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         Philosophy Texts:     more books (100)
  1. Novalis: Fichte Studies (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Novalis, 2003-09-15
  2. Plato: Meno and Phaedo (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy)
  3. Philosophy: A Text with Readings (Casebound with CD-ROM and InfoTrac) by Manuel Velasquez, 2004-07-19
  4. Philosophy: Key Texts by Julian Baggini, 2002-12-15
  5. Reclaiming Reality: A Critical Introduction to Contemporary Philosophy (Classical Texts in Critical Realism) by Roy Prof Bhaskar, 2010-11-29
  6. Classical Indian Philosophy: An Introductory Text by J. N. Mohanty, 2000-01-01
  7. The Philosophy of Religion (Scm Core Text) by Gwen Griffith-Dickson, 2005-06-27
  8. Shifting Shape, Shaping Text: Philosophy and Folklore in Fox Koan by Steven Heine, 2000-01
  9. The Qur'an As Text (Islamic Philosophy, Theology, and Science)
  10. Malebranche: The Search after Truth: With Elucidations of The Search after Truth (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Nicolas Malebranche, 1997-05-28
  11. Schleiermacher: On Religion: Speeches to its Cultured Despisers (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Friedrich Schleiermacher, 1996-04-26
  12. Fichte: Foundations of Natural Right (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) (Volume 0) by J. G. Fichte, 2000-09-18
  13. A brief text-book of logic and mental philosophy by Charles Coppens, 2010-07-28
  14. Cicero: On Moral Ends (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Marcus Tullius Cicero, 2001-08-20

81. Rousseau
Discussion of his life and works, with links to electronic texts and additional information.
http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/rous.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ... Locke

Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Life and Works
Inequality

Social Contract

General Will
...
Internet Sources
As a brilliant, undisciplined, and unconventional thinker, Jean-Jacques Rousseau spent most of his life being driven by controversy back and forth between Paris and his native Geneva. Orphaned at an early age, he left home at sixteen, working as a tutor and musician before undertaking a literary career while in his forties. Rousseau sired but refused to support several illegitimate children and frequently initiated bitter quarrels with even the most supportive of his colleagues. His autobiographical Les Confessions Confessions ) (1783) offer a thorough (if somewhat self-serving) account of his turbulent life. Rousseau first attracted wide-spread attention with his prize-winning essay Discours sur les Sciences et les Arts Discourse on the Sciences and the Arts in which he decried the harmful effects of modern civilization. Pursuit of the arts and sciences, Rousseau argued, merely promotes idleness, and the resulting political inequality encourages alienation . He continued to explore these themes throughout his career, proposing in

82. Descartes
A brief discussion of the life and works of Rene Descartes, with links to electronic texts and additional information by Garth Kemerling.
http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/desc.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ...
scholastic philosophy and troubled by skepticism of the sort expounded by Montaigne , Descartes soon conceived a comprehensive plan for applying mathematical methods in order to achieve perfect certainty in human knowledge. During a twenty-year period of secluded life in Holland, he produced the body of work that secured his philosophical reputation. Descartes moved to Sweden in 1649, but did not survive his first winter there. Although he wrote extensively, Descartes chose not to publish his earliest efforts at expressing the universal method and deriving its consequences. The Regulae ad directionem ingenii Rules for the Direction of the Mind ) (1628) contain his first full statement of the principles underlying the method and his confidence in the success of their application. In Le Monde The World ) (1634), Descartes clearly espoused a Copernican astronomy, but he withheld the book from the public upon learning of Galileo's condemnation. Descartes finally presented (in French) his rationalist vision of the progress of human knowledge in the Discourse on Method ) (1637). In this

83. "How Dynamic Aggregates May Achieve Effective Integration
Resources and texts available online, from the home page of J.E. Earley, Sr. of Georgetown University.
http://www.georgetown.edu/earleyj/metachem.html
Chemistry and Philosophy
Items posted:
"Would Introductory Chemistry Courses Work Better with a New Philosophical Basis?" (revised version) Submitted to Foundations of Chemistry , January, 2003. "How Dynamic Aggregates May Achieve Effective Integration." Joseph E. Earley, Sr. Advances in Complex Systems , in press, 2003. " Varieties of Properties: An Alternative Distinction among Qualities." Joseph E. Earley, Sr. Chemical Explanation: Characteristics, Development, Autonomy, Edited by Joseph E. Earley, Sr. Volume 988, Annals of the New York Academy of Science , Spring 2003, in press (500+ pages).
" Constraints on the Origin of Coherence in Far-from-equilibrium Chemical Systems" in: Physics and Whitehead: Quantum, Process and Experience, edited by Timothy E. Eastman and Henry Keeton. Albany ; State University of New York Press, in press, 2003.
"On the Relevance of Repetition , Recurrence, and Reiteration." Joseph E. Earley, Sr. in a volume edited by Ewa Zielonaka-Lis and Pawel Kreidler, to be published by Peter Lang Publishing Company, 2003. "Philosophical Implications of Chemical

84. Ron Barnette's Valdosta Philosophy Resources
Shuttle Philosophers' Works (UCSB); Tom Stone's excellent Electronic texts sectionat The Internet Encyclopedia of philosophy; Kent Anderson and Norm Freund's
http://www.valdosta.edu/~rbarnett/phi/resource.html
Welcome to the Valdosta Home Page of
Philosophy Resources
The Virtual Library

85. Alex Catalogue Of Electronic Texts
Include items from American literature, English literature, and Western philosophy. Provides somewhat customformattable .PDF (Adobe Acrobat) files.
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/alex/
Alex Catalogue of Electronic Texts
The Alex Catalogue of Electronic Texts has moved to a new location.
You are being redirected, and the new URL is http://www.infomotions.com/alex/ Eric Lease Morgan ( emorgan@sunsite.berkeley.edu
October 17, 2001

86. Spinoza
A brief discussion of the life and works of Baruch Spinoza, with links to electronic texts and additional information.
http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/spin.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ... Locke

Baruch Spinoza
Life and Works
Method

Metaphysics

God / Nature
...
Internet Sources
Baruch Spinoza was born to Portuguese Jews living in exile in Holland, but his life among the Marranos there was often unsettled. Despite an early rabbinical education, he was expelled from the synagogue at Amsterdam for defending heretical opinions in 1656. While engaging privately in serious study of medieval Jewish thought, Cartesian philosophy , and the new science at Rijnburg and the Hague, Spinoza supported himself by grinding optical lenses, an occupation that probably contributed to the consumption that killed him. Private circulation of his philosophical treatises soon earned him a significant reputation throughout Europe, but Spinoza so treasured his intellectual independence that in 1673 he declined the opportunity to teach at Heidelberg, preferring to continue his endeavors alone. Spinoza's first published work was a systematic presentation of the philosophy of Descartes , to which he added his own suggestions for its improvement. The Principles of Descartes's Philosophy (1663) contain many of the characteristic elements of his later work, but Spinoza seems to have realized that a full exposition of his own philosophical views would require many years of devoted reflection. In the meantime, he turned his attention briefly to other issues of personal and social importance. The

87. Philosophy, Medical Ethics And Society
site deals with new developments in bioethics and medical ethics, offers texts and information about conferences and workshops on ethical aspects of the life sciences.
http://members.tripod.com/~uniregensburgsvk
"What I´m really astonished at is having an essay published 15 years after it had been submitted to the editor, without prior notice. Usually I don´t agree with most of that old stuff anymore. People get confused, or even shocked when taken back so much in time" (Lord Hetherborough after the publication of one of his famous essays 15 years after its submission) "Information wants to be free" (John Gilmore)
PROF.DR.DR.JOSEPH SCHMUCKER VON KOCH, University of Regensburg, Bavaria, Germany - INTERNATIONAL ETHICS CONSULTANTS/ETHIKBERATUNG - Scientific Research Center: University of Regensburg, D-93040 Regensburg, Germany
GENERAL TEXTS AND INFOS Informational reality, real world and the human brain/mind (Informationelle Realitaet - reale Welt - Bewusstsein). :This site contains a lecture given at the GMD Research Center for Information Technology.
Is a value oriented concept of man anachronistic ? Sloterdijk´s thoughts on the social function of biotechnology in the light of current bioethical standards.
: English Lecture given at the European College of Liberal Arts, Berlin
The Internet - philosophical and social perspectives.

88. Logical Analysis And History Of Philosophy
Intends to provide a forum for articles in which classical philosophical texts are interpreted by drawing on the resources of modern formal logic; abstracts online.
http://www.uni-bonn.de/pla/eng1.htm
Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3 Volume 4 ... Call for Papers
(orders, editors,
outline and concept,
editorial board. Comments Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy

Outline and concept

Topics

Editors

Ordering information
...
Editorial Board
Outline and concept
back to top

Topics
  • Volume 1 (1998): History of philosophy in general - the papers will deal with several exemplary focal points throughout the history of philsophy - appeared in January 1998 Volume 2 (1999): Ancient philosophy Volume 3 (2000): From Descartes to Kant - tentative date of publication: January 2000 Volume 4 (2001): Origins and Foundations of Analytic Philosophy. Especially Bolzano, Frege, Russell, Carnap, Wittgenstein, Hempel, Ryle, Quine, Austin. - Deadline for papers: 31 May 2000 - tentative date of publication: January 2001
back to top Editors Uwe Meixner (Regensburg) Albert Newen (Bonn) back to top Ordering information Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse / Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy - Volume 1, 1998. 250 p., ISBN 3-89785-150-4. - Volume 2, 1999. 274 p., ISBN 3-89785-151-2.

89. JainNet - JainList: World's Largest Discussion Group On Jainism
Forum for serious study of Jain texts, philosophy, rituals, culture and history.
http://www.jainnet.com/jainlist.html
JainList is the world's largest discussion forum on Jainism.
Orientation of topics is towards learning Jainism.
Discuss philosophy, beliefs, history, rituals, lifestyle.
Casual coffee-table talk, news, announcements etc. are avoided.
Whether a novice or a scholar, JainList caters to everyone's needs. Some facts about JainList:
  • 650+ members
  • th year of existence
  • 3500+ messages exchanged
  • What is JainList?
  • How do I Subscribe / Unsubscribe?
  • How do I change my mode of Subscription?
  • I dont want to recieve too many mails from JainList ...
  • Who are the Moderators?
    What is JainList?
    It's an email forum for serious discussions on Jainism. Into it's fourth year of existence, this list is for serious discussion on Jainism. Emphasis is on learning, as through discussions and knowledge sharing everybody benefits. The orientation of discussions in JainList is towards understanding Jain philosophy, teachings, rituals, history and culture. Based on Ahimsa (Non violence) towards all living beings. Meditation, yoga, pranayam etc. are inherent to the lifestyle through various scientifically proved rituals and acts. For example, boiled drinking water was suggested by Lord Mahavira 2500 years ago. Historical and archeological evidence has proved existence of Jainism before Mahavira. Unlike Vedic Hinduism it doesn't believe in God as a creator.
  • 90. Hegel - History Of Philosophy - Boehme
    An excerpt giving Hegel's historical interpretation of this early German philosopher.
    http://www.ets.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Hegel - Hist Phil/boehme.htm
    G. W. F. Hegel: Lectures on the History of Philosophy
    Table of Contents
    B. JACOB BOEHME. WE now pass on from this English Lord Chancellor, the leader of the external, sensuous method in Philosophy, to the philosophus teutonicus, as he is called - to the German cobbler of Lusatia, of whom we have no reason to be ashamed. It was, in fact, through him that Philosophy first appeared in Germany with a character peculiar to itself: Boehme stands in exact antithesis to Bacon. He was also called theosophus teutonicus, just as even before this philosophia teutonica was the name given to mysticism. De signatura rerum this reason which was impressed upon him is found and fully explained); and for this he was overwhelmed with joy, thanked God, and went peacefully about his affairs." Later on he wrote several works. He continued to pursue his handicraft at Görlitz, and died at the same place in 1624, being then a master shoemaker. In reading his works we are struck with wonder, and one must be familiar with his ideas in order to discover the truth in this most confused method of expression. The matter of Jacob Boehme's philosophy is genuinely German; for what marks him out and makes him noteworthy is the Protestant principle already mentioned of placing the intellectual world within one's own mind and heart, and of experiencing and knowing and feeling in one's own self-consciousness all that formerly was conceived as a Beyond. Boehme's general conceptions thus on the one hand reveal themselves as both deep and sound, but on the other, with all his need for and struggle after determination and distinction in the development of his divine intuitions of the universe, he does not attain either to clearness or order. There is no systematic connection but the greatest confusion in his divisions - and this exists even in his tables

    91. Bibliography And Texts: Self / Person / Personal Identity
    Links to resources including bibliographies, journals, online texts, and institutions. Maintained by Professor Shaun Gallagher, philosophy and Cognitive Science, Canisius College.
    http://www.canisius.edu/~gallaghr/pi.html

    92. SparkNotes Classic Books
    More Resources for philosophy Complete texts Study Guides, Message Boards. MoreResources for philosophy Complete texts Study Guides, Message Boards.
    http://pd.sparknotes.com/philosophy/
    Advanced Search FAQ Home Free Study Aids ... Classic Books Philosophy
    The Communist Manifesto

    Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels Confessions
    St. Augustine Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals
    Immanuel Kant Leviathan
    Thomas Hobbes Poetics
    Aristotle The Prince
    Niccolo Machiavelli The Republic
    Plato
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    93. An Alchemist's Treasure
    Offers an insightful summary of alchemical philosophy plus original alchemy texts such as The Treasure of Treasures by Paracelsus, Summi Philosophi et Chemici by Joachim Tanckivs, and The Discovery of Secrets by Abu Musa Djaber.
    http://www.angelfire.com/ga2/splitskull2/index.html
    An Alchemist's Treasure
    This page utilizes the Alchemy Is a Science Alchemy is a Science of Soul that results from an understanding of God, Nature, and Man. A perfect knowledge of any of one them cannot be obtained without the knowledge of the other two, for these three are one and inseparable. Alchemy is not merely an intellectual but a spiritual science, because that which belongs to the spirit can only be spiritually known. Nevertheless, it is also a science dealing with material things, for spirit and matter are only two opposite manifestations or poles of the eternal One. Alchemy Is an Art Alchemy is also an art, and as every art requires an artist to exercise it, likewise this divine science and art can be practiced only by those who are in possession of the divine power necessary for that purpose. It is true that the external manipulations required for the production of certain alchemical preparations may, like an ordinary chemical process, be taught to anybody capable of reasoning. However, the results that such a person would accomplish would be without life, for only he in whom the true life has awakened can awaken it from its sleep in matter and cause visible forms to grow from the primordial Chaos of nature. Spiritual Aspects Alchemy in its highest aspect deals with the spiritual regeneration of man and teaches how a god may be made out of a human being or, to express it more correctly, how to establish the conditions necessary for the development of divine powers in man, so that a human being may became a god by the power of God in the same sense that a seed becomes a plant by the aid of the Four Elements and the action of the invisible Fifth Element (the Quintessence).

    94. Abelard Public Education Site
    texts on philosophy by Abelard and others.
    http://www.abelard.org/
    home of the
    over page calls a year documents why aristotelian logic does not work - abelard, 1999 the logic of ethics; with commentary on abelard of le pallet - abelard, 2000 feedback and crowding - abelard, 2000 metalogic - B: decision processes - abelard, 2001 Is Intelligence Distributed Normally? - Cyril Burt, 1963 abelard of le pallet: introduction - abelard, 1998 'Logic has made me hated amongst men': Abelard of Le Pallet on theology - abelard 2001 the rise and fall of the church of rome - abelard, 1999 'heresies', authority, quarrels and words - abelard, 1999 on aliquid - roland, pope alexander III, 12th century inquiries on the efficacy of prayer - francis galton, 1872 the psychology and development of adolph hitler schicklgruber - abelard, 2000 did hitler know about the holocaust? a psychological assessment - abelard, 2000 the turing test and intelligence - abelard, 1998

    95. Hegel
    Chapter on Hegel from The History of philosophy, as translated by Frank Thilly in 1908. Consider's Hegel's system in relation to prior German metaphysics.
    http://www.ets.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Weber - History/Hegel.htm
    History of Philosophy
    by
    Alfred Weber Table of Contents § 66. Hegel Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was born at Stuttgart, 1770, and died as a professor in the University of Berlin,1831. Like his friend Schelling, he attended the theological seminary at Tübingen. Jena, where he renewed and then dissolved the friendship with his fellow-countryman, who was five years his junior, Nuremberg, where he had charge of the Gymnasium, Heidelberg, and the Prussian capital, mark the different stages in his academic career. We mention the following works: (1) Phänomenologie des Geistes Wissenschaft der Logik in three volumes (1812-1816); (3) Encyclopedie der philosophischen Wissenschaften Grundlinien der Philosophie des Rechts (1821); also, Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Geschichte Vorlesungen über die Æsthetik Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Religion Vorlesungen über die Geschichte der Philosophie published after his death. According to Fichte, the thing-in-itself According to Hegel, the common source of the ego and of nature does not transcend reality; it is immanent in it. Mind and nature are not aspects of the absolute, or a kind of screen, behind which an indifferent and lifeless God lies concealed, but its successive modes. The absolute is not immovable, but active; it is not the principle of nature and of mind, but is itself successively nature and mind. This succession, this process, this perpetual generation of things, is the absolute itself. In Schelling, things

    96. Indian Philosophy And Religion
    General information, essays on Hinduism, religious texts, an overview of traditional and modern schools.
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/1863/index.html
    Indian Philosophy and Religion
    A Launch-pad to India's Spiritual Treasure
    General Information Essays on Hinduism Religious Texts Traditional Schools ... Online Book Store India is the home of Philosophy, Religion and Spirituality. Every age, she provides the world with her armies of spiritual masters. She uses every means to reach the people of various parts of the world to enlighten them to the grand avenues of a meaningful life. The world wide web is no exception. There are several sites which give very indepth information of the various concepts and various schools of Indian Religion. Here are a few sites which give general information on religions of direct Indian origin.
    (More specific links follow in the course of this article.) In India, spirituality is basically tuning one's mind to consider one's self and others as different from the gross physical body and the subtle mental body, and to be beyond the limitations of space, time and causation. Philosophy is the theory aspect and religion is the practical aspect of this principle.

    97. Publications: The Philosophy Major
    Online version of pamphlet published by the APA; review of the philosophy major Central Elements of a Major in philosophy; Structuring the philosophy Major; Philosophical Development.
    http://www.apa.udel.edu/apa/publications/texts/major.html
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    The Philosophy Major
    A statement prepared under the auspices of the Board of Officers of the American Philosophical Association
    An earlier version of this statement was prepared by an ad hoc committee appointed by the APA Board of Officers, under the chairmanship of Robert Audi of the University of Nebraska, and was published as the committee's report in the Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association , Volume 64, Number 5. The present version was subsequently prepared at the Board's request by Richard Schacht of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, then Chair of the APA Committee on the Status and Future of the Profession, and was approved for publication and distribution under the Board's auspices at its 1992 Annual Meeting.

    98. Gateway To Philosophy
    philosophy directory with links to image galleries, online guides and dictionaries, and online texts.
    http://www.websophia.com/gateway/

    99. Philosophy Of Education
    A collection of etexts archived at Metropolitan Community College, Omaha, Nebraska.
    http://commhum.mccneb.edu/PHILOS/phileduc.htm
    Materials on the Philosophy of Education
    Henry Adams' The Education of Henry Adams ( The hypertext includes the entire book.)
    Peter J. Albano's Merleau-Ponty, the Primacy of Perception , and the Philosophy of Education
    (For a response, see Yoon Pak and Ellen Timothy
    H.A. Alexander's Rationality and Redemption: Ideology, Indoctrination and Learning Communities ( For a response, see Harvey Siegel
    Barbara Applebaum's Is Caring Inherently Good? (For a response, see Barbara Houston
    Aristotle's Politics
    Jerry D. Bamburg's Learning, Learning Organisations, and Leadership:
    Implications for the Year 2050.

    Ananyo Basu's African Philosophy and Multicultural Thought
    Clive Beck's Postmodernism, Pedagogy, and the Philosophy of Education ( For responses, see Walter Feinberg and Maxine Greene Sanderson Beck's Confucius and Socrates: The Teaching of Wisdom ( An extensive web site devoted to presenting the lives, teachings, and practices of Confucius and Socrates.) Gert Biesta's The Right to Philosophy of Education: From Critique to Deconstruction Gert Biesta's Education/Communication: The Two Faces of Communicative Pedagogy ( For a response, see

    100. Medieval Philosophy - Texts
    philosophy 2316 Medieval philosophy. University of Saint Thomas. ProfessorJoseph M. Magee. texts Augustine, Confessions, translated
    http://members.aol.com/JMageeMA/medvtext.html
    Philosophy 2316: Medieval Philosophy
    University of Saint Thomas
    Professor Joseph M. Magee
    Texts:
    • Augustine, Confessions , translated by F.J. Sheed (Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Co., Inc., 1993). Introduction by Peter Brown.
    • Armand A. Maurer, Medieval Philosophy , (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 1982).
    • Walter Kaufmann and Forrest E. Baird, eds., Philosophical Classics , Volume II: Medieval Philosophy (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1994).
    • (Hand-outs and readings on reserve in the library may also be required.)

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