4 volumes. Strehl. Cerveaux Sans Ame: Les Robots. First Edition in French. Strehl. The Robots Are Among Us. First American Edition De Latil. La Pensee Artificielle: Introduction a La Cybernetique. De Latil. Thinking By Machine. First American Edition. Strehl’s work, sometimes taken to be a work of science fiction, was actually a non-technical scientific work that linked the just-emerging field of robotics to computing and automation. De Latil’s work was praised by Norbert Wiener, father of Cybernetics (pictured in the book) as “one of the really good popularizations” of an abstruse subject, and had an added Foreword in the U.S. edition by Asimov – to assure American readers that robots were real and not mere flights of imagination. Strehl. Cerveaux Sans Ame: Les Robots [Brains Without Soul, The Robots]. Paris: 1952. Preface by Albert Ducrocq. 339+1 pp. Illustrated with 18 photographic plates. Original pictorial wrappers, First Edition in French. (Some wear and tear at spine, outer hinge starting) Strehl. The Robots Are Among Us. New York: Arco, 1955. 316 pp. Illustrated with photographic plates and diagrams. Original cloth in pictorial dust jacket. First American Edition. (Moderate edgewear and rubberstamp price on front flap; offset darkening on front flyleaf) De Latil. La Pensee Artificielle: Introduction a La Cybernetique [Artificial Thought: Introduction to Cybernetics]. Paris: Gallimard, 1953. 332 pp. Illustrated with photographs, text drawings and fold-out chart. Original wrappers. Probable First Edition of the French text. (Slight darkening to spine) De Latil. Thinking By Machine. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957. 353 + 2 pp. Foreword by Isaac Asimov. Illustrated with photographs and diagrams. Original cloth in pictorial dust jacket. First American Edition. (Lightly edgeworn)
4 volumes. Strehl. Cerveaux Sans Ame: Les Robots. First Edition in French. Strehl. The Robots Are Among Us. First American Edition De Latil. La Pensee Artificielle: Introduction a La Cybernetique. De Latil. Thinking By Machine. First American Edition. Strehl’s work, sometimes taken to be a work of science fiction, was actually a non-technical scientific work that linked the just-emerging field of robotics to computing and automation. De Latil’s work was praised by Norbert Wiener, father of Cybernetics (pictured in the book) as “one of the really good popularizations” of an abstruse subject, and had an added Foreword in the U.S. edition by Asimov – to assure American readers that robots were real and not mere flights of imagination. Strehl. Cerveaux Sans Ame: Les Robots [Brains Without Soul, The Robots]. Paris: 1952. Preface by Albert Ducrocq. 339+1 pp. Illustrated with 18 photographic plates. Original pictorial wrappers, First Edition in French. (Some wear and tear at spine, outer hinge starting) Strehl. The Robots Are Among Us. New York: Arco, 1955. 316 pp. Illustrated with photographic plates and diagrams. Original cloth in pictorial dust jacket. First American Edition. (Moderate edgewear and rubberstamp price on front flap; offset darkening on front flyleaf) De Latil. La Pensee Artificielle: Introduction a La Cybernetique [Artificial Thought: Introduction to Cybernetics]. Paris: Gallimard, 1953. 332 pp. Illustrated with photographs, text drawings and fold-out chart. Original wrappers. Probable First Edition of the French text. (Slight darkening to spine) De Latil. Thinking By Machine. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957. 353 + 2 pp. Foreword by Isaac Asimov. Illustrated with photographs and diagrams. Original cloth in pictorial dust jacket. First American Edition. (Lightly edgeworn)
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