Letter from Pek Siong Ching, The Institute of East Asian Philosophies, to The Editor, Curzon Press, to ask that the Institute be associated with Graham's Reason and Spontaneity. With her letter is a letter from Graham stating he has no objection to this.
Sans titrePhilosophy
242 Description archivistique résultats pour Philosophy
Letter from J.F. Standish, Curzon Press, to Mrs Pek Siok Ching, Institute of East Asian Philosophies, to agree that the name of the Institute can be shown somewhere on Graham's book. With this letter is a copy of the reply sent by Pek Siok Ching regarding the status of the Institute and the request for the Institute to be acknowledged in Graham's book, dated 12 October 1984.
Sans titreLetter from J.F. Standish, Curzon Press, to Angus Graham to state that the galley proofs have arrived and to say they will add Graham's credentials to the jacket.
Sans titreLetter from J.F. Standish, Curzon Press, to Angus Graham to state that Graham's corrected page proofs have arrived but the package had burst open and there was no covering letter. With the letter is a "Guide for Authors".
Sans titreLetter from Angus Graham to Herbert Fingarette to "bother him again" about the central argument in Reason and Spontaneity asking if Fingarette would clarify his thinking.
Sans titreLetter from Herbert Fingarette to Angus Graham to thank him for the monograph Graham had sent on Yin-Yang and the Nature of Correlative Thinking. He looks forward to reading it after the holiday season. Fingarette writes concerning the previous letter and notes he has sent on Reason and Spontaneity and that he is unsure whether he remembered to send them via airmail.
Sans titreLetter from Angus Graham to Henry Rosemont concerning the republication of Reason and Spontaneity and their debate over fundamental issues. With the letter is a draft concerning Rosemont's review of Reason and Spontaneity.
Sans titreLetter from Joel Kupperman, Department of Philosophy, University of Connecticut, to Angus Graham to try again to formulate what he believes is Graham's vulnerable point in the argument.
Sans titreLetter from Joel Kupperman, Department of Philosophy, University of Connecticut, to Angus Graham to admit that Graham's account of awareness may be an ethical theory that is good in its way.
Sans titreLetter from Angus Graham to Joel Kupperman to reiterate some of their points of agreement and continue to clarify Graham's meanings.
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