Search Results
Subseries 2A: A-Z and unidentified, 1927-1971
65 boxes
1 folder
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Consists of individuals and organizations such as Jennie Ballard, Doubleday and Co., the Federal Civil Defense Administration, Aldous Huxley, the International Game Fish Association, Carl Jung, the Lerner Marine Laboratory, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Harold Ober, Rinehart and Co., and Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, as well as others.
Subseries 2B: Fan Mail, 1930-1971
27 boxes
Consists of fan mail received by Philip Wylie, sorted chronologically.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1927-1971
92 boxes
1 folder
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Consists of the correspondence of Philip Wylie, including fan mail. Notable individuals and organizations include Jennie Ballard, Doubleday and Co., the Federal Civil Defense Administration, Aldous Huxley, the International Game Fish Association, Carl Jung, the Lerner Marine Laboratory, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Harold Ober, Rinehart and Co., and Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, as well as others.
Series 3: Documents, 1938-1962
7 boxes
Consists of addresses, awards, deeds, tax information, invoices, leases, and other documents.
Series 4: Photographs, 1904-1975
5 boxes
Consists of photographs of Philip Wylie as well as his family, the Ballard Family, Karen Pryor, as well as others.
Consists primarily of clippings of Wylie's articles in magazines such as the Saturday Evening Post, Redbook, This Week Magazine, and New York Times Magazine, as well as others.
Consists of pamphlets, magazine clippings, and newspaper clippings of Philip Wylie's work.
Series 6: Magazines, 1937-1972
13 boxes
Consists of magazines collected by Philip Wylie, including Atlantic Monthly, Playboy, Cosmopolitan, Harper's Magazine, and Redbook Magazine, as well as others.
Box 282, Folder 5
Number copy 27 for Philip Wylie.
Consists of works by individuals such as Thomas Aitken, Lester del Ray, Robert Nevers, and Karen Wylie, as well as others.
Home Movies, 1941-1956
1 box
Box 293
Includes 1 Cine Kodak Super-X cartridge and 6 Ciné-Kodak Kodachrome film reels
Box 9, Folder 8
Consists of collected works such as "On the Law of the Excluded Middle," "The Need for Abstract Entities in Semantic Analysis," and "Ontological Commitment," as well as others.
Consists of lectures, abstracts, and unpublished papers, such as "Uniqueness of the Lorentz Transformation," "Frege on the Philosophy of Time," and "A revision of Monge's method," as well as others.
Series 1: Writings, 1924-1995
15 boxes
This series consists of Church's published and unpublished papers, lectures, and books, including reprints, manuscript drafts, research notes, and related correspondence. The first half of this series (Boxes 1-8) contains published papers, lectures, and a few reviews, all of which are arranged primarily by publication year, spanning 1924 to 1993. One exception is Church's 1995 published paper, which is placed in 1990, the year it was presented in a conference. In addition, a folder of miscellaneous, loose, and unidentified manuscript pages from Church's writings is at the end of Box 8. The second half of the series (Boxes 9-15) contains material pertaining to collected works of Church projects (unpublished as of this writing), early versions of Church's seminal textbook, Introduction to Mathematical Logic, the first edition of which was published by the Princeton University Press in 1956 (Church's many stenographer's notebooks filled with notes for the book are also included here), as well as some of Church's lectures, abstracts, and unpublished manuscripts. Church's mathematics and philosophy articles for the Encyclopaedia Britannica, along with his related editorial work and correspondence, are located in the Subject Files series.
Subseries 2A: Academic Correspondence, 1934-1978
7 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Consists of academic correspondence with individuals such as Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz, Paul Bernays, Charles Gillespie, and Robert McNaughton, as well as others.
Consists of correspondence related to the Journal of Symbolic Logic, arranged by year and whether the correspondence in incoming or outgoing.
Consists of correspondence on subjects such as the 1946 Princeton University Bicentennial Conference on Problems of Mathematics, Letters of Recommendation Evaluation, and correspondence relating to Symposia, Congresses and Lectures, as well as other subjects.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1934-1998
24 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
This series consists of Church's extensive correspondence (dating from 1928 to 1995) that relates to all aspects of Church's academic life and career, including his association with the Association of Symbolic Logic (ASL) from its earliest days (1935 and onwards) and the publication of the Journal of Symbolic Logic (JSL), of which he served as editor and editor of reviews from 1936 until 1979. While the academic correspondence is primarily organized alphabetically by correspondent's or organization's names, the JSL and ASL correspondence sub-series reflects changes in office filing systems over the years. Whenever possible, the original filing systems were preserved in the organization of this series. It is therefore possible to find the letters of any one prominent scholar under several categories; for example, W. V. Quine's letters can be found organized by year in the JSL/ASL sub-series between 1936 and 1979, including in one folder labeled "JSL Correspondence 1957-59 L-Z," and by name in both the academic correspondence and the JSL office correspondence files. There is a limited amount of non-academic-related correspondence (family, friends, financial, etc.) at the end of the series.
Consists primarily of notes for princeton university courses on Mathematics.
This series consists of Church's notes beginning with an undergraduate course at Princeton University in 1924 to his extensive research notes (many of which were removed from their original 3-ring binder notebooks), notes compiled by students from Church's course lectures at Princeton University and UCLA, and miscellaneous, loose notes, both dated and undated, through the years. The organization of this series follows and retains, wherever possible, Church's own subject filing system, including his original folder title and order. *Also includes loose notes removed from Church's books in his personal library.
Consists of subject files for Princeton University.
Consists of subject files for National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, and National Science Foundation.
Consists of subject files for publications.
Consists of subject files for publications and personal files.
Series 4: Subject Files, 1924-1990
10 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
This series consists of Church's academic and administrative files at Princeton University and UCLA, organizations such as the National Academy of Sciences (to which he was elected in 1978) and National Science Foundation, as well as his editorial and subject files pertaining to his consulting work with various encyclopedia and dictionaries, academic and research topics, etc. A small amount of personal, family-related, and financial material is filed at the end of this series.
Presentation Artwork, 1940s
2 folders
Box 1, Folder 1-2
Contains artwork orginally matted by Segal for presentation as the result of school assignments. These artworks correspond to some of the signature mats in Box 3, Folder 1 and Folder 2. Some artwork has been labeled with titles derived from those mats.
Signature Mats, 1940s
2 folders
Box 3, Folder 1-2
Signed mats, some with hand-written titles, which correspond to artwork in Box 1, Folder 1 and Folder 2.
Illustrated Assignments, 1940-1949
3 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Most of the illustrative elements (original artwork and clippings) in these assignments were adhered by a paste that has lost its bonding properties. Researchers are cautioned that items are already loose and more will become detached with use. Envelopes have been provided for these materials.
Subseries 1A: Student Work, 1940s
8.0 linear feet
10 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
This subseries consists of materials that can be definitively dated to the time of Segal's education and are known, with reasonable certainty, to have been created as the result of assignments and projects. Most of the material dates from 1947 to 1949, and contains artwork originally matted for presentation. A number of sketchbooks and original prints are also included.