William of Ockham, the most prestigious philosopher of the
fourteenth century, was a late Scholastic thinker who is regarded
as the founder of Nominalism - the school of thought that denies
that universals have any reality apart from the individual things
signified by the universal or general term. Ockham's Summa Logicae
was intended as a basic text in philosophy, but its originality and
scope encompass his whole system of philosophy. Yet the paucity of
English translations and the structural complexity have made the
Summa, until now, almost completely inaccessible.
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