TitlePopular Astronomy : A General Description of the Heavens
Author(s)Camille Flammarion, Translated by John Ellard Gore
Description1 online resource (xx, 686 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)
Abstract NoteFrench astronomer Camille Flammarion (1842???1925) called the study of the heavens 'the science which concerns us most'. He believed that learning 'what place we occupy in the infinite' could delight and instruct, and might even promote an end to war and strife. Flammarion dedicated the present work to Fran??ois Arago (1786???1853), author of earlier work on popular astronomy. Since Arago's time, the capabilities of telescopes and other instruments had vastly improved, advancing understanding in areas such as the composition of stars. Flammarion sought to bring this new knowledge to the public in a charming yet 'scrupulously exact' style. His highly illustrated introduction to astronomy succeeded in reaching a wide readership, selling over 100,000 French copies before this English translation appeared in 1894. The 1881 French version and Flammarion's work on the origins of the Earth, Le Monde avant la cr??ation de l'homme (1886), are also reissued in this series
NotesIncludes index
Keyword(s)1. ASTRONOMY 2. EBOOK 3. EBOOK - CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Item TypeBook
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OB0697     On Shelf