Student Philosophy Resources
Selected Philosophy Links on the Internet
Boyce M. Grier Student Center on the Lander University Campus
The Bloomsbury Research Centre is a free on-line database containing 17,000
cross-referenced entries linked and fully indexed. The Centre's search engine selects a wide range
of subjects by title or by topic including areas of literature, art, myth, human thought, and
quotations. The reference works include biographical quotations, thematic quotations, dictionary of
English literature, good word guide, guide to art, guide to human thought, myth, and thesaurus. The
entries published are selected from Bloomsbury Reference books.
Dictionary of the History of Ideas: Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas, edited by
Philip P. Wiener, was published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, in 1973-74. Now out of
print, the Dictionary is published online with the help of Scribner's and the Electric Text Center
at the University of Virginia. The dictionary includes articles on the historical development of a
broad spectrum of ideas in philosophy, religion, politics, literature, and the biological,
physical, and social sciences.
Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology by James Mark Baldwin is a developing
resource, first published in 1901, including terms from ethics, aesthetics, logic, philosophy
of religion, mental pathology, anthropology, biology, neurology, physiology, economics, political
and social philosophy, philology, physical science, and education. Entries
A--O are completed.
Edited by Chris Eliasmith, the
Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind is a free resource for the major concepts in the
philosophy of mind. The dictionary has a policy of blind peer review for all submissions, and is
sponsored by The Philosophy, Neuroscience, and Psychology Program at Washington University in St.
Louis. The definitions provided offer valuable help for key definitions for test review and
philosophy papers.
EpistemeLinks.com is o
ne of the oldest and most thorough sites on the Internet having
comprehensive links for many different interests in philosophy including philosophers, philosophic
subjects, reference works. blogs, philosophy discussion lists, etexts, and bibliographies. The site
created by Thomas Ryan Stone is now a nonprofit organization with a board of directors.
EpistemeLinks includes about 20,000 well-categorized links to all areas of
philosophy—a highly recommended and excellent place to find sources or start your
investigations.
This collection of e-texts contains philosophic classics and links to
scholarly philosophic organizations.
The English Server has other collections in addition, however, in critical theory,
history, and in eighteenth century studies, which also address philosophical interests and
concerns. The EServer, founded in 1990 at Carnegie Mellon as the English Server, is now based at
Iowa State University.
FOLDOP stands for the
Free On Line Dictionary Of Philosophy, edited by the SWIF (Sito Web Italiano per
la Filosofia). This resource contains about 2500 entries as of 01.01.05 contributed by qualified
volunteers. The entire database is downloadable offline. The terms are searchable by name, list of
entries, or on the entire database. The current definitions are somewhat uneven in this rapidly
improving philosophical dictionary. Although the definitions provided by Garth Kemerling's
dictionary of philosophical terms on his
Philosophy Pages are a bit more reliable for some
philosophical terms,
Foldop is worth checking.
The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (subtitled "A Field Guide to the
Nomenclature of Philosophy") consists of regularly updated original articles by fifteen editors,
one hundred academic specialists, and technical advisors. The articles are authoritative,
peer-reviewed, and available for personal and classroom use. The general editors are James Fieser
and Bradley Dowden. The site is most useful for students in obtaining secondary source information
on the key terms and personages of philosophy. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy can also be
recommended for obtaining an overview of the problems of philosophy for background readings for
lectures and papers. In general, the articles are well researched and are accessible by
undergraduates. The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, its main competitor,
is perhaps better suited for more advanced work.
The
Internet Philosopher is a tutorial on the use of the Internet for studying
philosophy. The tutorial covers the prominent Internet sites, how to search, what to trust, and how
to maximize information skills. Other features include printer friendly pages, glossary, and a link
basket, teaching resources, workbook, slide presentation, handouts, and downloadable poster. The
site is authored by Stig Hansen at the University of Leeds and is a tutorial designed for UK higher
education by the
RDN Virtual Training Suite. For students of philosophy, the
Internet Philosopher is most helpful at the beginning of the semester since the visitor quickly
learns how to access some of the most useful and authoritative sites on the
Internet.
Self-described as "an intellectual "field guide" that provides brief
definitions of theories, doctrines, movements, and approaches in philosophy, religion, politics,
science, the arts, and related disciplines. It was originally written in 1990 and was first posted
on the web in March 1996. In 2005 it was totally revised and nowadays it is continuously updated on
the web by Peter Saint-Andre, who has placed it in the public domain." As a guide to the
terminology of philosophy including some of the ordinary language meanings of the central terms,
the list of terms is interlinked and is especially useful in reviewing for examinations or for
obtaining definitions of key terms for philosophy papers.
Meta-Encyclopedia of Philosophy--a dynamic resource, by Andrew Chrucky,
accessing the following sources:
Dagobert D. Runes (ed.),
Dictionary of Philosophy, 1942 ,
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ,
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
,
Dictionary of the Philosophy
of Mind ,
The Ism Book ,
The Catholic Encyclopedia
(1913) , and
A Dictionary of Philosophical Terms and
Names .
The Orb--the online reference book for medieval studies includes an encyclopedia,
medieval text, links to related sites, and resources for teacher and beginning students. Religion,
history, art, law, literature, magic, music, philosophy, and science of the Medieval Period are all
covered. A guide to online studies of the Middle Ages is also of note.
The New York Times
philosophy news with newletter or email alerts about academic
philosophers and philosophy as well as societal applications of philosophy published in the
Times over the last several years with links to additional articles on ethics.
The Philosopher's Magazine has a sampling of online articles with popular and
introductory philosophical topics. Links to international newspaper articles with philosophical
content are provided, but access to full content requires subscription. The editors are Jeremy
Stangroom and Julian Baggini.
The World Philosophy Information Gateway is an extensive set of links rivaled only
by
EpistemeLinks.com, although the later site is somewhat
better organized. The Internet resources include bibliography, books, journals, mailing lists,
news, reference materials, and resource guides. The site includes many of the sub-subjects of
philosophy and is fairly comprehensive. The Philosophy Information Gateway is part of the Social
Science Information Gateway (SOSIG), in turn part of the UK Resource Discovery Network. Visitors
can sign up for special accounts with priviliges for utilizing the site. Also available are related
extensive links for
Philosophy Resources
(Europe), and
Philosophy Resources
(UK).
The Philosophy Pages includes a dictionary of philosophical terms and names, a
survey of the history of Western philosophy, a timeline for key figures, discussion of several
major philosophers, a summary treatment of the elementary principles of logic, study guide for
students of philosophy, and links to other philosophy sites on the Internet. The site is developed
by a former professor of Newberry College in South Carolina, is widely cited, and the information
is brief, but reliable.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy is a continuously updated reference work
and is a publishing project of the Metaphysics Research Lab at the Center for the Study of Language
and Information (CSLI) at Stanford University. The General editor of the Stanford Encyclopedia is
Edward N. Zalta. Authors of subject entries are well-known scholars in their fields; even so,
the subjects discussed are authoritative and well balanced. The
Encyclopedia is the most scholarly general source for philosophy on the Internet
and is essential as a starting point and background research for philosophy term
papers.
Wikipedia an online free encyclopedia for all subject, not just philosophy, is
licensed under the
Gnu Free Documentation License and contains a
half-million articles maintained and edited by Wiki according to the philosophy of the free
software movement. The project was founded by Jimmy Wales, and its strengths are its
decentralization, peer reviews and thousands of contributors from all over the world. Articles on
philosophical topics are especially useful in their breadth and variety. The site is especially
recommended for an accessible introduction and survey of philosophical topics for
review.
Laura Lander Hall
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This page last updated 08/31/07
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