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Mathematics and Game Dictionary - Panckoucke Encyclopedia - (1784 -1800)

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The Methodical Encyclopedia - Mathematical part and game dictionary: 3 volumes in 4 - complete

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Mathematics 1784-1800

 

3 flights in 4 connected period. Smooth spine and flat cardboard.

Condition of use

 

The text volumes are composed as follows:

 

Volume I - 1784

Preliminary speech (pages 1 to 114)

ABA to EXT (pages 1 to 721)

Volume II - 1785

FAC to ROU (pages 1 to 787)

Volume III - 1789

Representation (pages 1 to 54)

General table (pages 55 to 56)

SAG at WIS (pages 1 to 315)

Table page 316

 

Followed by

Games dictionary : pl 1 to pl 16

Game Dictionary : Year VII (1800)

Warning & Table of Math Games (pages 5 to 8)

AVA to VOY (pages 1 to 167)

Game Tables (pages 168 to 172)]

 

The Encyclopédie méthodique, known as the "Panckoucke Encyclopaedia", is a monumental encyclopedia based on the Encyclopedia or Dictionaries of Sciences, Arts and Crafts of Diderot and Alembert with the objective of improving and completing it.

 Unlike the latter, it is divided into subjects spread over 40 scientific dictionaries. The aim was to remedy the excessive fractionation of Diderot's work, which obliged him to read a hundred articles in order to have a sufficient idea of ​​a subject. We wanted to try if, by proceeding differently, the analysis and the synthesis would not lead to a better conciliation.

It was launched by subscriptions in 1782 by the bookseller Charles-Joseph Panckoucke, established in Lille then in Paris, where he had managed to create the first journalistic empire of the time. The bookseller and publisher, Clement Plomteux, established at Liege, seconded him between 1782 and 1789.

The publication lasted for half a century, and ended in 1832. After the death of Charles-Joseph Panckoucke in 1798, the publication was carried out by his son-in-law and partner, Henri Agasse (1752-1813), then by his Antoinette-Pauline Agasse daughter, widow of the latter.

This enterprise, which was attended by several hundred authors, resulted in a set of 206 volumes (159 of text on two columns and 47 of plates), comprising more than 125,000 pages and nearly 4,500 engravings,

The complete title is: The Methodical Encyclopedia or by order of subjects by a society of literary people, scholars and artists; preceded by a universal Vocabulary, serving as a table for the whole work, adorned with portraits of MM. Diderot and d'Alembert, first editors of the Encyclopedia.

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