless and cautious Smith, who found himself mired in obloquy for his friendship, not unlike a certain controversy respecting a university building in Edinburgh no longer name The David Hume Tower. George Horne (1730 - 1792), in 1777, issued his anonymous Letter to Dr. Adam Smith LL.D by one of the People called Christians, a rather vicious, though sometimes amusing attack on both Smith and Hume, with Horne asserting that Hume was a man "possessed with an incurable antipathy to all that is called RELIGION." Given that Hume had written to Heny Home (later Lord Kames, 1696 - 1782), in in June, 1747, confiding that "the Church is my Aversion," there is possibly a very small element of truth in Horne's assertion.