Page:Edward Thorpe — History of Chemistry, Volume I (1909).pdf/7



has been planned to present for the information of the general public a historic record of the great divisions of the great divisions of science. Each volume is the work of a writer who is accepted as an authority on his own subject-matter. The books are not to be considered as primers, but present thoroughly digested information on the relations borne by each great division of science to the changes in human ideas and to the intellectual development of mankind. The monographs explain how the principal discoveries have been arrived at and the names of the workers to whom such discoveries are due.

The books will comprise each about 200 pages. Each volume will contain from 12 to 16 illustrations, including portraits of the discoverers and explanatory views and diagrams. Each volume contains also a concise but comprehensive bibliography of the subject-matter. The following volumes will be issued during the course of autumn of 1909.


 * The History of Astronomy.
 * By, M.A., F.R.S., M. Inst. C.E.; author of The Transit of Venus, etc.