Skip to content

No image available

Alciphron: or, The Minute Philosopher. In Seven Dialogues. Containing an Apology for the Christian Religion, against Those Who are Called Free-Thinkers

No image available

Alciphron: or, The Minute Philosopher. In Seven Dialogues. Containing an Apology for the Christian Religion, against Those Who are Called Free-Thinkers

by [BERKELEY (George):]

  • Used
  • first
Condition
See description
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
LONDON, United Kingdom
Item Price
£1,650.00
Or just £1,630.00 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
£5.95 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 21 to 42 days

More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

Dublin: Printed for G. Risk, G. Ewing, and W. Smith, Booksellers in Dame-Street, MDCCXXXII 1732. FIRST IRISH EDITION. 2 volumes in 1. 8vo, 195 x 118 mms., pp. [x], 220; [ii], 245 [246 blank], engraved vignette on each title-page, contemporary calf; lackk label, front joint slightly cracked, but a good to very good copy. The present book, Alciphron, was the longest work written by the great Irish philosopher George Berkeley (1685-1753), preeminent proponent of the philosophy of immaterialism, who was also Bishop of Cloyne, and Fellow of Trinity College Dublin. The first edition of Alciphron was published by Tonson in London in 1732, but this first Irish edition published by Risk in Dublin the same year is far more rare, and has interest of its own: Berkeley being Irish, obviously, and the two editions, Tonson's in London and Risk's in Dublin, being in 1732 "nearly simultaneously released", according to Adam Grzelinski, an expert on the circumstances of the book's publication (see Grzelinski's "Alciphron; or the Minute Philosopher: Berkeley's Redefinition of Free-Thinking" in The Bloomsbury Companion to Berkeley, ed. by Bertil Belfrage and Richard Brook, [Bloomsbury Academic, 2016], p. 174). Readers familiar with the family background of George Berkeley will see the last name, "Wolfe", written in ink, atop the title-page, and stop in their tracks. The Wolfe family appears prominently in the Berkeley family tree. Oxford DNB records that Berkeley was "born at or near Kilkenny on 12 March 1685. His father, William Berkeley (d. in or after 1734), who later held a military commission, was a gentleman farmer descended from a Staffordshire family related to the earls of Berkeley; he owned the property of Dysart, further down the River Nore near Thomastown, where Berkeley grew up. Berkeley's mother, a great-aunt of General James Wolfe, has been tentatively identified as Elisabeth Southerne, daughter of a Dublin brewer and on her mother's side a descendant of James Ussher…" It is thus likely that the ownership inscription in this copy of the first Irish edition of Alciphron defines the present copy as a family association copy of Berkeley's longest book. But which Wolfe inscribed the book? The answer is nigh. My stock includes another book of philosophical content (if decidedly more light-hearted in temperament) titled Athenian Sport: or, Two Thousand Paradoxes Merrily Argued, To Amuse and Divert the Age: As a Paradox in Praise of a Paradox (1707), which has a variant of the Wolfe bookplate (one with the family name, "Wolfe de Forenaughts", engraved, in this case, just beneath the frame enclosing the trebled wolf-heads), and the ownership inscription, on the right-hand side at the top of the title-page, is, in this case, longer: "Phillpott: Wolfe." The "P" is unusual, being lollipop-shaped in its upper half and with a jack-boot upturn to the left in its lower half, as we see with the "P" in the inscription in the present copy of Alciphron. Keynes 16. Jessop 121b. ESTC T86362. Howe's catalogue, Franks Bequest, has three Wolfe bookplates (item nos. 32325, 32326, and 32327), but none is the one in this copy of Alciphron (1732). On the "Wolfes of Forenaughts" claiming kinship with "Major-General James Wolfe, the hero of Quebec", which, as we've seen, would also mean kinship with Bishop Berkeley, see George Wolfe, "The Wolfe Family of County Kildare" in the Journal of the Co. Kildare Archaeological Society and Surrounding Districts, Vol. 3, Dublin, 1902, pp. 361-367, most notably p. 364 and p. 367, the latter page illustrating the variant of the Wolfe bookplate, with the family name engraved. �

Reviews

(Log in or Create an Account first!)

You’re rating the book as a work, not the seller or the specific copy you purchased!

Details

Bookseller
John Price Antiquarian Books GB (GB)
Bookseller's Inventory #
10083
Title
Alciphron: or, The Minute Philosopher. In Seven Dialogues. Containing an Apology for the Christian Religion, against Those Who are Called Free-Thinkers
Author
[BERKELEY (George):]
Book Condition
Used
Publisher
Dublin: Printed for G. Risk, G. Ewing, and W. Smith, Booksellers in Dame-Street, MDCCXXXII 1732
Keywords
Philosophy dialogues prose provenance
Bookseller catalogs
philosophy;
Note
May be a multi-volume set and require additional postage.

Terms of Sale

John Price Antiquarian Books

Payment by cheque, credit card, cash. New customers will be invoiced pro forma. Books may be returned within two weeks for any reason; refund within 1 month for any reason; negotiable after that, but no returns after one year.

About the Seller

John Price Antiquarian Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2006
LONDON

About John Price Antiquarian Books

I work from home, but I am happy to see customers at almost any time by appointment.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Cracked
In reference to a hinge or a book's binding, means that the glue which holds the opposing leaves has allowed them to separate,...
Bookplate
Highly sought after by some collectors, a book plate is an inscribed or decorative device that identifies the owner, or former...
G
Good describes the average used and worn book that has all pages or leaves present. Any defects must be noted. (as defined by AB...
First Edition
In book collecting, the first edition is the earliest published form of a book. A book may have more than one first edition in...
Association Copy
An association copy is a copy of a book which has been signed and inscribed by the author for a personal friend, colleague, or...
Inscribed
When a book is described as being inscribed, it indicates that a short note written by the author or a previous owner has been...
Vignette
A decorative design or illustration placed at the beginning or end of a ...

Frequently asked questions

This Book’s Categories

tracking-