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22
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK’S PUBLICATIONS
ing diminution from rivalship, has steadily continued to increase, and never stood higher than at
the present time.
It has been the leading object of its conductors to combine abstract with practical, and solid
with pleasing information, in such proportions as would be most useful and most acceptable to
the public, to deliver the truths of Science in the most accurate and intelligible form, and, at
the same time, to pay due attention to those branches of knowledge, wdiich, though not admitting
of a scientific shape, are yet deservedly popular, and have a powerful influence on the taste,
habits, and character of the individual,—in a word, to render the Work at once a Dictionary
of Science, a Copious Abstract of Literature and Philosophy, and a Book of Universal
Reference.
The Eighth Edition will undergo careful revision and extensive alterations, so as to be
accommodated to the improved taste and advanced intelligence of the times. Arrangements are
accordingly made to secure the co-operation of the most eminent living Authors, who have con¬
tributed treatises in the various departments of Science, Literature, the Arts, Manufactures,
Commerce, Statistics, and General Knowledge, to supersede those now rendered obsolete by the
progress of discovery, improvements in the Arts, or the general advancement of society.
In giving effect to the extensive plan of reconstruction thus adopted, due consideration will,
at the same time, be given to the great and permanent value of many of those Articles and
Treatises with which the former Editions were enriched. The possession of these invaluable
contributions forms, indeed, a characteristic feature of the Work, and gives it a decided pre¬
eminence over every other publication of its class.
To the Gentleman and the - Merchant, to the Agriculturist and the Manufacturer, to the
Clergyman and the Layman, to the Student of Science or Philosophy and the Cultivator of
Literature or the Fine Arts, the Encyclopaedia Britannica will prove an acquisition of the highest
value. The great scope of its information also recommends it to Emigrants and other persons
resident in quarters where access to books is difficult, or whose fortunes do not permit them the
enjoyment of extensive libraries.
To all such the Publishers confidently recommend the Encyclopaedia Britannica, as a
Work deserving of their confidence and support, and worthy of the National Name.
EDINBURGH: ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK.

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