Paris, Charles-Antoine Jombert, 1749.
Deux volumes in quarto (255x190 mm), xvi-li-344-(4) pages et 18 planches dépliantes / viii-322-(6) pages et 12 planches dépliantes. reliure : Plein veau de l'époque, dos à nerfs. Petit accident à la coiffe de tête du tome I, petits trous de ver dans le dos du tome I qui se poursuivent discrètement dans la marge intérieure du papier (sans aucune atteinte de texte). Mouillure claire dans un coin de quelques feuillets du volume II.
références: Norman [(first ed. in english. 1742) : "Maclaurin published his Treatise of fluxions, in which he attempted to establish the rigor of the calculus using the geometrical methods favored by Newton. The Treatise is noteworthy for its solutions to a number of problems in geometry, statics and the theory of attractions; its presentation of "Maclaurin's test" for convergence of infinite serie; its elaboration, using Euclidean geometry, of many of the principles stated in Newton's Principia; its presentation of the first correct theory for distinguishing between maximum and minimum values of a function; and its discussion of the attraction of an ellipsoid on an internal point, in which Maclaurin proved that the oblate spheroid is an equilibrium shape for a fluid of uniform density under constant angular rotation."]
DSB [VIII, 609 : "the earliest logical and systematic publication of the Newtonian methods. It stood as a model of rigor until the appearance of Cauchy's Cours d'Analyse in 1821"].
Prix : 3500 €