Part
1
Printed
translation of Dial.
Part 1 Books 1-5 and some chapters of Contra Ioannem.
Latin text and English translation side-by-side:
(In some cases the Latin text is an earlier version of the
text of the printed volumes. Usually there is not much difference,
but it will be useful to consult the printed text and its notes.)
Part
1
Book 1 (entire)
Book 2 Chapters 1-16, 17-34
Book 3 Chapters 1-5, 6-11
Book 4 Chapters 1-5,
6-12, 13-19,
20-24, 25-28,
29-34
Book 5 Chapters 1-5, 6-10, 11-21, 22-35
Book 6 Chapters 1-15,
16-35, 36-50, 51-67, 68-78, 79-90, 91-100
Book 7 Chapters 1-21, 22-41, 42-51, 52-64, 65-73,
The same Latin/English pages can be accessed through the analysis of the argument: 1 Dial. 1-5, 1 Dial. 6, 1 Dial. 7, 2 Dial., 3.1 Dial., 3.2 Dial.
Translated Jürgen
Miethke:
Part 3, Tract 1: Bd.1, Bd.2
Translated Alessandro Salerno:
Part
1: Dialogo sul papa eretico
Readers interested mainly in Ockham’s ideas
about politics will find much of the relevant material
translated in
A
Short Discourse on Tyrannical Government, ed. A.S. McGrade, tr.
John Kilcullen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992)
A
Letter to the Friars Minor and Other Writings, ed. and tr. A.S. McGrade and John
Kilcullen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995),
which contains extensive extracts from 3.1 Dial. and 3.2 Dial.
On
the Power of Emperors and Popes, tr. Annabel S. Brett,
(Bristol: Thoemmes Press, 1998)
Work of Ninety Days, (Vol.1,
Vol.
2, online)
tr. John Kilcullen and John Scott (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press,
2001).
Ockham’s ideas about the constitution
of the Church (which are connected with his ideas about
politics) will be found especially in 1 Dial. and in 3.1 Dial.
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Contents