Scientific Memoirs

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Scientific Memoirs
AuthorRichard Taylor
CountryEngland
Publication date
1837-1852

Scientific Memoirs, Selected from the Transactions of Foreign Academies of science and Learned Societies and from Foreign Journals was a series of books edited and published by Richard Taylor (1781–1858) in London between 1837 and 1852.

After 1852 the publication continued in two series: Natural Philosophy, edited by J. Tyndall and William Francis; and, Natural history, edited by Arthur Henfrey and Thomas Henry Huxley.

Volume 3 (1843) is noteworthy because it contained Ada Lovelace's notes appended to her translation of Luigi Federico Menabrea's article.[1] Both are available on Wikisource.


Some volumes have been reprinted by Johnson Reprint Corp. New York in 1966.

  • Volume I and II of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
    Volume I and II of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
  • List of figures in volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
    List of figures in volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
  • Figure in volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
    Figure in volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
  • First page of volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)
    First page of volume I of Scientific Memoirs (1841)

Further reading

References

  1. ^ Green, Christopher (2001). "Charles Babbage, the Analytical Engine, and the Possibility of a 19th-Century Cognitive Science". York University. Retrieved 2 September 2018.