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Dictionary of the History of Ideas

Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas
  
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

B. Bolzano, Paradoxieri der Undendlichen (Leipzig, 1851),
trans. as Paradoxes of the Infinite (London, 1950). Theodore
C. Burgess, Epideictic Literature (Chicago, 1902). Greta
Calman, “The Picture of Nobody,” Journal of the Warburg
and Courtauld Institutes,
23 (1960), 60-104. Rosalie L. Colie,
Paradoxia Epidemica: The Renaissance Tradition of Paradox
(Princeton, 1966). Augustus De Morgan, A Budget of Para-
doxes
(London, 1872). Sister M. Geraldine, C.S.J., “Erasmus
and the Tradition of Paradox,” Studies in Philology, 61
(1964), 41-63. E. H. Gombrich, Art and Illusion (London
and New York, 1960). Walter Kaiser, Praisers of Folly
(Cambridge, Mass., 1963). William and Martha Kneale, The
Development of Logic
(Oxford, 1962). Alexandre Koyré,
Epiménide le menteur (Paris, 1946). A. E. Malloch, “The
Technique and Function of the Renaissance Paradox,”
Studies in Philology, 52 (1956), 191-203. Henry Knight
Miller, “The Paradoxical Encomium...,” Modern Phil-
ology,
53 (1956), 145-78. Karl Popper, “Self-Reference and
Meaning in Ordinary Language,” in Conjectures and
Refutations
(London, 1965). W. V. Quine, “Paradox,” Scien-
tific American
(April 1962), 84-96. Warner G. Rice, “The
Paradossi of Ortensio Lando,” Michigan Essays in Compar-
ative Literature,
8 (1932), 59-74. Alexander Rüstow, Der
Lügner (Leipzig, 1910). Alexander Sackton, “The Paradox-
ical Encomium in Elizabethan Drama,” University of Texas,
Studies in English, 28 (1949), 83-104.

ROSALIE L. COLIE

[See also Ambiguity; Satire; Style; Wisdom of the Fool.]