
A fascinating snapshot of a bygone era, this volume opens with the catalogue of the International Scientific Series, a modestly priced collection of concise monographs that once lined the shelves of libraries and reading rooms. Each pamphlet—covering subjects from the forms of water in clouds and glaciers to the early theories of sociology—was bound in cloth and illustrated with dozens of detailed plates, offering readers a tactile sense of the scientific publishing world at the turn of the century.
The assortment of topics reads like a tour through the intellectual preoccupations of the age: physics and politics, the chemistry of light, the mechanics of animal locomotion, and even the contentious dialogue between religion and science. Together they reveal a period when scholars sought to explain the natural world and humanity’s place within it in clear, accessible language, often bridging disciplines that today seem far apart.
For modern listeners, the book serves as a portal to the foundations of contemporary thought, showing how early researchers framed questions about climate, evolution, and human behavior. Its vivid illustrations and straightforward prose make the material come alive, inviting anyone curious about the roots of today’s scientific understanding to listen and reflect.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (709K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Tom Cosmas from materials provided at The Internet Archive.
Release date
2016-01-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1838–1921
A minister, geologist, and prolific writer, he became known for trying to bring science and Christian belief into conversation at a time when Darwin’s ideas were fiercely debated. His books range from geology and human origins to theology and personal memoir, giving a vivid sense of the intellectual world of late 19th-century America.
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