| Author's note |
| Translator's note |
| Short titles frequently used |
| Part I |
| 1. Introduction: Purpose and plan of the inquiry. |
| 2. The opposition of logistic and arithmetric in the Neoplatonists. |
| 3. Logistic and arithmetic in Plato. |
| 4. "The role of the theory of proportions in Nicomachus, Theon, and Domninus." |
| 5. Theoretical logistic and the problem of fractions. |
| 6. The concept of arithmos. |
| 7. The ontological conception of the arithmoi in Plato. |
| A. The science of the Pythagoreans. |
| B. Mathematics in Plato-logistike and dianoia. |
| C. The arithmos eidetikos. |
| 8. The Aristotelian critique and the possibility of a theoretical logistic. |
| Part II |
| 9. On the difference between ancient and modern conceptualization. |
| 10. The Arithmetic of Diophantus as theoretical logistic. The concept of eidos in Diophantus. |
| 11. The formalism of Vieta and the transformation of the arithmos concept. |
| A. The life of Vieta and the general characteristics of his work. |
| B. Vieta's point of departure: the concept of synthetic apodeixis in Pappus and in Diophantus. |
| C. The reinterpretation of the Diophantine procedure by Vieta: |
| I. "The procedure for solutions "in the indeterminate form" as an analogue to geometric analysis" |
| 2. "The generalization of the eidos concept and its transformation into the "symbolic" concept of the species." |
| 3. The reinterpretation of the katholou pragmateia as Mathesis Universalis in the sense of ars analytice. |
| 12. "The concept of "number." |
| A. In Stevin. |
| B. In Descartes. |
| C. In Wallis. |
| Notes |
| "Part I, Notes 1-125" |
| "Part II, Notes 126-348" |
| "Introduction to the Analytical Art, by Francois Viète (Vieta)." |
| Letter to Princess Mélusine. |
| I. On the definition and division of analysis and those things which are of use to zetetics. |
| II. On the stipulations governing equations and proportions. |
| III. Concerning the law of homogeneity and the degrees and genera of the magnitudes that are compared. |
| IV. On the precepts of the reckoning by species. |
| V. Concerning the laws of zetetics. |
| VI. Concerning the investigation of theorems by means of the poristic art. |
| VII. Concerning the function of the rehetic art. |
| VIII. The symbolism in equations and the epilogue to the art. |
| Index of names |
| Index of topics |