Summary Information
Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers ASP.1983.01 Ramsey, Frank Plumpton, 1903-1930
1920-1930 3.75 linear feet (8 manuscript boxes)
Language: English
Abstract: This is a collection of autograph manuscripts documenting the philosophical work of Frank Plumpton Ramsey between the years 1920 and 1930. F.P. Ramsey was one of the most important British analytic philosophers of the twentieth century. During his career he worked in the areas of philosophy of mathematics, symbolic logic, epistemology, economics, and probability theory. The collection contains drafts of Ramsey's papers, including drafts of two of the most important and influential of Ramsey's works, The Foundations of Mathematics and On a Problem of Formal Logic. There are notes on the Tractatus of L. Wittgenstein. There are also papers, notes, and drafts of works on topics in philosophy of mathematics, formal logic, economics, and political theory. Some of Ramsey's undergraduate essays are also found in the collection. Digital reproductions of the entirety of the Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers are available online.
ULS Special Collections Department University of Pittsburgh Library System Hillman Library, Room 363 3960 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA, 15260 412-648-8190 uls-specialcollections@mail.pitt.edu
1984
Finding aid prepared by curators and staff of the Archives of Scientific Philosophy, Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh. Revisions occurred to the finding aid as a part of the encoding process on December 10, 2004 and January 10, 2006.
August 2011:
Added links within finding aid to access content selected for digitization.
Biography
Frank Plumpton Ramsey was born in 1903 in Cambridge, England, and died in 1930 in London, England. Ramsey was one of England's foremost philosophers in the Anglo-American analytic tradition. He was educated first at Winchester, one of England's leading public schools, then at Trinity College of Cambridge University. At Trinity he was a protégé of John Maynard Keynes, and a member of the important Cambridge discussion group, the Apostles. Ramsey received a bachelor's degree in Mathematics with first class honors from Cambridge in 1923. He was a mathematician, philosopher, and economist who was associated with Cambridge University in England throughout his entire professional career. He was interested in and contributed significantly to philosophical problems in epistemology, probability, symbolic logic, the foundations of mathematics, and economics. He was a colleague of Bertrand Russell, John Maynard Keynes and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Despite his short life and short professional career he is one of the leading British philosophers of the twentieth century.
Collection Scope and Content Notes
This is a collection of autograph manuscripts, notes, and drafts of Ramsey's work in mathematics, philosophy, and economics. It contains drafts of several undergraduate papers and the manuscript of several chapters of an unpublished book on the relationship of logic and epistemology. Early versions of two of Ramsey's most significant papers -
Universals, 1925, and
The Foundations of Mathematics, 1925 are found within the collection. There are papers giving Ramsey's outline of the
Tractatus of Wittgenstein, and notes on the concept of infinity that are in Ramsey's hand but which may have been dictated to him by Wittgenstein. Relatively few of the documents are dated. Class notes and papers given to the Apostles are also included in the collection.
Ramsey's manner of organizing his material is not known nor are dates included for most of the documents, however, the material begins with his arrival at Cambridge and runs until his death, hence it all falls between 1920 and 1930. The papers have been kept in the order in which they were received. This guide attempts to provide information on the material based on this organization, due to the number of scholarly publications that have previously been published using this order.
The materials are arranged into seven series organized by topic or subject of philosophical concern. Because of the overlap within series the researcher should be sure to consult the entirety of the collection to ensure that they view all relevant documents. Additional scope and content notes are provided at the series levels.
All materials in the collection have been digitized. Beneath each folder title is a link that says "Digitized Folder Contents." Clicking on this link will open a PDF file which contains the entire contents of the folder exactly as they would be presented to the researcher in person.
Arrangement
Series I. The nature of truth - manuscript notes
Series II. General notes on philosophy and philosophy of science
Series III. Notes on various topics including Mathematics and Psychology
Series IV. Outlines, notes, and drafts of articles
Series V. Notes and materials on Mathematics and Mathematical Logic
Series VI. Materials from Ramsey's undergraduate work
Series VII. Undergraduate notebooks and commentaries on Wittgenstein
Subject Terms
- Causality (Physics)
- Economics
- Knowledge, Theory of
- Logic, Symbolic and mathematical
- Mathematics
- Science -- Philosophy
- Truth
- Cambridge Apostles (Society).
- Keynes, John Maynard, 1883-1946
- Moore, G. E. (George Edward), 1873-1958
- Russell, Bertrand, 1872-1970
- Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 1889-1951
Access and Use
No restrictions.
The collection was acquired in
1983 from a London dealer in rare books and manuscripts, Bernard Quaritch, Ltd.
A copy of a speech given by Ramsey to the Apostles was donated by Professor Nicholas Rescher in
November of 2004. The original is held by the King's College Archive Centre, Cambridge.
Digital reproductions of the collection are available electronically by following the respective "Digitized Folder Contents" links within the finding aid.
Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers, 1920-1930, ASP.1983.01, Archives of Scientific Philosophy, Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh
This collection was processed by
curators and staff of the Archives of Scientific Philosophy, Special Collections, in
1984. The guide to this collection was written by
Lance Lugar, Curator of the Archives of Scientific Philosophy, in
2004.
Revision and rearrangement for the encoded version of the finding aid provided by
Dan Horvath on
December 10, 2004 and
Charles Stanford on
January 10, 2006. Information about the collection title and the controlled access terms was extracted from the MARC record in the University of Pittsburgh catalog Voyager ID number: 4533236
Any requests for permission to publish, quote, or reproduce materials from this collection must be submitted in writing to the Assistant University Librarian for Archives and Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the University of Pittsburgh as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained.
Collection Inventory
Series I. The Nature of the Truth
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Scope and Content Notes: Series I contains notes on chapters I-V of F. Ramsey's manuscript on the nature of truth. All of these notes are handwritten and may show signs of revision or reformulation. While the series is focused on the topic of the nature of truth and its components were intended to be part of a book, the researcher should be aware that other series will contain additional notes explicating Ramsey's thoughts on the nature of truth.
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Box 1
| Folder |
1-2 |
Chapter I - The Nature of Truth
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| Folder |
3 |
Mental States and Acts, Notes
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| Folder |
4-5 |
Theories of Truth
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| Folder |
7-9 |
Coherence Theory of Truth (Chapter II)
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| Folder |
11 |
Chapter III Judgment
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| Folder |
12 |
Chapter IV Knowledge and Opinion
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| Folder |
13-14 |
Chapter V Judgment and Time
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| Folder |
15 |
Truth and Science, Notes on Truth
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| Folder |
16 |
Notes on Truth, Logic, and Probability
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| Folder |
17 |
Chapter I - Logical Values
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| Folder |
18 |
Chapter I - Introductory
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Series II. Notes on Philosophy and Philosophy of Science
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Scope and Content Notes: Series II consists of general notes by F. Ramsey on topics such as logical philosophy, philosophy of science, philosophy of mathematics, and individual philosophers such as G.E. Moore, I. Kant, L. Wittgenstein. The notes are arranged thematically by notebook or folder. These notes are on loose sheets of paper and as with his other notes may show the imprint of his developing thought by containing passages that have been lined out and replaced by later formulations. The folders containing miscellaneous notes hold material that is often fragmentary or short. The topics covered are often to be found as principal topics in other folders, so researchers may wish to consult these folders for Ramsey's development of his ideas. The notes in the miscellaneous folders are often Ramsey's jottings on reading that he was doing, as indicated by his citation of specific works.
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Box 2
| Folder |
1 |
Solipsism and Language
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| Folder |
7 |
Sense Data, Time
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| Folder |
10-11 |
Miscellaneous Notes
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| Folder |
13-14 |
Miscellaneous Notes
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| Folder |
17 |
Existential Judgment
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| Folder |
19 |
Letter to Behmann
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| Folder |
21 |
Logic and Language
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| Folder |
22 |
Logic and Truth
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| Folder |
23 |
Truth, Judgment, and Knowledge
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| Folder |
25 |
Miscellaneous notes
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| Folder |
26 |
Philosophy, Logic, and Mathematics
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| Folder |
30 |
Causality and Probability
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| Folder |
32 |
Meaning, Acquaintance
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| Folder |
33 |
Meaning and Experience
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Series III. Notes on Various Topics
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Scope and Content Notes: Series III contains notes by F. Ramsey on philosophical topics, psychological topics, specific philosophers (notably Kant, Hobbes, and Schopenhauer), and on mathematical and statistical topics. The miscellaneous notes here - as in Series II - are short exposition of Ramsey's ideas, notes about texts that he was reading, and insights on topics that he was considering. The subjects covered in the wider array of notes are not restricted to the topics prominent in this series.
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Box 3
| Folder |
2 |
De Rochefoucauld, Hobbes, and La Bruyere
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| Folder |
4 |
Miscellaneous Notes
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| Folder |
7 |
Shaw's
Back to Methuselah
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| Folder |
10 |
Hume's Treatise
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| Folder |
13 |
Probability, Modality
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| Folder |
14 |
Aristotle, Plato
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| Folder |
17 |
Schopenhauer on Kant
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| Folder |
18 |
Pritchard on Kant
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| Folder |
21 |
Philosophy, Mathematics
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| Folder |
23 |
Bradley and Bosanquet
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| Folder |
30-31 |
Miscellaneous Notes (cont.)
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| Folder |
34 |
Vagueness, Sensation
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| Folder |
37 |
Causality, Psychology, Acquaintance
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Series IV. Outlines, Notes, and Drafts of Articles
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Scope and Content Notes: Series IV contains F. Ramsey's outlines, notes, and drafts of articles. The subject of these works are often mathematical and logical topics, as well as notes on the work of the mathematician John Von Neuman and the philosophers G.E. Moore and Bertrand Russell. Please note that Series V. also contains material on mathematical and logical topics.
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Box 4
| Folder |
2 |
Eddington and Weyl
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| Folder |
3 |
Outline on Logic
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| Folder |
5 |
The Rule of Succession
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| Folder |
6 |
The Ideas of Mathematics
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| Folder |
7 |
The Number of Things in the World
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| Folder |
9 |
Philosophy and Language
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| Folder |
10 |
G.E. Moore and Notes on Credit, Power, and Democracy
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| Folder |
12 |
Paradoxes, Mathematics
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| Folder |
13 |
Theory of Types
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| Folder |
14 |
Philosophy and Language
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| Folder |
17 |
Logic and Mathematics
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| Folder |
20 |
Lowenheim-Skolem Theorem
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| Folder |
21 |
Language, Experience
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| Folder |
22 |
Miscellaneous Notes
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| Folder |
23 |
Time and Mathematics (in German)
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Series V. Notes and Materials on Mathematics and Mathematical Logic
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Scope and Content Notes: Series V contains F. Ramsey's notes and manuscripts on various aspects of logic and mathematical logic. Materials in this series comprise Ramsey's work on technical matters of logic and mathematics as well as his thoughts on prominent philosophers and mathematicians whose work made significant contributions to these topics. Researchers interested in Ramsey's work on mathematical logic and logic should be sure to consult the additional materials in Series IV.
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Box 5
| Folder |
3-4 |
Theory of Types
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| Folder |
5-6 |
Axiom of Reducibility
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| Folder |
7 |
Theory of Types and Mathematics
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| Folder |
9 |
Second Order Functions
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| Folder |
10 |
General Propositions
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| Folder |
12 |
First Order Logic
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| Folder |
17 |
Scientific Theories
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| Folder |
18 |
Solipsism and Personal Identity
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| Folder |
19 |
Meaning of Hypothetical Propositions
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| Folder |
20 |
Probability, Mathematics (also preservation copies)
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| Folder |
22-25 |
W.E. Johnson, Logic
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| Folder |
26 |
Hilbert (German)
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| Folder |
27 |
Bernays (German)
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| Folder |
28 |
Bernstein (German)
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| Folder |
29 |
Hilbert (German)
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| Folder |
30 |
Peirce, Chance, Love, and Logic
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Series VI. Undergraduate Materials
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Scope and Content Notes: Series VI contains drafts of manuscripts, lecture notes, papers from F. Ramsey's undergraduate career and drafts of his works on economics. This series holds his early papers given to the Moral Science Club, a Cambridge reading and discussion group. Other papers in this series concern the rule of succession, the foundations of mathematics, philosophy of mathematics, and commentary on Russell and Whitehead's
Principia Mathematica.
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Box 6
| Folder |
1 |
Foundations of Mathematics
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| Folder |
3 |
Draft of
On a Problem in Formal Logic
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| Folder |
4 |
Lectures on Foundations of Mathematics
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| Folder |
5 |
Early Moral Science Club Papers
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| Folder |
6 |
Intuitionist Mathematics
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| Folder |
7 |
Ramsey Economics
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Series VII. Undergraduate Notebooks and Commentaries
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Scope and Content Notes: Series VII contains F. Ramsey's early undergraduate notebooks and essays, unpublished papers for the Cambridge Discussion Society, drafts of important later essays, and material addressing Wittgenstein's Theory of Identity. This series also consists of the unpublished papers presented to the Cambridge Conversation Society (Apostles) including papers on ethical topics, economics, socialism, civilization and happiness, the philosophical problem of induction, and the philosophical and psychological views of John Stuart Mill. Notebooks contained in this series are Ramsey's class notes for classes he took from G.E. Moore on metaphysics, from Bertrand Russell on mathematical philosophy, from J.M. Keynes on probability theory, and from A.N. Whitehead on principles of natural knowledge. There is also a photocopy of an item from the King's College Archives.
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Box 7
| Folder |
3 |
Douglas Proposal
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| Folder |
5 |
Peirce's Monist Article (1906)
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| Folder |
6 |
Unpublished Papers for the Cambridge Discussion Society
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| Folder |
7 |
Wittgenstein's Theory of Identity
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| Folder |
8 |
Essay on Progress.
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| Folder |
9 |
Nature of Truth, Read to the Apostles April 29th, 1922. (Photocopy)
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