Letter from David Ramsey Steele, Open Court Publishing Company, to Angus Graham to send two copies of the contract for The Unreasoning within Reason. He asks for Graham to sign one and return it. A signed Memorandum of Agreement is with the letter.
Open Court Publishing CompanyPhilosophy
242 Archival description results for Philosophy
Letter from David L. Hall, Chairman, Philosophy Department, The University of Texas at El Paso, to Angus Graham to thank for sending the paper, "Value, Fact and Facing Fact". He continues that he was a reader of Reason and Spontaneity for Hawaii Press. He encloses his report and writes that he is willing to correspond regarding improving the manuscript.
Hall David LLetter from David Hall to Angus Graham concerning the title of the publication, The Rhyme of Reason.
Hall David LLetter from David [Hall] to Angus Graham concerning Lloyd's "Polarity and Analogy" and how that may help in Graham research on correlative thinking. He writes that he enjoyed Graham's Bataille piece and gives possible alternatives for Graham's book on reason. He also writes of his own paper on Eros and Irony. He writes Bill Lucker sends his greetings.
Letter from Christoph [Harbsmeier] to Angus Graham to respond with some comments to the article that Graham has sent.
Harbsmeier Christoph b 1946Letter from Carol to Angus Graham concerning his article on Awareness as the First Principle in Ethics suggesting editorial changes. With the letter is a partial draft.
Graham Angus Charles 1919-1991Letter from Arthur Danto, Columbia University, to Angus Graham in which he apologises for the delay in responding to Graham's article but he has been travelling for the last month. He then comments upon Graham's paper.
Danto Arthur Coleman 1924-2013Letter from Angus Graham to V.V. Nalimov to thank for his letter and to continue the discussion regarding the premises in Graham's book. Incomplete.
Graham Angus Charles 1919-1991Letter from Angus Graham to Sebastian de Grazia to send him a copy of the manuscript of Reason and Spontaneity. Graham expresses his concern over getting it published and whether de Grazia would want his name associated with it.
Graham Angus Charles 1919-1991Letter from Angus Graham to Roger T. Ames to inform Ames that Stanford had rejected his manuscript and to ask whether he would hand in the manuscript to the University of Hawaii Press.
Graham Angus Charles 1919-1991