The Mutus Liber, or Mute Book (from Latin: Silent Book), is a Hermetic philosophical work published in La Rochelle in 1677. It ranks amongst the ...
Continue Reading →Philosophia Botanica (The Science of Botany), by Carl Linnaeus, was originally published in Latin in Stockholm and Amsterdam in 1751. It is a greatly expanded ...
Continue Reading →The debt of modern chemistry to Antoine Lavoisier (1743–1794) is incalculable. With Lavoisier’s discoveries of the compositions of air and water (he gave the ...
Continue Reading →Philosophie zoologique (“Zoological Philosophy, or Exposition with Regard to the Natural History of Animals”) is an 1809 book by the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, in ...
Continue Reading →Written by René Laennec (1781-1826), a French physician and inventor of the stethoscope, A Treatise on the Diseases of the Chest and on Mediate Auscultation ...
Continue Reading →Presents in the English language, and in convenient-size soft cover volumes, a selection of the most indispensable Christian treatises written before the end of ...
Continue Reading →The Histoire Naturelle is the work that the Comte de Buffon (1707–1788) is remembered for. 36 volumes came out between 1749 and 1789, followed by ...
Continue Reading →A close friend of Horace, the late Republic poet Tibullus composed some of the most refined and celebrated elegies of Latin literature. Download ...
Continue Reading →Although he is most famous for The Faerie Queene, this volume demonstrates that for these poems alone Spenser should still be ranked as one ...
Continue Reading →The Faerie Queene is an English epic poem by Edmund Spenser. Books I–III were first published in 1590, then republished in 1596 together with books ...
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