File contains handwritten notes and manuscripts drafts for Doull's paper "Dante on Averroism," which was published in Actas del V congresso internacional de filosofia medieval (Madrid, 1979).
Fonds consists of a wide variety of materials related to the personal life and professional activities of David Braybrooke. Records include personal materials such as biographical information, curricula vitae, financial records, personal correspondence, school records and memorabilia; records related to committees and associations such as meeting reports, professional correspondence and transcripts of speeches; publications by Braybrooke and others; research documentation and manuscripts; and teaching materials including lecture transcripts, examinations, assignments and student correspondence.
Fonds consists of a printed copy of Ritchie's thesis, completed in 1889 at Cornell University; two essay offprints from The Dalhousie Review; and a hand-bound catalogue of Ritchie's book collection, with her personal bookplate on the endpapers.
Fonds comprises records documenting Françoise Baylis's work as a bioethics scholar, educator and public intellectual, including her teaching, research, publishing and professional activities. Records include lecture and presentation notes and slides, manuscripts, publishing contracts, editorial correspondence and reviews, committee notes, agendas and correspondence.
File contains handwritten notes and a printed manuscript titled "Comment on Emil Fackenheim's "Hegel and Judaism," by James Doull, which was published in The Legacy of Hegel, ed. J.J. O'Malley et al. (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1973). Also in the file are copies of Emil Fackenheim's article "The People Israel Lives," from The Christian Century (May 6, 1970) and Shlomo Avineri's "The Palestinians and Israel."
File contains handwritten notes on the difference between Neoplatonism and the philosophy of Hegel; Hegel and the concept of absolute spirit; and Parmenides.
File contains handwritten notes about Hegel's Introduction to Philosophy; Hegel on Anglo-American liberalism; Emil Fackenheim on Hegel; the English Reform Bill; Hegel's Phänomenologie; and other topics.
File contains a handwritten review of Hegel's Phenomenology: Dialogues on the Life of Mind, by J. Loewenberg, and notes about Hegel on Chinese culture.
Fonds consists of records primarily originating from Herbert L. Stewart's work as a philosopher, professor, and political commentator. Records include manuscripts and typescripts, notes, scrapbooks, diaries, offprints, reports, and correspondence. One series comprises Stewart's collection of his father's sermons, notes, and correspondence.
This introductory lecture written by James Dinwiddie discusses natural philosophy. Dinwiddie draws on past philosophers including Rene Descartes, Plato, and John Locke to describe Nature and man's relationship with her.
Fonds contains records created by James Doull in the course of his thinking, writing and teaching about the culture of ancient Rome, ancient, medieval and modern philosophy, and twentieth-century politics. The majority of the records are notes and manuscripts, handwritten in blank examination answer books. There is also a lesser number of both typed and printed manuscripts.
Item is a bound book of lecture notes written as a series of consecutively numbered questions and answers on moral philosophy. The book was written during the 1838-1839 session of Professor Hercules Scott's lectures and contains 125 closely written pages.
File contains ten sets of lecture notes and manuscripts on the subject of liberation and history, first given in 1999 to the Foundation Year Programme, University of King's College, and later published in Philosophy and Freedom: The Legacy of James Doull, ed. David Peddle and Neal Robertson (University of Toronto Press, 2003).
File contains handwritten notes and manuscripts and a typed manuscript of James Doull's "Review of Hegel's Philosophy of Nature," translations of the Philosophy of Nature by A.V. Miller and M.J. Petry, Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review 11 (1972).
Item is an untitled five-page handwritten manuscript, probably an early draft of "Neoplatonism and the Origin of the Older Modern Philosophy," in The Perennial Tradition of Neoplatonism (Leuven, Belgium: 1997).
File contains six printed manuscript drafts for "Neoplatonism and the Older Modern Philosophy," in The Perennial Tradition of Neoplatonism (Leuven, Belgium: 1997), three of which are titled "Neoplatonism and the Origin of the Cartesian Subject."
File contains manuscripts written in examination answer books, probably early drafts for "Neoplatonism and the Older Modern Philosophy," in The Perennial Tradition of Neoplatonism (Leuven, Belgium: 1997).