"Aristotelian categories and cognitive domains" / Ian Hacking, Synthese 126
- UTA 1339-5-5.4-B2016-0017/011(13)
- File
- 2001
Part of Ian Hacking fonds
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"Aristotelian categories and cognitive domains" / Ian Hacking, Synthese 126
Part of Ian Hacking fonds
Consists of correspondence received by Liubchenko from writers, translators, theatre administrators, directors, actors, film studios and editors; records of the literary groups HART and VAPLITE and PROLITFRONT; correspondence and other records dating from WWII; manuscripts and typescripts of Liubchanko's novels, short stories, reports and articles; notes; photographs; books; newspaper clippings; and records relating to the Liubchenko Archive.
Liubchenko, Arkadii
Fonds consists of 2 accessions:
B1992-0024: Photoprints, illustrations, slides, film and video documenting Professor Rappaport's expertise on diseases of the liver. Most were used for teaching and lectures; some of the graphic records were used in publications. Also included in this accession are some biographical files, addresses and publications. (14 boxes and 10 cans of film, 1927-1992)
B1993-0010: Course notes, manuscripts and articles, course and lecture notes, theses, minutes of meetings, publications, documenting the career of Dr. Aron M. Rappaport as a professor, research scientist and a specialist in diseases of the liver. (3 boxes, 1934-1992)
Rappaport, Aron M.
Correspondence, course and lecture notes relating to his early education at University of Toronto Schools, Upper Canada College and as undergraduate and medical student at the University of Toronto; diaries, addresses, and publications documenting Arthur Parks' education, his military service in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps during World War II, and his subsequent career in the insurance business. Also includes course notes of Park's aunt, Mary Louise McLennan, in Education, 1914-1915. Photograph of Camp Borden.
Parks, Arthur Ewart
Fonds consists of 3 accessions:
B1978-0030: Personal and professional correspondence, lecture notes, course notes, research materials, manuscripts of publications, diaries, photoprints, maps, posters of Prof. Arthur Michell, as a student in the Faculty of Forestry in the late 1930's, and as a professor in the Faculty at the University of Toronto. Includes material relating to his work as a consultant to the pulp and paper industry. (68 boxes, 1936-1974)
B1988-0057: Course and lecture notes relating to Prof. A. S. Michell's teaching in the Faculty of Forestry. Includes subject files. Photoprint of members, Survey School of Military Engineering, Ripon, Yorkshire, Dec. 1, 1945 (2 boxes, 1926-1970; predominant 1936-1952)
B1989-0042: Course and lecture notes, publications, consultant's files, reflecting Prof. Michell's career in forestry. Lecture notes by James Herbert White. Photoprints of views of logging and aspects of forest management, ca 1940-1968. (3 boxes, 1933-1968; predominant 1933-1940)
Michell, Arthur Stephen
Menus of the dinners of the graduating classes of Victoria University, 1897-1903; an 1892 "Alumni Souvenir" depicting the buildings and faculties of the University and its federated colleges; "The Bob" issue 1902. University of Toronto, Graduating Class, 1900 (photograph). Academic hood and gown.
St. John, Arthur Newton
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a one column article by Henri Nouwen with no title but part of a larger article entitled ‘Hearing Heart to Heart, responses to a theological conference on prayer, published in Sojourners, October 1980, p.23,24. Nouwen begins by identifying his physical and emotional tiredness when he arrived at the conference but then states, ‘My week [at Woodland Park] will stick in my mind as one of the most hopeful events of my life’. Nouwen states that he does not speak of hope as optimism but the hope and trust in God who promises ‘unwavering faithfulness’. Nouwen then goes on to state that he learned from the conference that there are two essential aspects to the common life: prayer and resistance. Prayer holds the community steady and resistance is ‘an act of visible protest against the powers who are bent on waging war even at the cost of the destruction of humanity’.
Article about Nouwen's views about Yale's mission
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a one-half page article by Henri Nouwen included in a series entitled, Five Faculty Views of the University’s Mission, published in the Yale Alumni Magazine and Journal, November 1977, p. 10-11. Nouwen begins by asking if it isn’t preposterous to speak about the mission of Yale because mission implies being sent to serve which for missionaries involves not an upward, but a downward movement to the path of pain and suffering. For Yale students however, he suggests the path is directed upward to be successful lawyers, doctors, executives. Nouwen then goes on to say that he does not see the argument as so simple after all. Nouwen says, ‘there is little doubt that Yale is a secular institution. [But] it is also an institution in which the call to service is continually heard.’ At Yale, Nouwen points out, hundreds of students study the sacred scriptures, the sacraments of the church are received, ‘it is a center where people from the most varied religious traditions meet…it is the home where people come together to assist the poor, visit the elderly, to tutor disadvantaged youth…’. Nouwen concludes by saying,’ so there might be a mission for Yale after all: to send men and women into our society who know the world and have acquired the knowledge and the skills to fulfill a task in it, but who also realize that the value of their lives does not depend on what they have been able to acquire, but on how much they have been able to serve their fellow human beings’.
Article by Nouwen featuring his first reflection for the Dutch magazine
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an excerpt from Here and Now.
Article by Nouwen featuring his seventh reflection for the Dutch magazine
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an excerpt from Here and Now.
Article by Nouwen featuring his sixth reflection for the Dutch magazine
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an excerpt from Here and Now.
Article by Nouwen featuring his tenth reflection for the Dutch magazine
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an excerpt from Here and Now.
Article by Nouwen featuring his twelfth reflection for the Dutch magazine
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an excerpt from Here and Now.
Article mentioning The way of the heart
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Series contains articles, clippings, magazines, and interviews that feature or mention David C. Onley as Lieutenant Governor. Also includes “Articles of Interest” material collected for David C. Onley about current events and issues.
Series has been kept in its original order, arranged chronologically.
Part of Lorraine C. Smith fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Articles related to Harold A. Innis, his work and legacy
Part of Innis Family fonds
Articles related to Harold A. Innis, his work and legacy
Part of Innis Family fonds
Part of Fr. Dan Donovan fonds
Series consists of collected texts pertaining to artists within the Donovan Art Collection. Texts include articles, CVs, interviews, and exhibition catalogues. Currently, the series only consists of artist Meryl McMaster's reference file.
As I see it: our God is a God who cares
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
2 p. of textual records
A masters thesis by Mary Jane Trunzo Rahbar for the Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences and the Faculty of the Graduate School of Wichita State University.
Associated Medical Services Incorporated Papers
Part of Christian Bay fonds
This series reflects Professor Bay’s involvement in the American Political Science Association and its radical Caucus for a New Political Science which was formed by 200 dissident political scientists, of which Professor Bay was one, at the September, 1967 meeting of the APSA. Bay was president from 1971 to 1972. Material included is minutes of meetings, correspondence, newsletters, memos, and election material. Some material related to addresses presented at panels and conferences can be found in this series. Related material may also be located in the correspondence series.
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
An active joiner and participant, Dr. Solandt belonged to many associations and sat on many committees. Those documented here are those he was most interested in and his involvement often lasted many years. The title for this series is Dr. Solandt
At home with Henri Nouwen: a visit to Daybreak
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
In September, 1945 the British Chiefs of Staff were invited by their American counterparts to send a mission to Japan to study the effects of the atomic bomb. Omond Solandt was loaned to the Scientific Advisor to the Army Council in the War Office to go as his representative. He went as a specialist in damage to military installations but, there being none of significance in Hiroshima or Nagasaki, spent most of his time studying the casualties from a medical perspective.
This series includes Dr. Solandt
Augmentative and Alternative Communication Developmental Issues
Augmentative and Alternative Communication: European Perspectives
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Part of David C. Onley fonds
Aunt Jemima's birthday / Rube Bloom
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of solo piano sheet music and manuscript copy of the same.
Part of Ian Hacking fonds
A copy of "Autumn" written by Andy Mann and Gwen Mann.
File consists of 1 broadside with a poem by Rainer Maria Rilke, translated by Burton Raffel. 'Dreadnaught Broadside' is printed below the poem.
Avalon / Al Jolson and Vincent Rose
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the vocal sheet music.
Part of Norma Ford Walker fonds
"B. K. Sandwell," Canadian Forum, January 1955, 219
Part of Malcolm William Wallace fonds
A copy of "Babies" written by Gyo Fujikawa with printed and taped Blissymbol labels inside. This book previously belonged to the Hamilton Wentworth Public Library - Terryberry branch, Collection for Disabled Children Boys and Girls Department.
Baby face / Benny Davis and Harry Akst
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the vocal sheet music.
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of two copies of the solo piano sheet music, stamped "Dec 16 1939" and a manuscript copy of the same, with alterations.
Barbier di Siviglia / Giacomo Rossini
Part of Andrew MacMillan collection
Item is an annotated copy of the piano-vocal score for the English version of the opera, translated by Natalia MacFarren. The score is autographed by Andrew MacMillan and annotated for a performance. The score includes sketches of set designs on the flyleaves.
Fonds consists of 2 accessions
B1985-0028: Research notes and files assembled for and drafts of portions of Barry Levine's book, A Century of Skill and Vigour, a history of the Toronto Engineering Society. (1 box, 1984-1985)
B2000-0014: Photographs document the activities of the University of Toronto Engineering Society which were used in publications such as the Skule Calendar, 1980-81 and 1982-83, as well as original photographs and layouts used in the book authored by Levine "A Century of Skill and Vigour". One copy of a special Toike publication called Rodent Track, a parady of the car magazine Road and Track, is also included. (2 boxes and 1 item, 1977-1989)
Levine, Barry Glenn
Bats in the belfry / Billy Mayerl
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the solo piano sheet music and a manuscript copy of the same.