Primary Sources
Latin
Buridan John (1998) Summulae de suppositionibus, ed. van der Lecq R. Ingenium, Nijmegen
William of Ockham (1974) Opera philosophica I, eds. Boehner Ph et al.
The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure William of Sherwood (1995) Einfuhrung in die Logik, ed. and German trans. Brands H, Kann C. Felix Meiner, Hamburg
English
Buridan John (2001) Summulae de dialectica, trans. Klima G. Yale University Press, New Haven
William of Ockham (1998) Summa logicae part I, trans. Loux M. St. Augustine’s Press, South Bend
William of Sherwood (1966) Introduction to logic, trans. Kretzmann N. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Secondary Sources
Ashworth EJ (1974) Language and logic in the post-medieval period. Reidel, Dordrecht
Ashworth EJ (1978) Multiple quantification and the use of special quantifiers in early sixteenth century logic. Notre Dame J Formal Logic 19:599-613
Dutilh Novaes C (2004) The Buridanian account of inferential relations between doubly quantified propositions: a proof of soundness. Hist Philos Logic 25(3):225-244
Dutilh Novaes C (2008) Logic in the 14th century after Ockham. In: Gabbay D, Woods J (eds) The handbook of the history of logic, vol 2. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 433-504
Karger E (1993) A theory of immediate inferences contained in Buridan’s logic. In: Jacobi K (ed) Argumentationstheorie. Brill, Leiden, pp 407-429
Karger E (1997) The 15th and early 16th century logicians on the quantification of cateGorical sentences. Topoi 16(1):65-76
Matthews G (1973) Suppositio and quantification in Ockham. Nous 7:13-24
Parsons T (1994) Anaphoric pronouns in very late medieval supposition theory. Linguist Philos 17:429-445
Parsons T (1997) Supposition as quantification versus supposition as global quantificational effect. Topoi 16(1):41-63
Priest G, Read S (1977) The formalization of Ockham’s theory of supposition. Mind 86:109-113
Spade PV (1996) Thoughts, words and things. Http://www. pvspade. com