University of Chicago Library Guide to the George Herbert Mead Papers 1883 … · 2011-09-26 · 4...

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University of Chicago Library Guide to the George Herbert Mead Papers 1883-1964 © 2006 University of Chicago Library

Transcript of University of Chicago Library Guide to the George Herbert Mead Papers 1883 … · 2011-09-26 · 4...

University of Chicago Library

Guide to the GeorgeHerbert Mead

Papers 1883-1964

© 2006 University of Chicago Library

Table of Contents

3Descriptive Summary3Information on Use3Access3Citation3Biographical Note4Scope Note4Related Resources4Subject Headings4INVENTORY4Series I: Correspondence4Subseries 1: Personal Correspondence7Subseries 2: Philosophy of the Present Correspondence7Series II: Course Materials7Subseries 1: Mind, Self and Society9Subseries 2: Movement of Thought in the 19th Century, Materials10Subseries 3: Philosophy of the Act Materials12Subseries 4: Student Notes15Series III: Writings21Series IV: Addenda Materials22Subseries 1: Correspondence22Subseries 2: Biographical22Subseries 3: Essays on Psychology23Subseries 4: Titled Manuscripts25Subseries 5: Untitled Writings30Subseries 6: Student Notes30Subseries 7: Writings by Others31Subseries 8: Addenda Correspondence31Subseries 9: Biographical materials32Subseries 10: Addenda Writings32Subseries 11: Student notes32Subseries 12: Books signed by Mead

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Descriptive Summary

Title Mead, George Herbert. Papers

Date 1883-1964

Size 7.5 linear ft. (15 boxes)

Repository Special Collections Research CenterUniversity of Chicago Library1100 East 57th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A.

Abstract George Herbert Mead, educator, social psychologist, philosopher. TheGeorge Herbert Mead Papers contain correspondence, primarily with familymembers including Henry Northrup Castle, Helen Castle Mead, HenryCastle Mead, and Irene Tufts Mead. Other correspondents include JohnDewey and Charles Morris. The collection also includes manuscripts ofpublished journal articles and books, correspondence relating to publications,and student notes from Mead's courses.

Information on Use

Access

No restrictions.

Citation

When quoting material from this collection, the preferred citation is: Mead, George Herbert.Papers, [Box #, Folder #], Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library

Biographical Note

Mead was born in South Hadley, Massachusetts, in 1863, the son of a clergyman, HiramMead. Seven years later, the family moved to Oberlin, Ohio, where his father took the chair inHomiletics at the Theological Seminary of Oberlin College. In 1879, George entered Oberlinwhere he met two students from Hawaii, Henry and Helen Castle. In 1891, Mead marriedHenry's sister Helen. A year later, their only child, Henry Castle Albert Mead, was born.

Mead taught from 1891 to 1894 at the University of Michigan, and at the University of Chicagofrom 1894 to the year of his death. A prominent American thinker, Mead is studied for his workin social psychology and social philosophy, systematic pragmatism, and the history of ideas, aswell as for his relationship with his friend and contemporary, John Dewey.

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Mead published many books and articles including; Philosophy of the Present (1932), Mind,Self and Society (1934), Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century (1936), andPhilosophy of the Act (1938).

George Herbert Mead died in 1931.

Scope Note

The George Herbert Mead Papers contain correspondence, primarily with family membersincluding Henry Northrup Castle, Helen Castle Mead, Henry Castle Mead, and Irene TuftsMead. Other correspondents include John Dewey and Charles Morris. The collection alsoincludes manuscripts of published journal articles and books, correspondence relating topublications, and student notes from Mead's courses.

The collection is comprised of four series: Series I: Correspondence; Series II: Course Materials;Series III: Writings; Series IV; Addenda Materials.

Related Resources

The following related resources are located in the Department of Special Collections:

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/spcl/select.html

Subject Headings

• Castle, Henry Northrup, b. 1853• Dewey, John, 1859-1952• Mead, George Herbert, 1863-1931• Mead, Helen Castle• Mead, Henry C. A• Mead, Irene Tufts• Morris, Charles W. (Charles William), 1903-1979• Philosophy• Social psychology•• Philosophers

INVENTORY

Series I: Correspondence

Subseries 1: Personal Correspondence

Box 1Folder 1

Mead to Henry Northrup Castle, July 1883-October 1884Box 1

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Folder 2Mead to Henry Northrup Castle, January 1885-March 1889

Box 1Folder 3

Mead to Henry Northrup Castle, August 1890-December 1894Box 1

Folder 4Mead to his parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Northrup Castle, 1892-1906

Box 1Folder 5

Mead to his wife, Helen Castle Mead, 1894-1918Box 1

Folder 6Mead to his son, Henry C. A. Mead, 1899-1913

Box 1Folder 7

Mead to his son, 1914Box 1

Folder 8Mead to his son, 1915

Box 1Folder 9

Mead to his son, 1916-1919Box 1

Folder 10Mead to his son, 1920-1921

Box 1Folder 11

Mead to his son, 1923-1935Box 1

Folder 12Mead to his son, 1921

Box 1Folder 13

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, 1916Box 1

Folder 14Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, 1917

Box 1Folder 15

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, 1918Box 1

Folder 16Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, March 1919

Box 1Folder 17

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Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, July 1919Box 1

Folder 18Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August 1-13, 1919

Box 1Folder 19

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August 14-31, 1919Box 1

Folder 20Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August 1919 (typescript copies of some of letters in folders 18and 19, preceding)

Box 1Folder 21

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1919Box 1

Folder 22Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1919 (typescript copies of some of letters in folder21, preceding)

Box 1aFolder 1

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, June-July 17, 1920Box 1a

Folder 2Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, July 1920 (typescript of some letters in folder 1, preceding)

Box 1aFolder 3

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, July 20-July 31, 1920Box 1a

Folder 4Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August 1920

Box 1aFolder 5

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August 1920 (typescript of some letters in folder 4, preceding)Box 1a

Folder 6Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1920

Box 1aFolder 7

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1920 (typescript of some letters in folder 6,preceding)

Box 1aFolder 8

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, July-August 1921Box 1a

Folder 9Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1921

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Box 1aFolder 10

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, June-July 1923Box 1a

Folder 11Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August-September 1923

Box 1aFolder 12

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, June-July 1925Box 1a

Folder 13Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, August-September 1925

Box 1aFolder 14

Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, September 1926Box 1a

Folder 15Mead to Cynthia Tufts, August 1919

Box 1aFolder 16

Miscellaneous letters;Box 1a

Folder 17List of persons referred to in Mead's correspondence

Box 1aFolder 18

"George Herbert Mead," a memorial pamphlet; three eulogies and a biographical essay

Subseries 2: Philosophy of the Present Correspondence

Box 2Folder 1

The Paul Carus Foundation Lectures, 1930. Typescript with corrections and additionalcarbon copy of preface to and exchange of letters between H. C. A. Mead and CharlesMorris, October, 1936.

Box 2Folder 2

Untitled manuscripts I and II. Typescript with corrections, used as "SupplementaryEssays."

Series II: Course Materials

Subseries 1: Mind, Self and Society

Box 2Folder 3

Correspondence, chiefly to and from Charles W. Morris, editor, 1931-1936Box 2

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Folder 4"Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 1-80

Box 2Folder 5

Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 81-160Box 2

Folder 6Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 161-240

Box 2Folder 7

Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 241-321Box 2

Folder 8Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 322-400

Box 2Folder 9

Mind, Self, and Society," carbon copy of transcript of student notes, pp. 401-452Box 2

Folder 10Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes by

Box 2Folder 11

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes byBox 2

Folder 12Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes by

Box 2Folder 13

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes byBox 2

Folder 14Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes by

Box 2Folder 15

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes byBox 2

Folder 16Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes by

Box 2Folder 17

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321), student notes byBox 3

Folder 1Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321). Carbon copy of notes by R. R. Page, fromthe course given by Mead, Winter Quarter, 1930, interspersed with letters from R. R. Pageto Charles Morris, concerning the notes, pp. 1-113

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Box 3Folder 2

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321). Carbon copy of notes by R. R. Page, fromthe course given by Mead, Winter Quarter, 1930, interspersed with letters from R. R. Pageto Charles Morris, concerning the notes, pp. 114-184

Box 3Folder 3

"Supplementary Material." Carbon copy marked for printer's copy of SupplementaryEssays I, II, and III, "The Function of Imagery in Conduct," "The Biologic Individual,"and "The Self and the Process of Reflection."

Box 3Folder 4

Social Psychology (Philosophy 321). Typescript of notes by G. Shelburg, from the courseby Mead, Winter Quarter, 1927

Box 3Folder 5

Social Psychology. Typescript of student notes on the course given by Mead. (The pencilednotation indicates 1912 as the date of this set of notes, and the course as Philosophy 321.However, according to the Annual Register for the University of Chicago in 1912, Meadwas teaching a course on social psychology in the Psychology Department, Psychology 13.)

Box 3Folder 6-8

Copies of the contents of folder fiveBox 3

Folder 9Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 321). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead'slecture course, Winter Quarter, 1927

Box 3Folder 10

Social Psychology. Typescript of student notes from Mead's courseBox 3

Folder 11Social Psychology. Untitled handwritten set of student notes by

Subseries 2: Movement of Thought in the 19th Century, Materials

Box 3aFolder 1

Movements of Thought in the 19th Century (Philosophy 212). Carbon copy of studentnotes on Mead's course, April 2-May 4, 1928

Box 3aFolder 2

Movements of Thought in the 19th Century (Philosophy 212) Carbon copy of studentnotes on Mead's course, May 8-June 8, 1928

Box 3aFolder 3

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Movements of Thought in the 19th Century (Philosophy 212). Apparent duplicate of thestudent notes contained in Box 3a, folders 1 and 2 above, with different pagination. April2-May 4, 1928

Box 3aFolder 4

Movements of Thought in the 19th Century (Philosophy 212). Apparent duplicate of thestudent notes contained in Box 3a, folders 1 and 2 above, with different pagination, May8-June 8, 1928

Box 4Folder 1

Movements of Thought in the 19th Century (Philosophy 212). Carbon copy of studentnotes on Mead's course, Summer Quarter, 1928

Box 4Folder 2

Henri Bergson (Philosophy 413). Typescript of student notes by George N. Pappas onMead's course, Summer Quarter, 1927

Box 4Folder 3

(Carbon copy of the notes in folder 4)Box 4

Folder 4Henri Bergson. Carbon copy of student term paper for Mead by M. J Wahl

Subseries 3: Philosophy of the Act Materials

Box 4Folder 5

Correspondence, chiefly to Charles Morris concerning the preparation of the volume,August 1933-December 1937. Included is a carbon copy of the contract with theUniversity of Chicago Press for that volume

Box 4Folder 6

Notes by Charles W. Morris, in preparation for the volumeBox 4

Folder 7Typescript of the table of contents, the preface, and the introduction, marked for printer'scopy

Box 4Folder 8

Carbon copy of the title page and preface and typescript of an earlier draft of theintroduction, with corrections

Box 4Folder 9

Manuscript of essays I and II, Part I, titled by the editors, "Stages in the Act; PreliminaryStatement" and "The Limits of the Problematic." Also "Perception," typescript carbonwith holograph corrections in ink, 2 pp.; "The Reality of the Object in Perception,"typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink. 4 pp. (p. 5 missing); "The Perceptual

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and the Scientific Objects," typescript carbon, 7 pp.; and untitled fragment of "The Limitsof the Problematic," typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink and pencil,paginated 3-18.

Box 4Folder 10

Manuscript of essays III and IV, Part I, titled by the editors, "The Nature of ScientificKnowledge" and "Consciousness and the Unquestioned." Also, typescript carbon withholograph corrections in ink, paginated 23-61

Box 4Folder 11

Manuscript of essays V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, and XI, Parts I and II, titled by the editors,"Fragments on the Process of Reflection," "History and the Experimental Method,""Perspective Theory of Perception," "Mediate Factors in Perception," "The Social Factorin Perception," "Perceptual Error," and "Perspective Theory of Objects."

Box 4Folder 12

Manuscript of essays XII, XIII, XIV, XV, and XVI, Parts II and III, titled by the editors,"The Relativity of Objects," "Perception and the Spatiotemporal," "The Perceptual Modelin Science," and "Ontological Assumptions." Also untitled fragment of "The PerceptualModel in Science," typescript carbon, 9 pp.; and untitled fragment on "OntologicalAssumptions," typescript carbon, 3 pp

Box 4Folder 13

Manuscripts of essays XVII, XVIII, XIX, and XX, Part III, titled by the editors,"Mechanical and Teleological Objects," "Form and Environment," "Mechanism andContingency," and "Passage, Process, and Permanence."

Box 5Folder 1

Manuscript of essay XXI, Part III, titled by the editors, "The Process of the Mind inNature," and of that section of essay XXX, Part V titled by the editors, "Measurement andAction." Also incomplete typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, paginated1-88

Box 5Folder 2

Manuscripts of essays XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV, XXVI, XXVII, and XXVIII, Part IV,titled by the editors, "Value and the Consummatory Phase of the Act," "The Aestheticand the Consummatory," "Moral Behavior and Reflective Thinking," "Science andReligion," "Religion and Social Values," "Back of Our Minds," and "Experimentalism asa Philosophy of History." Also, "Back of Our Minds," typescript carbon with holographcorrections in ink and pencil, 19 pp

Box 5Folder 3

Manuscripts of essays XXIX, XXX, and XXXI, Part V, titled by the editors, "Fragmentson Whitehead," "Fragments on Relativity," and "Miscellaneous Fragments." Also,copy of fragment titled by the editors, "Relativity and Perception," typescript carbonwith holograph corrections in ink, paginated 62-75; copy of fragment titled by the

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editors, "Relativity and Perception," typescript carbon with holograph corrections inink, paginated 76-80; and copy of fragment titled by the editors, "Questions AboutWhitehead's Concept of Relativity," typescript carbon, 3 pp

Box 5Folder 4

Typescript of section G, essay XXXI, Part V, titled by the editors, "CategoricalFragments." Also, typescript carbon with annotations in pencil, paginated 299-411[irregular]

Box 5Folder 5

Manuscript of student notes, from which the material in folder 4 above, was compiledBox 5

Folder 6Fragments of Mead's work. Typescripts with some corrections, labeled, presumably by theeditors of Philosophy of the Act, as "Used in Philosophy of the Act."

Box 5Folder 7

Fragments of Mead's work. Typescripts with some corrections, labeled, presumably by theeditors of Philosophy of the Act, as omitted from that volume

Box 5Folder 8

Fragments of Mead's work. Typescripts, labeled, presumably by the editors of Philosophyof the Act, but apparently not included in that volume

Box 5Folder 9

Fragments of Mead's work. Typescript and handwritten, untitledBox 5

Folder 10Fragments of Mead's work. Typescript and ditto copy, with some corrections

Subseries 4: Student Notes

Box 6Folder 1

Aristotle's Metaphysics (Philosophy 355). Typescript of student notes by George N.Pappas, on Mead's course, Winter Quarter, 1925, pp. 1-73

Box 6Folder 2

Aristotle's Metaphysics (Philosophy 355). Typescript of student notes by George N.Pappas, on Mead's course, Winter Quarter, 1925, pp. 73a-158

Box 6Folder 3

Carbon copy of material in folder 1Box 6

Folder 4Carbon copy of material in folder 2

Box 6

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Folder 5Carbon copy of material in folder 1

Box 6Folder 6

Carbon copy of material in folder 2Box 6

Folder 7Aristotle's Metaphysics (Philosophy 355). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Spring Quarter, 1928, pp. 1-110

Box 6Folder 8

Aristotle's Metaphysics (Philosophy 355). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Spring Quarter, 1928, pp. 111-263

Box 6Folder 9

Carbon copy of material in folder 7Box 6

Folder 10Carbon copy of material in folder 8

Box 7Folder 1

John Dewey (Philosophy 441?). Student notes. Student notes by George Dykhuisen onMead's course, Winter Quarter, 1926

Box 7Folder 2

The Philosophy of John Dewey (article by G. H. Mead). Carbon copy marked fromprinter's copy

Box 7Folder 3

Elementary Ethics (Philosophy 104). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Autumn Quarter, 1927, pp. 1-118

Box 7Folder 4

Elementary Ethics (Philosophy 104). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Autumn Quarter, 1927, pp. 119-244

Box 7Folder 5

Hegel's Phenomology (Philosophy 420). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Winter Quarter, 1928, pp. 1-105

Box 7Folder 6

Hegel's Phenomology (Philosophy 420). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course,Winter Quarter, 1928, pp. 106-207

Box 7Folder 7

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Hume (Philosophy 17). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, Spring Quarter,1922, 36 pp. Also, carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, Winter Quarter, 1925,with penciled notation indicating the notes were taken by George Dykhuisen

Box 7Folder 8

Hume. Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, Spring Quarter, 1927Box 7

Folder 9Hume. Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, undated

Box 7Folder 10

Hume. Typescript of student notes on Mead's course, undatedBox 7

Folder 11Hume (Philosophy 345). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, undated

Box 7Folder 12

Hume (Philosophy 407). Typescript of a student paper by David H. Chirin for MeadBox 7

Folder 13Leibnitz (Philosophy 341?). Typescript of student notes on Mead's course, undated

Box 7Folder 14

Leibnitz (Philosophy 344). Typescript of "Logical and Epistemological Implications ofthe Leibnitzian Monadology," based on a presentation by Mead, Autumn Quarter, 1926,arranged by G. E. M. Shelburg

Box 7Folder 15

Leibnitz (Philosophy 344). Apparent duplicate of the student notes contained in folder 13Box 7

Folder 16Leibnitz (Philosophy 344). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, AutumnQuarter, 1926

Box 8Folder 1

Logic (Philosophy 103). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, AutumnQuarter, 1928, pp. 1-129

Box 8Folder 2

Logic (Philosophy 103). Carbon copy of student notes on Mead's course, AutumnQuarter, 1928, pp. 130-232

Box 8Folder 3

Philosophies on Eminent Scientists (Philosophy 65?). Carbon copy of student notes.(Penciled notation indicates the notes were taken by George Dykhuisen, for SpringQuarter, 1925)

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Box 8Folder 4

Philosophies on Eminent Scientists (Philosophy 343). Carbon copy of student notes onMead's course, Winter Quarter, 1927)

Box 8Folder 5

The Problem of Consciousness (Philosophy 403). Typescript of student notes by G. E. M.Shelburg on Mead's course, Spring Quarter, 1926

Box 8Folder 6

The Problem of Consciousness (Philosophy 403). Apparent duplicate of the student notescontained in folder 5

Box 8Folder 7

Rationalism and Empiricism (Philosophy 19). Holograph notes taken by Irene TuftsMead, Autumn Quarter, 1915, 94 pp. Also, typescript of student [?] notes on Mead'scourse, Autumn Quarter, 1915

Box 8Folder 8

Logic of Social Science (Philosophy 30). Typescript of student notes by Juliet Hammondon Mead's course, 1910-1911

Box 8Folder 9

Philosophy of Education (Philosophy ). Typescript of student notes by Juliet Hammondon Mead's course, 1910-1911

Series III: Writings

Box 9Folder 1

"Bishop Berkeley and His Message; an address delivered on the 200th anniversary of thelanding of Bishop Berkeley in this country, at a joint celebration by the University ofCalifornia and the city of Berkeley, _____, 1929." Typescript marked for printer's copy.Also, typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink; galley proofs; and reprint fromThe Journal of Philosophy, XXVI, August 1, 1929

Box 9Folder 2

"Cooley's Contribution to American Sociological Thought." Typescript marked forprinter's copy. Also, typescript carbon and reprint from The American Journal ofSociology, XXXV, March 1930

Box 9Folder 3

"The Genesis of the Self and Social Control." Typescript marked for printer's copy. Also,reprint from The International Journal of Ethics, XXXV, April 1925

Box 9Folder 4

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"Industrial Education, the Working Man, and the School." Holograph draft, 60 pp. Also,typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 19 pp.; and reprint from The ElementarySchool Teacher, X, March 1909

Box 9Folder 5

"The Mechanism of Social Consciousness." Typescript marked for printer's copy;typescript copy prepared by student [?]; galley proofs; and reprint from The Journal ofPhilosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, IX, July 18, 1912

Box 9Folder 6

"National-Mindedness and International-Mindedness." Typescript marked for printer'scopy, 19 pp. Also, galley proofs titled, "International-Mindedness and Its Achievement";and two reprints from The International Journal of Ethics, XXXIX, July 1929

Box 9Folder 7

"Natural Rights and the Theory of the Political Institution." Reprint from The Journal ofPhilosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, XXI, March 18, 1915

Box 9Folder 8

"The Nature of Aesthetic Experience." Typescript marked for printer's copy, 12 pp. Also,carbon copy and reprint from The International Journal of Ethics, XXXVI, July 1926

Box 9Folder 9

"The Nature of the Past." Typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, 9 ppBox 9

Folder 10"The Philosophies if Royce, James, and Dewey in Their American Settings." Typescriptwith holograph corrections in ink, 21 pp. lso, typescript carbon, 20 pp. [incomplete];typescript marked for printer's copy, 28 pp.; and reprint from The International Journal ofEthics, XL, January 1930

Box 9Folder 11

"A Pragmatic Theory of Truth." Typescript with corrections, 22 pp. Also, a carbon copy(possibly lecture given at the Chicago Literary Society or the University College. M.McF.). This material has been published under the title "A Pragmatic Theory of Truth,"in Studies in the Nature of Truth, University of California Publications in Philosophy, XI,1929

Box 9Folder 12

"The Psychology of Punitive Justice." Typescript marked for printer's copy, 28 pp. Also,reprint from The American Journal of Sociology, XXIII, March 1918

Box 9Folder 13

"Relativity." Typescript of manuscript, 46 pp. Begins; "Newtonian relativity recognizedthat uniform translation in a straight line..."

Box 9

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Folder 14"Scientific Method and the Moral Sciences." Typescript marked for printer's copy, 18 pp.Also, typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, 18 pp.; and reprint form TheInternational Journal of Ethics, XXXIII, April 1923

Box 9Folder 15

"Suggestions Toward a Theory of the Philosophical Disciplines." Carbon copy of atranscript of a reprint from The Philosophical Review, IX, 1900

Box 9Folder 16

Untitled essay or lecture. Begins; "The grandiose undertaking of Absolute Idealism tobring the whole of reality within experience..." (on connection between behavioristicpsychology and Whitehead's philosophy of relativism). Penciled note by David Millerreads, "The Objective Reality of Perception," address given at Sixth International Congressof Philosophy, 1926.' Typewritten carbon copy, 13 pp

Box 9Folder 17

Obituary of Albert Temple Swing. Typewritten carbon copy, 3 ppBox 9

Folder 18Untitled essay on perception. Begins; "All perception refers to actual or possible contactexperience." Holograph, 1 p

Box 9Folder 19

Untitled essay on Royce and James. Begins; "To envisage Royce and James as they wereprojected upon the minds and imaginations of graduate students..." Typescript withcorrections and carbon copy, 7 pp. each

Box 9Folder 20

Reviews and book notices on Mind, Self, and Society; Movements of Thought in the 19thCentury; and Philosophy of the Present

Box 9Folder 21

Untitled welcoming speech to new members of the University Congregation, re; thefunctioning of the Congregation and obligations of its members. Typescript withcorrections, 2 pp

Box 9Folder 22

Hart, Schaffner and Marx Labor Agreement; Mead's notes, holograph, 4 ppBox 9

Folder 23Untitled MS re; proposal for central statistical bureau to coordinate the findings of variousagencies on Chicago's social conditions

Box 9Folder 24

"Social Bearings of Industrial Educations." Typescript, incomplete, 24 pp

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Box 9Folder 25

Untitled notes re; living conditions of Slavic immigrants working in the packing industry.Typescript, 1 p

Box 9Folder 26

"The Teaching of Science in College." Typescript marked for printer's copy, 13 pp. Also,reprint from Science, XXIV, September 28, 1906

Box 9Folder 27

Review of McDougall's An Introduction to Social Psychology, 1908Box 9

Folder 28Untitled fragments. Typescripts, 1 p. each

Box 9Folder 29

Untitled miscellaneous notes on logic; various quotations from Plato and Aristotle;mimeographed outline "Impulse, Problems of," bibliography for "Effort," and quotationsfrom various philosophers on "Choice."

Box 9Folder 30

Untitled essay, holograph, 7 pp. Begins; "The distinction between the primary andsecondary qualities..."

Box 9Folder 31

Untitled essay, typescript, 14 pp. (incomplete). Begins; "The Presentation that followsadvances upon two suppositions."

Box 9Folder 32

Untitled essay, holograph, 14 pp. (incomplete). Begins; "Science in its assumptions takesto be real the result of an actual or conceivable contact."

Box 9Folder 33

Untitled essay, typescript, 2 pp. On World War IBox 9

Folder 34Clippings. Five articles by Mead on World War I

Box 10Folder 1

Untitled essay on Jesus, love and activity. Holograph, 39 pp. page 1 missing), February1893?

Box 10Folder 2

Untitled remarks on the 100th anniversary of the death of Kant, 1904, holograph, 8 ppBox 10

Folder 3

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"The Imagination in Wundt's Treatment of Myth and Religion" (published inPsychological Bulletin, III, 1906). Typescript marked for printer's copy, 8 pp

Box 10Folder 4

Untitled essay (published as "Science in the High School," School Review, XIV, 1906).Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 16 pp. Also, typescript carbon withholograph corrections in ink, 16 pp (p. 9 missing)

Box 10Folder 5

Review of Henri Bergson's L'Evolution Creatrice, Paris; 1907, holograph, incomplete, 21pp

Box 10Folder 6

Untitled essay (published as "Concerning Animal Perception," Psychological Review, XIV,1907), holograph, incomplete, 21 pp

Box 10Folder 7

Untitled essay (published as "Policy of The Elementary School Teacher," The ElementarySchool Teacher, VIII, 1907-1908) Holograph, 13 pp

Box 10Folder 8

Untitled essay (published as "The Philosophical Basis of Ethics," International Journal ofEthics, XVIII, 3, April 1908). Holograph, 52 pp

Box 10Folder 9

"Social Psychology as Counterpart to Physiological Psychology." Typescript marked forprinter's copy, 10 pp. Also, reprint from Psychological Bulletin, VI, December 15, 1909

Box 10Folder 10

Untitled speech on the world of thought before and after the publication of Origin of theSpecies. Address given at celebration of Darwin Centenary, 1909. Typescript, 16 pp

Box 10Folder 11

Untitled essay (published as "What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose?").Holograph draft, 29 pp. Also, typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 10 pp.Published in Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, VII, 1910

Box 10Folder 12

"The Psychology of Social Consciousness Implied in Instruction." Typescript marked forprinter's copy, 10 pp. Also, galley proofs, Science, XXI, 1910

Box 10Folder 13

Review of Warner Fite's Individualism; Four Lectures on the Significance ofConsciousness for Social Relations, New York, London; Longmans, Green & Co., 1911.Holograph draft, 18 pp. Also, typescript carbon, 8 pp.; and galley proofs, PsychologicalBulletin.

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Box 10Folder 14

"The Social Self" (published in The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and ScientificMethods, X, 1913). Typescript marked for printer's copy, 13 pp. Also, typescript preparedby student [?], 7 pp. (incomplete)

Box 10Folder 15

Untitled essay (published as "Mead on the Child and the School" with an introduction byDarnell Rucker, in School and Society, March 2, 1968, pp. 148-152). Holograph, 29 pp.Also, reprint from School and Society

Box 10Folder 16

"Educational Aspects of Trade Schools" (speech before the Women's Trade Union Leagueof Chicago, reprinted in the Union Labor Advocate, pp. 19-20, n. d.)

Box 10Folder 17

"The Relation of Embryological Development to Education." Typescript, incomplete, 7pp

Box 10Folder 18

"Science in social practice." Partial typescript, partial manuscript, 40 ppBox 10

Folder 19Untitled report on vocational training. Typescript, 12 pp

Box 10Folder 20

Untitled essay on the origin of Greek speculation. Typescript, incomplete, pp. 4-33.Carbon copy, incomplete, pp. 11-33

Box 10Folder 21

Notes on industry and slavery from Plato's Laws. Typescript, 7 ppBox 10

Folder 22Untitled translation of Aristotle's Metaphysics, Book III (B) Typescript, incomplete, 17 pp

Box 10Folder 23

Untitled response to a paper by Professor Robinson. Partially typescript, partialmanuscript, 7 pp

Box 10Folder 24

Untitled essay on social consciousness and social science. Partial typescript, partialmanuscript, 22 pp. Begins; "From the attitude of Tennyson who `saw the heavens filled..."

Box 10Folder 25

Untitled fragments on the social role of religious emotion. Typescript with corrections, 14pp

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Box 10Folder 26

Untitled fragment on social conflict and the superstition of necessity. Typescript withcorrections, 10 pp

Box 10Folder 27

Untitled fragment on the act and the stimulus. Typescript, 9 pp.Box 10

Folder 28Untitled fragment on the act, control of the environment, intelligence, etc. Typescript, 1p.

Box 10Folder 29

Untitled fragment on the distinction between fact and theory. Holograph, 3 ppBox 10

Folder 30Untitled fragment on the relation between evolution, the development of intelligence, andthe control of emotion, passion, or reflex action. Typescript, 7 pp

Box 10Folder 31

Untitled fragment on the development of locomotion and tactual control in the feedingprocess of animals. Typescript, 2 pp

Box 10Folder 32

Untitled fragment on the art impulse in the young child and on the development of it byeducation. Typescript, 2 pp

Box 10Folder 33

Untitled fragment on the development of Greek political consciousness based on rationalindividual participation as opposed to the family or clan oriented irrational politicalorganization of more primitive societies. Typescript, 5 pp

Box 10Folder 34

Review of B. M. Anderson, Jr., Social Value; A Study in Economic Theory; Critical andConstructive, Boston and New York; Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1911. Holograph draftmarked or printer's copy, 13 pp

Box 10Folder 35

Untitled fragment on sense of perception and behavior. typescript, not necessarilycontinuous, 7 pp

Box 10Folder 36

Untitled fragment on rationality in lower forms as exhibited in external behavior and asresult of possible nervous processes, typescript, 5 pp

Series IV: Addenda Materials

22

Subseries 1: Correspondence

Box 11Folder 1

CorrrespondenceBox 11

Folder 2Correspondence

Subseries 2: Biographical

Box 11Folder 3

Eulogies for Helen Castle Mead, 1929-1930Box 11

Folder 4Program of the American Philosophical Association meeting, University of California,Berkeley, December 29-31, 1930. Two humorous verses regarding the theory of relativity.Holograph, 2 pp

Box 11Folder 5

Ames, Edward Scribner. "Professor George Herbert Mead. April 30, 1931." Eulogy,typescript carbon, 4 pp

Box 11Folder 6

Dewey, John. "George Herbert Mead as I knew Him." Eulogy, typescript with holographcorrections in ink and pencil, 8 pp. Also, typescript carbon, 10 pp

Box 11Folder 7

Webster, Mary H. "Mr. Mead's Funeral." Typescript carbon with holograph corrections inink, 1 p

Box 11Folder 8

Letter of condolence on the death of GHM, 1931-1932. Includes Ellsworth Faris, SergeProkofieff, Graham Taylor, William Kelley Wright, and others

Box 11Folder 8a

Raymond Graham Swing to Henry C. A. Mead, September 23, 1931, concerningmemorial booklet and memories of Mead. Memorial statement by James M. Tufts at 1932meeting of Western Philosophical Association

Subseries 3: Essays on Psychology

Box 11Folder 9

Manuscript on essays titled, "The Social Character of Instincts," "Social Psychologyas Counterpart to Physiological Psychology," "What Social Objects Must Psychology

23

Presuppose," "Emotion and Instinct," and "A Psychological Study of the Use ofStimulation."

Box 11Folder 10

Galley proofs for essays in folder 9Box 11

Folder 11Manuscript essays titled, "The Problem of Comparative Psychology," "ConcerningAnimal Perception," "On Perception and Imitation," "The Relation of the EmbryologicalDevelopment to Education," and "The Child and His Environment." Typescript,paginated 00038-00102

Box 11Folder 12

Galley proofs for essay in folder 11Box 11

Folder 13Manuscript of essays titled, "The Kindergarten and Play," "The Relation of Play toEducation," "On the Social Situation in the School," "The University and the School ofEducation," "The University and the Elementary Schools," "Science in the High School,""The Teaching of Science in College," and "Industrial Education, the Workingman,and the Elementary School." Typescript, typescript carbon, and reprints, paginated00103-00165

Box 11Folder 14

Galley proofs for essays in folder 13

Subseries 4: Titled Manuscripts

Box 12Folder 1

"A Behavioristic Account of the Significant Symbol." Typescript with holographcorrections in ink, 8 pp. Also, typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, 8 pp

Box 12Folder 2

"Editorial, Feb. School Rev." Typescript marked for printer's copy, 9 pp. Published inSchool Review, XV, February 1907

Box 12Folder 3

"How Can a Sense of Citizenship Be Secured?" Typescript with holograph corrections inink, 11 pp

Box 12Folder 4

Human nature and Conduct. By John Dewey. Review, typescript carbon with holographcorrections in ink and pencil, 7 pp

Box 12Folder 5

24

"The League and the Community." Bulletin of the Vocational Supervision League, April15, 1919, p. [1]. Reprint

Box 12Folder 6

"Natural Rights and the Theory of the Political Institution." Typescript marked forprinter's copy, 19 pp. Also, galley proofs, Journal of Philosophy

Box 12Folder 7

The Philosophy of the Act. Manuscript fragments prepared for possible use and titled bythe editors, "Simultaneity in Relation to Neo-Realism and Pragmatism," "Time Systemsand Contingency," "Perceptual Simultaneity," "The Subjective," and "The Reflective Act."Typescript carbon, paginated 666-669, 691-700

Box 12Folder 8

A Report on Vocational Training in Chicago and Other Cities, by a Sub-Committee[Ernest A. Wreidt, William J. Bogan, and GHM] of the Committee on Public Educationof the City Club of Chicago (Chicago; U of C Press, 1912). Chapter I, miscellaneousmanuscript fragments. Typescript, 4 pp.; typescript carbon, 18 pp

Box 12Folder 9

A Report on Vocational Training in Chicago and Other Cities, by a Sub-Committee[Ernest A. Wreidt, William J. Bogan, and GHM] of the Committee on Public Educationof the City Club of Chicago (Chicago; U of C Press, 1912). Chapter V, miscellaneousmanuscript fragments. Typescript, 5 pp.; typescript carbon with holograph corrections inink and pencil, 5 pp

Box 12Folder 10

A Report on Vocational Training in Chicago and Other Cities, by a Sub-Committee[Ernest A. Wreidt, William J. Bogan, and GHM] of the Committee on Public Educationof the City Club of Chicago (Chicago; U of C Press, 1912). Chapter V, manuscriptfragment. Typescript carbon, 3 pp

Box 12Folder 11

A Report on Vocational Training in Chicago and Other Cities, by a Sub-Committee[Ernest A. Wreidt, William J. Bogan, and GHM] of the Committee on Public Educationof the City Club of Chicago (Chicago; U of C Press, 1912). Chapter X, manuscript byWalter C. Campbell, special investigator. Typescript carbon, 22 pp. Also, covering letterfrom Campbell to the Committee, holograph, 1 p

Box 12Folder 12

"Scientific Method and the Individual Thinker." Typescript with holograph corrections inink and pencil, 38 pp

Box 12Folder 13

"Social Consciousness and the Consciousness of Meaning." Typescript (pp. 1-3) andholograph (pp. 3-24) marked for printer's copy, 24 pp

25

Box 12Folder 14

"Social Settlements." Address delivered in Mandel Hall on Settlement Sunday, October28, 1907; published in The University Record, XII, January 1908. Typescript marked forprinter's copy, 6 pp

Subseries 5: Untitled Writings

Box 12Folder 15

Eulogy for Maria Merriam Shorey. Begins; "Mrs. Shorey was born 76 years ago in a NewEngland town..." Holograph, 11 pp

Box 12Folder 16

Fragments on mind-body, experience, gestures, and other subjects. Holograph, 3 pp. inpencil, 26 pp. in ink and pencil

Box 12Folder 17

On a proposed Board of Examination and Supervision for the Chicago public schools.Begins; "1. I wish to make it perfectly clear at the outset that in appearing before theCommittee at this hearing..." Typescript carbon, 8 pp

Box 12Folder 18

On a review of Ross' Sin and Society. Begins; "Professor Ross of the University ofWisconsin has written a book entitled Sin & Society..." Holograph, 23 pp

Box 12Folder 19

On America's entry into World War I. Begins; "Out of a situation of great confusion[of] judgement and uncertainty of issues America has passed into the completely definiteattitude of a fighting power..." Typescript, 4 pp

Box 12Folder 20

On Bergson's theory of perception. Begins; "Bergson's theory of perception involves twoessential conceptions." Typescript carbon, 3 pp

Box 12Folder 21

On charitable man and sympathy. Begins; "The charitable man is immediately moved bysympathy to assist those in distress." Typescript, 2 pp. Also, typescript carbon, 2 pp

Box 12Folder 22

On conflicting responses and the emergence of thought. Begins; "Sensitivity implies arelation between the object and the organism..." Added title in the handwriting of DavidL. Miller. Typescript carbon with holograph corrections in pencil, 16 pp. (incomplete)

Box 12Folder 23

26

On consciousness and the material world. Begins; "St. Augustine watching from hisspiritual height the sack of Rome..." Typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink,19 pp

Box 12Folder 24

On contact experience and distance experience. Begins; "Reality in perceptual world andunder scientific method is ultimately determined by the agreement between anticipatedcontact experience..." Holograph, 8 pp

Box 12Folder 25

On disease prevention. Begins; "There are constantly appearing in the practice of thecommunity new procedures, methods of treating and preventing disease..." Typescriptcarbon with holograph corrections in ink, 2 pp

Box 12Folder 26

On humanity, happiness, and the moral order [1922]. Begins; "There are threeconceptions potent in the life of the world today..." Typescript carbon, 2 pp

Box 12Folder 27

On Kant and German nationalism. Begins; "Immanuel Kant is the Königsbergphilosopher to whom the present King of Prussia ascribes in good part..." Typescript withholograph corrections in pencil, 21 pp

Box 12Folder 28

On labor and industrial power. Begins; "In the face of the problem of our modernindustrial society..." Typescript, 2 pp

Box 12Folder 29

On labor's interests in World War I. Begins; "What are the specific interests of labor in thewar?" Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 16 pp

Box 12Folder 30

On loss of consciousness. Begins; "What is the meaning of the expression, loss ofconsciousness?" Typescript with holograph corrections in pencil, 26 pp. (paginated a-z).Also, typescript carbon with holograph corrections in pencil, 31 pp. (paginated a-z)

Box 12Folder 31

On medical training for women. Begins; "The problem of training women for medicineis much more serious than that of the training of men." Typescript, 7 pp. Also, holographnote by Irene Tufts Mead dating the manuscript ca. 1917, 1 p

Box 12Folder 32

On might and right in World War I. Begins; "The most serious injury which can be dealtto the cause of Germany is to identify it..." Typescript with holograph corrections in inkand pencil, 11 pp

Box 13

27

Folder 1On militarism and nationalism. Begins; "The war in Europe has paid certain great spiritualdividends." Holograph, 37 pp. Also, typescript carbon, 22 pp. (incomplete)

Box 13Folder 2

On nationalism, individual rights, and social conflict. Begins; "Since the middle of thenineteenth century there has been a rising tide of nationalism throughout the world."Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 14 pp

Box 13Folder 3

On perception, consciousness, and the mind-body problem. Begins; "There appear to betwo problems involved in perception..." Typescript carbon, 6 pp

Box 13Folder 4

On primary and secondary qualities. Begins; "There appear to be two problems involved inPerception..." Typescript, 11 pp (paginated aa-kk, incomplete). Also, typescript carbon, 18pp (paginated aa-qq)

Box 13Folder 5

On relativity. Begins; "Relativity inevitably makes spatiality and temporality functions ofimmediate experience..." Holograph in ink and pencil, 34 pp

Box 13Folder 6

On Russell's Skeptical Essays. Begins; "I wish to propose for the reader's favorableconsideration a doctrine..." Typescript, 8 pp

Box 13Folder 7

On socialism and World War I. Begins; "I recognize that there are many socialistdoctrines, and still more socialist attitudes among

Box 13Folder 8

On space and motion. Begins; "If all motion was transitory and uniform..." Holograph inink, 3 pp

Box 13Folder 9

On space and time. Begins; "A physical thing lies in a space-time, and it has characters..."Typescript carbon, 4 pp

Box 13Folder 10

On temperance. Begins; "The phenomena of intemperance are of such a fundamentalcharacter that they are sure to have their roots..." Added title in the handwriting of DavidL. Miller. Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 7 pp

Box 13Folder 11

28

On the appointment of the Librarian of the Chicago Public Library in Chicago. Begins;"The appointment of the Librarian of the Public Library of Chicago presents a problem..."Typescript with holograph corrections and additions in ink and pencil, 11 pp

Box 13Folder 12

On the colonization of Hawaii. Begins; "Hawaii is America's oldest and indeed onlycolony..." Typescript and holograph, 23 pp

Box 13Folder 13

On the creative character of human intelligence. Begins; "The real issue involved in thecreative character of human intelligence..." Typescript carbon with holograph correctionsin ink, 128 pp. (paginated I-CXXXI, pp. II, LVIII-LIX missing); 2 pp. typescript original(paginated XVII-XIX)

Box 13Folder 14

On the effects of industrialization. Begins; "The study of the development of the machinereveals certain fairly definite tendencies..." Holograph, 40 pp

Box 13Folder 15

On the German Kulturstaat. Begins; "There are voices heard in Germany, occasionallyreaching the world outside, that betray serious anxiety..." Typescript with holographcorrections in ink, 9 pp

Box 13Folder 16

On the individual and the environment. Begins; "The problem of the modern world, atleast as the modern world has conceived it..." Typescript with holograph corrections inpencil, 4 pp

Box 13Folder 17

On the individual and the object. Begins; "An object is that toward which an individualreacts as a whole." Typescript, 5 pp. Also, typescript carbon, 6 pp (incomplete)

Box 13Folder 18

On the integration of academic departments at the University of Chicago. Begins; "Thedepartments in this group cover subjects so intimately related..." Holograph, 9 pp. Also,typescript carbon, 4 pp

Box 13Folder 19

On the material universe and the social world. Begins; "The reality of the materialuniverse in so far as it is distinguished from the social world..." Typescript with holographcorrections in pencil, 2 p

Box 13Folder 20

On the methodology of the social sciences. Begins; "Scientific method the same in allsciences." Typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, 2 pp

Box 13

29

Folder 21On the object and the gesture. Begins; "Thinking involves significant indication ofobjects..." Typescript carbon, 1 p

Box 13Folder 22

On the relationship between intellectualistic psychology and America's entry into WorldWar I. Begins; "There are certain inheritances of an intellectualistic psychology..."Typescript with holograph corrections in ink and pencil, 6 pp

Box 13Folder 23

On the relationship between the University of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin stategovernment. Begins; "... a so-called progressive movement in Wisconsin politics which hasled among other things to the formation of commissions..." Galley proofs and typescriptwith corrections in pencil, 27 pp (incomplete)

Box 13Folder 24

On the role of social settlements. Begins; "The Settlement grew out of ecclesiasticalphilanthropy." Typescript carbon, 12 pp

Box 13Folder 25

On the self and teleological behavior. Begins; "The human individual has as part of his self,the physical organism in so far as it acts as a stimulus..." Typescript carbon with holographcorrections in ink, 39 pp

Box 13Folder 26

On the state and social control. Begins; "The two sides of our emotional life upon whichemphasis has been laid..." Holograph, 8 pp

Box 13Folder 27

On Tolstoi and Ibsen. Begins; "Two artists have arisen in the last generation, upon who,Maeterlinck has commented..." Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 16 pp

Box 13Folder 28

Report of a subcommittee of the Committee on the Chicago Board of Education andTeaching Federation. Begins; "The Vice President of the Board of Education, Mr. Eckhart,in statements of the 7th and 8th..." Typescript carbon, 8 pp

Box 13Folder 29

Report of the Committee on Public Education on vocational training in high schools,[1913]. Begins; "Your committee instructed two years ago to make a survey of the variousagencies involved in educating..." Typescript carbon with hlograph corrections in ink, 8 pp

Box 13Folder 30

Review of Lasswitz' Die moderne Energetik in ihrer Bedeutung für die ErkenntnissKritik. Begins; "The author adds in these articles another chapter to his history of modernatomism." Holograph, 10 pp

30

Subseries 6: Student Notes

Box 14Folder 1

Advanced Social Psychology (Philosophy 21). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames,69 pp. Winter Quarter, 1921

Box 14Folder 2

Aristotle's Metaphysics (Philosophy 40). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, 71pp. Autumn Quarter, 1923

Box 14Folder 3

Hegel's Logic (Philosophy 63). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, 50 pp. SpringQuarter, 1923. (10 pp. of reading motes on Hegel follow the lecture notes)

Box 14Folder 4

Hegel's Phenomenology (Philosophy 44). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, 21pp. Spring Quarter, 1921

Box 14Folder 5

Logic of the Sciences (Philosophy 45). Holograph notes, with oneBox 14

Folder 6Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century (Philosophy 6). Holograph notestaken by Irene Tufts Mead, 69 pp. Spring Quarter, 1915

Box 14Folder 7

Philosophy pf Kant (Philosophy 42). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, 29 pp.Autumn Quarter, 1920

Box 14Folder 8

Philosophy of Kant (Philosophy 43). Holograph notes taken by Van Meter Ames, 29 pp.Winter Quarter, 1921

Box 14Folder 9

Problems of Consciousness (Philosophy 50). Holograph notesBox 14

Folder 10Relativity from the Standpoint of Pragmatism (Philosophy 46). Typescript notes takenby Van Meter Ames, 45 pp. (pp. 24-28 borrowed from Charles Morris). Spring Quarter,1923

Box 14Folder 11

Social Psychology (Philosophy 13). Holograph notes taken by Irene Tufts Mead, 59 pp.Spring Quarter, 1915

Subseries 7: Writings by Others

31

Box 14Folder 12

Addams, Jane. "Charity and Social Justice." Typescript carbon with holograph correctionsin pencil, 27 pp

Box 14Folder 13

Anonymous. "Education through Activity, Behavior, Expression." Typescript carbon withholograph corrections and drawings in ink, 182 pp

Box 14Folder 14

Anonymous. Eulogy for Gordon Dewey. Typescript carbon, 8 ppBox 14

Folder 15Anonymous. "Mr. Lowell's College," Typescript with holograph corrections in ink, 19 pp

Box 14Folder 16

Chamberlain, Thomas C. "The Reform of the Calendar." Reprint from Science. N.S.,XXXII, November 25, 1910

Box 14Folder 17

Robinson, James Harvey. "The Background of History." Typescript carbon withholograph corrections in pencil, 28 pp

Box 14Folder 18

Talbert, Ernest L. Opportunities in School and Industry for Children of the StockyardsDistrict (Chicago; U of C Press, 1912). Typescript with holograph corrections in ink andpencil, 96 pp

Box 14Folder 19

Yoshioka, Gen-ichiro. "A Semantic Study of the Verbs of Doing and Making in the Indo-European Languages." Typescript carbon with holograph corrections in ink, 34 pp

Subseries 8: Addenda Correspondence

Box 15Folder 1

George Herbert Mead to Elizabeth S. Mead, ALS, January 9, 1912Box 15

Folder 2George Herbert Mead to Irene Tufts Mead, AL, 1929, note concerning correspondencewith Arthur E. Murphy

Subseries 9: Biographical materials

Box 15Folder 3

32

Mount Holyoke Alumnae Association, Resolutions regarding Mrs. Elizabeth S. Mead,October 20, 1900 Autopsy report of George Herbert Mead, April 27, 1931 Memorialbooklet for Albert Temple Swing, 1849-1925

Box 15Folder 4

Irene Tufts Mead to David Miller, ALS, May 28, 1964 List of material lent to David L.Miller by Irene Tufts Mead, of George Herbert Mead Manuscripts lent to D. W. Miller byIrene Tufts Mead

Subseries 10: Addenda Writings

Box 15Folder 5

Review of Thoughts of a Psychiatrist on the War and After by William A. White, M. D.,TD

Box 15Folder 6

Review of The Domain of Natural Science by E. W. Hobson, TD"The Function of theSettlement in the Community" (TD)

Box 15Folder 7

"Ideal," typed and autograph manuscript

Subseries 11: Student notes

Box 15Folder 8-10

Class notes from Philosophy 321, Social Psychology, author unknown, 1912 or 1914Box 15

Folder 11-12Class notes from Philosophy 321, Social Psychology, by G. Shelburg, Spring [sic] 1927

Box 15Folder 13

Class notes from Philosophy 21, Social Psychology, by Ernst Bouldin Harper, Winter1921

Box 15Folder 14

Class notes from Psychology 11; Theoretical Comparative Psychology and Psychology 13;Abstract Social Psychology, by Juliet Hammond, 1910-1911

Subseries 12: Books signed by Mead

Box 15Folder 15

J. Baumann, Einführung in die Pädagogik, Leipzig, 1890Box 15

Folder 16Jürgen Bona Meyer, Aristoteles Thierkunde; Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Zoologie,Physiologie, und alten Philosophie, Berlin, 1855