Skip to content

Secure Checkout

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Subtotal: $1,400.00
Shipping: $20.00
$0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $1,420.00
4 - 6 days
7 - 14 days

All fields are required unless marked optional.

Add Shipping Note
  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • Paypal
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay

Verified and Secured. Guaranteed.

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Please select your payment method from the following list:
Click the button to checkout with PayPal.
You will be charged $1,420.00 when completing this purchase.

Cart Totals

Subtotal: $1,400.00
Shipping: $20.00
: $0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $1,420.00

You are about to purchase:

No image available

Manchild in the Promised Land by Claude Brown

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $5.00
Details
$1,000.00
( US$)
Seller: Jeff Bergman Books ABAA/ILAB
Title
Manchild in the Promised Land
Author
Claude Brown
Seller
Jeff Bergman Books ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
Macmillan, 1965. Book. Fine. Original Wraps. First Edition. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. The Most Powerful Book of Race in 60's. First Edition. Very Scarce Advance Reading Copy in Wraps. Published August 18, 1965 Printed on Front Panel. Excellent Copy. Very Scarce in this Format..
No image available

Logicae artis compendium by SANDERSON, R.

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$400.00
( US$)
Seller: Rootenberg Rare Books & Manuscripts
Title
Logicae artis compendium
Author
SANDERSON, R.
Seller
Rootenberg Rare Books & Manuscripts (United States)
Description
Oxford: Leon, Lichfield, 1680. Ninth ed. Woodcut diagrams, headpiece, and initials. Contemporary calf, spine rubbed, otherwise a very nice copy. From the library of Thomas Smith, with his manuscript annotations on the title and last page. Ninth edition of Sanderson’s excellent textbook of logic, one of the most important tools used by seventeenth-century Cambridge and Oxford students (including John Locke). First published in 1615, it enjoyed at least ten editions during the seventeenth century. Divided into three parts, the first contains a discussion on predicables and the ten Aristotelian categories; the second part treats propositions, especially concerned with the medieval notions of supposition, ampliation, restriction and exponible propositions; and the third is a discourse on the nature of arguments. This work, the result of lectures Sanderson gave at Lincoln College, remained popular as a standard treatise on the subject even after the appearance of the influential Port-Royal Logic. Sanderson (1587-1662) was an English theologian. He became a fellow of Lincoln College in Oxford in 1600 and reader in Logic. He was also Bishop of Lincoln. In her introduction to the 1985 facsimile edition E. J. Ashworth writes that “The young Isaac Newton studied Sanderson’s logic at Cambridge.