The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908
This eleventh volume of a projected twelve continues the series of William James’s correspondence with family, friends, and colleagues that began with volume 4. Consisting of some 500 letters, with an additional 650 letters calendared, volume 11 gives a complete accounting of James’s known correspondence from April 1905 through March 1908.

Several major professional events in James’s career occur during this period, including his California adventure—a semester of teaching at Stanford University in the spring of 1906 that is interrupted by the San Francisco earthquake on April 18. In the fall of that year, James delivers the Lowell Lectures on pragmatism. Also during this period, in 1908, he agrees to deliver the Hibbert Lectures at Oxford, which were to become A Pluralistic Universe. In 1907, after several years of a reduced teaching load, James retires from Harvard, giving his final course that January.

James has trouble concentrating on writing what he considers his great work in philosophy, a book setting out his metaphysics but with the central focus shifting now from radical empiricism to pluralism. And as criticism of pragmatism persists, he becomes more and more impatient with its critics, who in his view make no effort to understand this new philosophical movement.

He continues his correspondence with the first generation of professionally trained philosophers and psychologists in America, among whom are Dickinson Sergeant Miller, Charles Augustus Strong, Charles Montague Bakewell, Mary Whiton Calkins, Arthur Oncken Lovejoy, Ralph Barton Perry, and Horace Meyer Kallen, and remains in touch with friendly critics Francis Herbert Bradley and Josiah Royce as well as with philosophical allies Henri Bergson, Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller, and Charles Peirce.

A number of correspondents make their first appearance in this volume. Marion Hamilton Carter, a muckraking journalist, acquaints James with some of the social problems of the South but also drags him into many futile sittings with mediums. Horace Fletcher, a nutritionist whose reforms became known as Fletcherism, gives James dietary advice. Alfred Hodder, a former student of James, embroils James in his complicated marital situation, and only Hodder’s death saves James from having to testify in court. Maxim Gorky, who on a visit to America scandalized some by presenting as his wife a woman to whom he was not married, makes a brief appearance as James praises his writing. Clifford Beers, a former patient in a mental hospital, receives moral and financial support from James and initiates a movement for the reform of mental hospitals.

1123125148
The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908
This eleventh volume of a projected twelve continues the series of William James’s correspondence with family, friends, and colleagues that began with volume 4. Consisting of some 500 letters, with an additional 650 letters calendared, volume 11 gives a complete accounting of James’s known correspondence from April 1905 through March 1908.

Several major professional events in James’s career occur during this period, including his California adventure—a semester of teaching at Stanford University in the spring of 1906 that is interrupted by the San Francisco earthquake on April 18. In the fall of that year, James delivers the Lowell Lectures on pragmatism. Also during this period, in 1908, he agrees to deliver the Hibbert Lectures at Oxford, which were to become A Pluralistic Universe. In 1907, after several years of a reduced teaching load, James retires from Harvard, giving his final course that January.

James has trouble concentrating on writing what he considers his great work in philosophy, a book setting out his metaphysics but with the central focus shifting now from radical empiricism to pluralism. And as criticism of pragmatism persists, he becomes more and more impatient with its critics, who in his view make no effort to understand this new philosophical movement.

He continues his correspondence with the first generation of professionally trained philosophers and psychologists in America, among whom are Dickinson Sergeant Miller, Charles Augustus Strong, Charles Montague Bakewell, Mary Whiton Calkins, Arthur Oncken Lovejoy, Ralph Barton Perry, and Horace Meyer Kallen, and remains in touch with friendly critics Francis Herbert Bradley and Josiah Royce as well as with philosophical allies Henri Bergson, Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller, and Charles Peirce.

A number of correspondents make their first appearance in this volume. Marion Hamilton Carter, a muckraking journalist, acquaints James with some of the social problems of the South but also drags him into many futile sittings with mediums. Horace Fletcher, a nutritionist whose reforms became known as Fletcherism, gives James dietary advice. Alfred Hodder, a former student of James, embroils James in his complicated marital situation, and only Hodder’s death saves James from having to testify in court. Maxim Gorky, who on a visit to America scandalized some by presenting as his wife a woman to whom he was not married, makes a brief appearance as James praises his writing. Clifford Beers, a former patient in a mental hospital, receives moral and financial support from James and initiates a movement for the reform of mental hospitals.

95.0 In Stock
The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908

The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908

The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908

The Correspondence of William James: William and Henry April 1905 - March 1908

Hardcover

$95.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

This eleventh volume of a projected twelve continues the series of William James’s correspondence with family, friends, and colleagues that began with volume 4. Consisting of some 500 letters, with an additional 650 letters calendared, volume 11 gives a complete accounting of James’s known correspondence from April 1905 through March 1908.

Several major professional events in James’s career occur during this period, including his California adventure—a semester of teaching at Stanford University in the spring of 1906 that is interrupted by the San Francisco earthquake on April 18. In the fall of that year, James delivers the Lowell Lectures on pragmatism. Also during this period, in 1908, he agrees to deliver the Hibbert Lectures at Oxford, which were to become A Pluralistic Universe. In 1907, after several years of a reduced teaching load, James retires from Harvard, giving his final course that January.

James has trouble concentrating on writing what he considers his great work in philosophy, a book setting out his metaphysics but with the central focus shifting now from radical empiricism to pluralism. And as criticism of pragmatism persists, he becomes more and more impatient with its critics, who in his view make no effort to understand this new philosophical movement.

He continues his correspondence with the first generation of professionally trained philosophers and psychologists in America, among whom are Dickinson Sergeant Miller, Charles Augustus Strong, Charles Montague Bakewell, Mary Whiton Calkins, Arthur Oncken Lovejoy, Ralph Barton Perry, and Horace Meyer Kallen, and remains in touch with friendly critics Francis Herbert Bradley and Josiah Royce as well as with philosophical allies Henri Bergson, Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller, and Charles Peirce.

A number of correspondents make their first appearance in this volume. Marion Hamilton Carter, a muckraking journalist, acquaints James with some of the social problems of the South but also drags him into many futile sittings with mediums. Horace Fletcher, a nutritionist whose reforms became known as Fletcherism, gives James dietary advice. Alfred Hodder, a former student of James, embroils James in his complicated marital situation, and only Hodder’s death saves James from having to testify in court. Maxim Gorky, who on a visit to America scandalized some by presenting as his wife a woman to whom he was not married, makes a brief appearance as James praises his writing. Clifford Beers, a former patient in a mental hospital, receives moral and financial support from James and initiates a movement for the reform of mental hospitals.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813921495
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 07/29/2003
Series: Correspondence of William James , #11
Pages: 800
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.25(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ignas K. Skrupskelis is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of South Carolina and a lecturer at Vytautas Magnus University, Kaunas, Lithuania. Elizabeth M. Berkeley was Editorial Coordinator of The Works of William James. John J. McDermott is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Texas A&M University.

Table of Contents

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews

Forewordxix
Introductionxxiii
Bibliographical Notexlix
A Note on the Editorial Methodlv
Abbreviationslxi
1905
April 3 To Margaret Mary James1
April 3 To Margaret Mary James2
April 6 To Alice Howe Gibbens James3
April 9 To Alice Howe Gibbens James5
April 14 To Alice Howe Gibbens James7
April 17 To Alice Howe Gibbens James9
April 20 To Alice Howe Gibbens James11
April 21 To Alice Howe Gibbens James14
April 25 To Alice Howe Gibbens James16
April 26 To Alice Howe Gibbens James19
April 27 To Alice Howe Gibbens James20
April 28 From Francis Herbert Bradley20
April 30 To Alice Howe Gibbens James25
May 2 To George Santayana27
May 4 To Alice Howe Gibbens James28
May 4 To Margaret Mary James30
May 8 To Alice Howe Gibbens James30
May 9 To Barrett Wendell32
May 11 To Giulio Cesare Ferrari34
May 13 To Henri Bergson35
May 13 To Alice Howe Gibbens James35
May 17 To Alice Howe Gibbens James38
May 18 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller38
May 19 To Alice Howe Gibbens James39
May 22 To Alice Howe Gibbens James41
May 22 To Alice Howe Gibbens James42
May 22 From Victoria Welby43
May 23 From Charles Augustus Strong44
May 25 To Pauline Goldmark45
May 26 To Patrick Geddes47
May 26 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller47
May 28 To Alice Howe Gibbens James49
May 28 From Alice Howe Gibbens James50
May 30 To Alice Howe Gibbens James52
June 2 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller53
June 3 To Pauline Goldmark53
June 6 To Walter Taylor Marvin55
June 6 To Herbert George Wells56
June 7 From Charles Augustus Strong57
June 8 To George Kerr59
June 11 To Henry William Rankin59
June 13 To Margaret Mary James60
June 15 From Charles Sanders Peirce61
June 17 To Robert Underwood Johnson62
June 22 To Charles William Eliot63
June 25 To Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge65
June 26 To Robert Underwood Johnson66
June 27 To Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge66
June 28 To James Medbery MacKaye67
June 30 To Alice Howe Gibbens James68
July 4 To Alice Howe Gibbens James69
July 6 To Alice Howe Gibbens James69
July 6 To Alice Howe Gibbens James70
July 10 To Henri Bergson71
July 10 From Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller72
July 11 To Margaret Mary James74
July 12 To Alexander Agassiz75
July 12 To Charles Montague Bakewell76
July 12 To Charles William Eliot77
July 18 To Henry Lee Higginson77
July 19 To Alexander Robertson James79
July 20 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller79
July 21 To Harald Hoffding80
July 21 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller81
July 21 To Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge82
July 22 To Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge83
July 23 To Henry William Rankin83
July 23 To Thomas Mitchell Shackleford84
August From M. Carey Thomas85
August 1 To Charles Sanders Peirce86
August 15 From Edwin Bissell Holt87
August 16 To Henry Rutgers Marshall89
August 18 To Ellen James Temple Emmet Hunter89
August 22 To Giovanni Papini90
August 23 From Charles Augustus Strong91
August 24 To Thomas Sergeant Perry94
August 28 To Giovanni Amendola95
August 29 To Margaret Mary James95
August 30 To Charles Montague Bakewell96
August 31 To Margaret Mary James96
September 3 From Charles Montague Bakewell97
September 16 To Pauline Goldmark99
October 3 To Bliss Perry99
October 9 To David Starr Jordan100
October 9 From Boris Sidis101
October 15 To Carlotta Lowell101
October 15 To Charles Sanders Peirce102
October 17 To George Frederick Stout103
October 18 To Charles William Eliot104
October 25 To Wincenty Lutoslawski104
October 26 To Charles William Eliot106
October 27 To John Dashiell Stoops107
November 4 To John Dashiell Stoops107
November 7 From Horace Fletcher108
November 8 To Horace Fletcher110
November 10 To Dickinson Sergeant Miller110
November 12 From Charles Augustus Strong112
November 24 To Wincenty Lutoslawski114
November 25 From Carveth Read115
December 6 To Benjamin Paul Blood116
December 6 To Dickinson Sergeant Miller116
December 6 To Moorfield Storey119
December 7 From Dickinson Sergeant Miller119
December 9 To Daniel Merriman120
December 9 To Dickinson Sergeant Miller121
December 9 To Edward Lee Thorndike121
December 11 To John Dashiell Stoops122
December 15 To Abbott Lawrence Lowell122
December 21 From Oliver Joseph Lodge123
December 23 To Abbott Lawrence Lowell124
December 24 From Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller124
December 25 To Horace Fletcher126
December 26 From Robertson James127
December 27 To Hugo Munsterberg128
December 28 To Charles William Eliot129
December 28 To Pauline Goldmark130
December 28 To Henry Rutgers Marshall131
December 28 To Hugo Munsterberg131
December 29 From Charles William Eliot132
1906
January 2 To Alice Howe Gibbens James133
January 3 To Pauline Goldmark134
January 3 To Alice Howe Gibbens James136
January 4 To Alexander Robertson James137
January 5 To James McKeen Cattell138
January 5 To Alice Howe Gibbens James138
January 6 To Alice Howe Gibbens James140
January 7 From Hugo Munsterberg141
January 8 To Alice Howe Gibbens James142
January 10 To Alice Howe Gibbens James143
January 14 To Alice Howe Gibbens James144
January 15 To Alice Howe Gibbens James145
January 16 To Alice Howe Gibbens James145
January 16 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller147
January 17 To Alice Howe Gibbens James148
January 20 To Alice Howe Gibbens James149
January 22 To Dickinson Sergeant Miller151
January 23 To George Holmes Howison152
January 24 To Alice Howe Gibbens James153
January 26 To Henry James III153
January 28 To Harald Hoffding155
January 28 To Henry James III156
January 30 To Giulio Cesare Ferrari157
January 30 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller158
January 31 To Alice Howe Gibbens James160
February 1 To Charles William Eliot160
February 1 To Alice Howe Gibbens James161
February 4 From Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller162
February 6 To Giovanni Papini164
February 6 To Thomas Sergeant Perry165
February 7 To George Holmes Howison168
February 7 To Margaret Mary James168
February 8 To Pauline Goldmark169
February 8 To Margaret Mary James171
February 8 From George Holmes Howison172
February 9 From George Holmes Howison172
February 11 To Alice Howe Gibbens James174
February 12 From Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller174
February 13 To Pauline Goldmark177
February 14 To George Holmes Howison178
February 17 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller179
February 19 To Isaac Kaufman Funk179
February 22 To Charles William Eliot181
February 24 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller182
February 26 To Ralph Barton Perry183
February 27 To Ralph Barton Perry184
March 1 To Harry Norman Gardiner185
March 5 To Alexander Robertson James186
March 7 To George Holmes Howison187
March 17 To William James, Jr.188
March 18 To Charles William Eliot188
March 18 To George Holmes Howison190
March 20 To George Bucknam Dorr190
March 27 To Henry James III191
April To William James, Jr.193
April 3 To Warner Fite193
April 3 To Theodora Sedgwick195
April 7 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller196
April 8 To Margaret Mary James198
April 11 To Ralph Barton Perry200
April 12 From Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller201
April 17 To David Starr Jordan201
April 19 To Horace Davis202
April 19 To David Starr Jordan207
April 22 To Josiah Royce209
April 23 To Giulio Cesare Ferrari210
April 23 From Charles Augustus Strong211
April 27 To Giovanni Papini213
April 28 From David Starr Jordan215
April 29 To Henry James III215
May 4 To David Starr Jordan216
May 4 To Sydney Haldane Olivier218
May 6 To Wincenty Lutoslawski219
May 9 To Henry Holt222
May 13 To Frank Angell222
May 18 To John Jay Chapman223
May 21 To Giovanni Papini225
May 24 To Katharine Outram Rodgers226
May 27 To Arthur Oncken Lovejoy229
May 28 From Marion Hamilton Carter230
June 3 To James McKeen Cattell231
June 5 To Allan Marquand231
June 7 To Alice Howe Gibbens James232
June 8 To Alice Howe Gibbens James233
June 9 From Clifford Whittingham Beers234
June 10 To Alice Howe Gibbens James235
June 14 To Hugo Munsterberg236
June 17 From Henry Lee Higginson236
June 19 To Henry Lee Higginson237
June 21 To Eveleen Tennant Myers238
June 22 To William James, Jr.239
June 28 To Hugo Munsterberg241
June 28 From Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson242
June 28 From David Starr Jordan243
June 29 To Wendell Phillips Garrison244
July 1 From Hugo Munsterberg245
July 3 From Giovanni Papini246
July 5 To Margaret Mary James247
July 14 To Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe247
July 17 From Warner Fite248
July 29 To William James, Jr.251
July 30 To Warner Fite252
August 3 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller253
August 6 To Leopold Hamilton Myers254
August 15 To Hugo Munsterberg255
August 17 To Alice Howe Gibbens James256
August 22 To Marion Thayer Ashton257
August 22 To William James, Jr.257
August 24 To Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller259
August 28 To Alice Howe Gibbens James260
August 29 To Alice Howe Gibbens James261
August 30 To Alice Howe Gibbens James262
September 1 To Margaret Mary James263
September 2 From Ralph Barton Perry265
September 11 To Margaret Mary James266
September 11 To Herbert George Wells267
September 13 To Theodora Sedgwick268
September 19 To Charles William Eliot269
September 20 To Maxim Gorky270
September 23 To Charles William Eliot271
September 25 To Katharine Outram Rodgers273
September 29 To John Hays Gardiner274
October 2 To Sally Fairchild274
October 3 To Giovanni Amendola275
October 9 To Margaret Mary James276
October 11 To Julius Goldstein277
October 15 To Margaret Mary James277
October 20 To Pauline Goldmark278
October 21 To Margaret Mary James279
October 29 To James McKeen Cattell280
October 31 To Margaret Mary James281