‘THE DREAMS OF A FRIEND OF MANKIND’

Träume eines Menschenfreundes. Erster Theil.

Basel, Johannes Schweighauser, 1776.

8vo, pp. xvi, 288; with typographical folding plate bound after prelims; woodcut device on the title, woodcut tailpieces; title lightly soiled at foot, occasional very light spotting; withal a good copy in contemporary boards, title label gilt to spine; rubbed; library stamps of the Bibliothek des Handwerkervereins to a few leaves.

£150

Approximately:
US $202€173

Add to basket Make an enquiry

Added to your basket:
Träume eines Menschenfreundes. Erster Theil.

Checkout now

Uncommon first edition, part one only (very rarely to be found complete with both parts), of the most mature expression of Iselin’s anti-Rousseau republicanism, a social ‘dream’ of great articulation and – arguably – applicability, residing confidently on the borderline between utopia and reformism, and the author’s principal work on physiocracy.

The most ‘persistent and sympathetic’ Swiss Enlightened opponent of Rousseau (Cambridge History of eighteenth-century Philosophy), one of the main voices in contemporary central Europe, Iselin was the first to formulate a philosophy of history based on the notions of an innate human perfecting drive and of continuous progress of the mind, resulting in an ever-increasing predominance of reason and social happiness over impulses. Iselin’s increasing belief in the civilizing function of society led to growing opposition to Rousseau’s ideas on the natural origins of morality and his glorification of the state of nature. While Iselin’s 1764 History of Mankind had marked a first step towards an explicitly anti-Rousseau concept of history, it was not until he encountered French physiocratic thought in the early 1770s that his theory of republican reform matured fully, in the articulation of this two-part Träume eines Menschenfreundes as well as in the initiation of the physiocratic-inspired periodical Ephemeriden der Menschheit.

Outside continental Europe, OCLC finds a mixed copy Columbia University, the 1776 ed. of the first part bound with the 1784 ed. of the second part. Library Hub finds four copies in the UK (BL, CUL, LSE, Senate House).

Goedeke IV,1, 478, 14; Goldsmiths’ 11382; not in Kress. 

You may also be interested in...