A Bibliography of Symbolic Logic

There follows a list of additions and corrections to A bibliography of symbolic logic (THD JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC, vol. 1, pp. 121-218) and a set of indexes to the Bibliography. In the case of minor corrections the necessary change in the original entry in the Bibliography is indicated; in the case of major corrections the entire entry is given in corrected form. All the corrections which were noted in the Errata to volume 1 of the JOURNAL are here repeated. If further additions and corrections to the Bibliography are found, they will not again be separately published but will be listed in the reviews section of the JOURNAL and included in the biennial indexes to the reviews section. If typographical or other minor errors appear in the present Additions and corrections, they will be corrected in the Errata to volume 4 of the JOURNAL. In cross references and in the indexes, a letter A preceding a reference indicates that it is to the Additions and corrections rather than to the original Bibliography. References containing the fraction J or a decimal point are also to the Additions and corrections, the preceding letter Abeing omitted in this case as superfluous. Aletter A following a reference indicates a double reference to an item of the same number in the Bibliography and in the Additions and corrections. Three indexes are provided-an index of subjects, an index of reviews, and an index of authors. The index of reviews includes reviews, published subsequently to 1935, of publications contained in the Bibliography, so far as such reviews have been listed in the first three volumes of the JOURNAL. Otherwise the indexes refer entirely to A bibliography of symbolic logic and the present Additions and corrections. For the convenience of the user, a number of items not strictly in the nature of reviews have been included in the index of reviews. The index of subjects makes no claim to completeness or finality and should be used as a tentative finding list only. The caution should also be observed that the appearance of a heading in the index of subjects does not mean that all publications coming (or coming partly) under that heading are to be found in the Bibliography or the index, but only such publications as have some special relevance to symbolic logic. Under the heading "Syllogism" in the index, for example, will iBot be found publications dealing with the syllogism purely in the manner of traditional logic-even when such a publication has been included in the Bibliography for a different reason. Similarly, mathematical publications not specially relevant to symbolic logic should not be sought under the headings "Analysis, foundations of," "Continuum hypothesis," "Ordinal numbers, transfinite," etc.