|
Showing 1 - 25 of
86 matches in All Departments
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
First published in 1908, this volume explored Japanese culture and
society for British readers in the wake of the Anglo-Japanese
treaty of 1902. Japan's recent victory over the Russian Empire in
the Russo-Japanese war in 1904-5 had represented the first victory
of an Asian power over its Western counterpart. Japan's resulting
parity is reflected both in the treaty and in the author's
conviction that Britain and Japan, though in many ways diametric
opposites, could inform and enlighten one another. The two powers,
Lowell argues, could work together to the benefit of both peoples.
As the 1854 Convention of Kanagawa, in which Japan had abandoned
isolation, remained recent, British awareness of Japan and its
culture was still in its early stages. Percival Lowell sought to
explore and communicate the culture of Britain's new allies through
areas such as its language, social structures, art and religion
along with 32 illustrations.
MARS AND ITS CANALS BY PERCIVAL LOWELL - 1911 - PREFACE ELEVEN
years have elapsed since the writers first work on Mars was
published in which were recorded the facts gleaned in his research
up to that time and in which was set forth his theory of their
explana tion. Continued work in the interval has confirmed the
conclusions there stated sometimes in quite unexpected ways. Five
times during that period Mars has approached the earth within
suitable scan ning distance and been subjected to careful and
prolonged scrutiny. Familiarity with the subject, improved
telescopic means, and long-continued train ing have all combined to
increased efficiency in the procuring of data and to results which
have been proportionate. A mass of new material has thus been
collected, some of it along old lines, some of it in lines that are
themselves new, and both have led to the same outcome. In addition
to thus push ing inquiry into advanced portions of the subject,
study has been spent in investigation of the reality of the
phenomena upon which so much is based, and in testing every theory
which has been suggested to account for them. From diplopia to
optical inter ference, each of these has been examined and found
incompatible with the observations. The phenomena are all they have
been stated to be, and more. Each step forward in observation has
confirmed the genu ineness of those that went before. To set forth
science in a popular, that is, in a generally understandable, form
is as obligatory as to present it in a more technical manner. If
men are to benefit by it, it must be expressed to their com
prehension. To do this should be feasible for him who is master of
his subject and is both the best testof, and the best training to,
that post. Espe cially vital is it that the exposition should be
done at first hand for to describe what a man has him self
discovered comes as near as possible to making a reader the
co-discoverer of it. Not only are thus escaped the mistaken glosses
of second-hand knowl edge, but an arorna of actuality, which cannot
be filtered through another mind without sensible evap oration,
clings to the account of the pioneer. Nor is it so hard to make any
well-grasped matter com prehensible to a man of good general
intelligence as is commonly supposed. The whole object of science
is to synthesize, and so simplify and did w r e but know the
uttermost of a subject we could make it singularly clear. Meanwhile
technical phraseology, useful as shorthand to the cult, becomes
meaningless jargon to the uninitiate and is paraded most by the
least profound. But worse still for their employ symbols tend to
fictitious understanding. Formulae are the anaesthetics of thought,
not its stimulants and to make any one think is far better worth
while than cramming him with ill-considered, and therefore
indigestible, learning. Even to the technical student, a popular
book, if well done, may yield most valuable results...
|
|