Edward Tufte's Library Up For Auction
px2 writes "I was poking around Christie's auction house after taking a look at the Apple 1 when I came across this: Beautiful Evidence: The Library of Edward Tufte. He's unloading everything from Galileo and Da Vinci firsts to a rotating Japanese astronomical text from 1801. I guess he didn't conjure his ideas on information design from thin air." Based on Christie's estimates, the collection of 29 artifacts could fetch in excess of two and a quarter million dollars.
If the auction catalog will be up to his standards!
...I won't be receiving any more diagrams in the mail of Napoleon's march in and out of Russia?
a genetically modified shark with a laser on its head!
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I was flicking through stuff at random when I saw GALILEI, Galileo. Sidereus nuncius. Frankfurt: Poltheanus, 1610. which has the description:
"Pirated edition of Galileo's work containing "some of the most important discoveries in scientific literature" (PMM), published the same year as the first edition. This the the first publication of any of Galileo's works outside of Italy. ..."
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
It's sortof a flip remark, since Tufte is pretty effusive with examples and citations. He rarely asserts a design principle a priori, he always goes and shows you how somebody historically did X and he's much more of a descriptive than prescriptive authority.
Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
All I can think of is how paypal will take a big chunk of the payment, plus the cost of selling something on e-bay, and then the taxes involved... Yeah, he's better off just selling it over on craigslist so long as he hires bodyguards. http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/nation/craigslist-murder-in-washington-is-a-cautionary-tale-for-internet-users
Back in the early 90s, I took a short course on visualization with Ed Tufte prior to a conference in Montreal. I remember him showing a book he had in his collection from a century I don't recall, that contained paper pop-ups to display three-dimensional geometric figures. It was awesome. I wonder if it's in the lot for auction...
If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
Finally someone has created a genuine and effective reason for me to desire to be a millionaire...
kartune85 : Incapable of reason, observation or learning. A kind of dim, drab, flightless parrot.
>> RIDLEY, Mark (1560-1624). A Short Treatise of
>> Magneticall Bodies and Motions. London: Nicholas
>> Okes, 1613.
Translation :
Magneticall Bodies : How Theye doth Fornicating Function.
kartune85 : Incapable of reason, observation or learning. A kind of dim, drab, flightless parrot.
Sorry to give that impression. It wasn't sarcasm. It doesn't really mean anything. These are not the droids you're looking for.
It was an attempt at humor by stating something so completely obvious (that Tufte is steeped in the history of how to convey information visually) that my supposed surprise at discovering this would be funny. Since his books are chock full of this history, I didn't consider that I might be taken seriously on that point.
Wonderful books. I'd like to see him lecture.
But judging by the gushing stream of non-information in this thread he's some sort of cult hero because he doesn't like Powerpoint much.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it