[28] Principal edition still that of Waitz, with Latin commentary, (2 vols., 1844-1846). Among the innumerable writers who have thrown light upon Aristotle’s logical doctrine, St Hilaire, Trendelenburg, Ueberweg, Hamilton, Mansel, G. Grote may be named. There are, however, others of equal distinction. Reference to Prantl, op. cit., is indispensable. Zeller, Die philosophie der Griechen, ii. 2, “Aristoteles” (3rd ed., 1879), pp. 185-257 (there is an Eng. trans.), and Maier, Die Syllogistik des Aristoteles (2 vols., 1896, 1900) (some 900 pp.), are also of first-rate importance.
[29] Sophist. Elench. 184, espec. b 1-3, but see Maier, loc. cit. i. 1.
[30] References such as 18b 12 are the result of subsequent editing and prove nothing. See, however, [Aristotle].
[31] Adrastus is said to have called them πρὸ τῶν τοπικῶν.
[32] Metaphys. E. 1.
[33] De Part. Animal. A. 1, 639a 1 sqq.; cf. Metaphys. 1005b 2 sqq.
[34] De Interpretatione 16a sqq.
[35] De Interpretatione 16a 24-25.
[36] Ib. 18a 28 sqq.
[37] Ib. 19a 28-29.