Language: English
Published by A Bantam Matrix Edition/Published by Bantam Books, Inc., Toronto, ON, Canada, New York, London, 1974
Seller: gearbooks, The Bronx, NY, U.S.A.
Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Bantam Matrix Ed/10th Printing: Jan.1974. 371 pp. An excellent study/work/research/reading copy! Solidly and tightly bound copy with moderate external, but minimal internal wear and use. Copy with clean text on very mildly brittle pages. Smooth covers, Mildly shelf worn. Moderate browning/foxing on page edges, not affecting text. Single crease on spine.
Soft cover. Condition: Fair/Reading Copy Only. Significant overall wear; smells like smoke. Book.
Language: English
Published by Penguin Books/Pelican, Harmondsworth, Middlesex, UK, 1965
Seller: Sarah Zaluckyj, KINGTON, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: Good +. Reprint. 124 pages. Moderate wear to covers' corners and spine-ends. Page-edges/margins lightly browned and moderately foxed o/w pages clean and tidy.
Published by Royal Navy: Naval Review, 2003
Seller: Bailgate Books Ltd, Doncaster, United Kingdom
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket. First Edition. Crisp navy card covers with white lettering. Very lightly rubbed corners. Sound binding. Clean pages. No dust jacket, as published. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: under 1 kg. Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 75218012101. All our books are sent by tracked mail.
Language: English
Published by Routledge, London, 1972
Seller: SAVERY BOOKS, Brighton, East Sussex, United Kingdom
US$ 21.41
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. Condition: Very Good. Reprint. Paperback 1972 reprint. 179 pages. FLAT SPINE IS FADED. Flat covers. Clean & tight. No inscriptions. Flat pages. Dispatched ROYAL MAIL FIRST CLASS with TRACKING next working day or sooner securely boxed in cardboard. ref 117:18.
Language: English
Published by London, 1955
Seller: SAVERY BOOKS, Brighton, East Sussex, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 21.99
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. Condition: Very Good. SOFTCOVER. Pages are numbered 215 to 284. Clean & tight. Dispatched ROYAL MAIL FIRST CLASS with TRACKING next working day or sooner securely boxed in cardboard. ref 35:18. The Plain View. Spring 1955. The Role of Reason. No. 4. Volume IX. February 1st.
Published by Ethical Union, London, 1955
Seller: Rareeclectic, Pound ridge, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Presumed to be first editions (NAP). This is a very unique offering. Copies of The Plain View are quite rare, only a few individual copies are for sale on the Internet. This will be the Only offering of a large number of issues. Specifically, the 21 Journals are as follows: 'Autumn 1955, Winter 1955, Spring 1956, Summer 1956, Winter 1956, Summer 1957, Winter 1957, Spring 1958, Winter 1958, Summer 1959, Winter 1959, Summer 1960, Winter 1960, Spring in 1961, Winter 1961, Summer 1962, Winter 1962, Summer 1963, Winter 1963, Summer 1964, Winter 1964. They can also be identified as following: No. 2, Volume X; No. 3, Volume X; No. 4, Volume X; No.1 Volume XI; No. 2, Volume XI; No. 3, Volume XI; No. 4, Volume XI; No. 1, Volume XII; No.2, Volume XII; No.3, Volume XII; No. 4, Volume XII, No.1, Volume XIII; No.2, VOLUME XIII; No. 3, Volume XIII; No.4, Volume XIII; No.1, Volume XIV; No. 2, Volume XIV; No. 3, Volume XIV; No. 4, Volume XIV; No.1, Volume XV; No. 2, Volume XV. So as you can see, beginning with No.2 of Volume X in 1955 all of the Journals that were published are present through to the second Volume in 1964. Each Journal started with a Commentary which was followed by one to four essays and typically around four to eight book reviews. I've rated the Journals 'Very Good'. I scrolled slowly through all of them. I've provided photographs of the covers. They are, in the main, exceptionally clean. Three have one very tiny edge loss, one has a small loss at its rear bottom corner. On the fronts and rears combined on all the Journals I saw a total of only a few tiny edge tears. At the spines I'm seeing three with a little tearing and two with tiny losses at their ends. A half-dozen or so have corner creases, and there's some crinkling here and there. The pages are exceptionally clean in all of the Journals. Some pages in a number of them have light creasing at the corners, none touching the print. One has a sharper crease at the top corner of 20 consecutive pages. I saw one corner loss in one issue. Two pages in the Index of one Journal are cleanly detached. On the title page of one Journal there is a small stamp of the Bibliotheque J.P. Slack. There are no other markings or stamps in any of the other Journals. There are no attachments of any kind in any of the journals. I saw a tiny bit of penciling (typically 2 to 4 margin lines) in 6 of the 21 Journals. There is one red pen mark. No one wrote their name anywhere. The bindings of the Journals are excellent. In only one is there a slight binding issue with the covers attached but slightly pulling away from the textblock. 'Harold Blackham was the father of modern humanism. He perceived a humanist tradition--of free inquiry, human-centered ethics and a naturalistic worldview-- stretching from the ancient philosophers to the present day and sought to create a movement of organizations that would promote this tradition and engage in practical work to improve the condition of humanity. In Britain, he guided the development of this movement as a philosopher and scholar, and as principal administrator and activist. He founded the British Humanist Association, bringing together the disparate ethical and rationalist organizations that had existed in Britain since the mid 19th-century. In 1933, he went to London to become assistant to the social reformer Stanton Coit at the west London Ethical Society. With the second world war approaching, Blackham assisted in transporting Jewish refugees from Austria, and, in 1938, helped to organize what was to be the last great conference of the World Union of Freethinkers before the double onslaught of fascism and communism. After the war, Blackham set about re-establishing the free-thought and ethical movement under the new banner of 'humanism'. He founded a journal in 1944, The Plain View, which attracted the foremost thinkers of the day, from Julian Huxley to Gilbert Murray, in developing the humanist worldview.'.