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         Philosophy Texts:     more books (100)
  1. Philosophy of Science (text with readings) by David Boersema, 2008-03-25
  2. Ten Great Works of Philosophy by Various, 2002-03-01
  3. Renaissance Humanism: Studies in Philosophy and Poetics (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies) by Ernesto Grassi, 1988-04
  4. Philosophy Then and Now: An Introductory Text with Readings
  5. Knowledge, Mind, and the Given : Reading Wilfrid Sellars's "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind," Including the Complete Text of Sellars's Essay by Willem A. Devries, Timm Triplett, et all 2000-09
  6. Essays On The Philosophy And History Of Art (Continuum Classic Texts) 3 Volume Set by Johann Joachim Winckelmann, 2006-03-05
  7. World Philosophy: A Text with Readings by Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen M Higgins, 1994-11-01
  8. Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts: Moral and Political Philosophy (Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts)
  9. Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts 2 volume set (paperback): Moral and Political Philosophy (Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts)
  10. Ethical Philosophy: The Complete Texts of Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals, and Metaphysical Principles of Virtue, Part II of the Metaphysics by Immanuel Kant, 1982-09
  11. Reading Metaphysics: Selected Texts with Interactive Commentary (Reading Philosophy)
  12. Aquinas: Summa Theologiae, Questions on God (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy)
  13. Daybreak: Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Friedrich Nietzsche, 1997-11-13
  14. Nietzsche: Writings from the Late Notebooks (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) by Friedrich Nietzsche, 2003-03-10

101. Oxford University Press: Philosophical Texts: G. W. Leibniz
Philosophical texts. GW Leibniz Translated by Richard Francks and RS Woolhouse With Introduction and Notes by RS Woolhouse. bookshot Add to Cart
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Philosophy/History/20thCContempora

102. Schelling
Section on Schelling from Alfred Weber's 1908 History of philosophy. Brief biography, followed by a detailed examination of his relation to other thinkers in the Idealist tradition.
http://www.class.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Weber - History/Schelling.htm
History of Philosophy
by
Alfred Weber Table of Contents § 65. Schelling had made him acquainted. The following works belong to his Spinozistic and Neo-Platonic phase, which he calls his "negative philosophy": Ideen zu einer Philosophic der Natur Von der Weltseele System des transcendentalen Idealismus Philosophic und Religion Ueber die Gottheiten von Samothrake (1816); V published by his son. 1. The non-ego, Fichte had said, is the unconscious product of the ego, or, what amounts to the same thing, the product of the unconscious ego. But, Schelling objects, the unconscious ego is not really the ego; what is unconscious is not yet ego or subject, but both subject and object, or rather, neither one nor the other. Since the ego does not exist without the non-ego, we cannot say that it, produces the non-ego, without adding, conversely: the non-ego produces the ego. There is no object without a subject, - as Berkeley had previously declared, - and in this sense Fichte truly says that the subject makes the object; but neither can there be a subject without an object. Hence the existence of the objective world is as much the condition sine qua non of the existence of the ego, as conversely. Fichte, who implicitly recognized this in his profession of pantheistic faith, regards the distinction between the empirical ego and the absolute ego as fundamental to his thought. But what right has he to speak of an absolute ego, when it is certain that the ego, or the subject, is

103. Philosophical Texts (from Hinduism) Encyclopædia Britannica
Philosophical texts (from Hinduism) Although the details of Indian philosophy, as it was developed by professional philosophers, may be treated as a subject
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9014

104. Cartesian School
From Alfred Weber's 1908 work.
http://www.class.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Weber - History/Cartesian School.htm
History of Philosophy
by
Alfred Weber Table of Contents § 54. The Cartesian School
The philosophy of Descartes clearly and accurately expressed the ideals of its age: the downfall of traditional authorities in matters of knowledge, and the autonomy of reason. It met with immense success. Though accused of neologism and atheism by the Jesuits of France and the severe Calvinists of Holland, though attacked in the name of empiricism by Thomas Hobbes and Pierre Gassendi, and in the name of scepticism by Huet, Bishop of Avranches, and Pierre Bayle, it gathered around its standard men like Clerselier, De La Forge, Sylvain Regis, Clauberg, Arnauld, Nicole, Malebranche, Geulincx, Balthazar Bekker, and Spinoza. Even the leaders of militant Catholicism, Bossuet and Fenelon, felt its irresistible influence. Two great problems dominate the speculations of the new school. What is the relation between soul and body, mind and matter? That is the ontological question, with which the question regarding the origin of ideas and the certainty of knowledge, or the critical problem, is closely allied. What is the relation between the soul and God, - between human liberty, on the one hand, and divine omnipotence, on the other? That is the moral question, which is closely connected with the preceding. influxus physicus is exercised by the body upon the soul, or

105. Arnauld Index
George MacDonald Ross's translation of a section on Method from the Port Royal Logic, anonymously authored by Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole. With prefatory material.
http://www.philosophy.leeds.ac.uk/GMR/hmp/texts/modern/arnauld/arnindex.html
ARNAULD TEXTS INDEX Introduction to the Port Royal Logic
The
Port Royal Logic ...
Go to Site Homepage

106. Christiaan Stange's DOSTOEVSKY RESEARCH STATION
An icy sled skidding down a narrow St. Petersburg street. An excellent Dostoevsky resource, including texts, literary criticism, philosophy, biography, and discussion.
http://www.kiosek.com/dostoevsky/
DOSTOEVSKY RESEARCH STATION
“IF GOD DOES NOT EXIST, THEN EVERYTHING IS PERMITTED.”
OK... no matter how much the above statement sounds like him,
and no matter how many times it has been attributed to him,
it is beginning to look like it wasn't Dostoevsky who wrote this.
We're going to keep it here for now (cause we like it) but if some wise soul out there
knows from where this quote truly originates, please don't keep us all in suspense! .F. Dostoevski Dostojewsky Fyodor Mikhailovits' Dosrtoyevsrki Th. Dostogephskee Teodor Dostojewski Deastavaskei Poor Folk [Poor People] (1846) The Double (1846) Mr. Prokharchin (1846) A Novel in Nine Letters (1847) The Landlady (1847) The Stranger-Woman (1848) A Weak Heart [A Faint Heart] (1848) Polzunkov (1848) An Honest Thief (1848) A Jealous Husband (1848) A Christmas Tree and a Wedding (1848) White Nights [Bright Nights] (1848) Netochka Nezvanova (1849) A Little Hero (1849) Uncle’s Dream (1859) The Village of Stepanchikovo and Its Inhabitants [The Friend of the Family] (1859) The House of the Dead (1860-1862) The Insulted and the Injured [The Humiliated and Wronged] (1861) An Unpleasant Predicament (1861) A Silly Story (1861) A Nasty Tale (1862) Winter Notes on Summer Impressions (1863) Notes From Underground [Letters from the Underworld] (1864) An Unusual Happening (1865) Crime and Punishment (1866) The Gambler (1866) The Idiot (1868) The Eternal Husband (1870) The Devils [The Possessed] (1871-72) The Diary of a Writer [The Journal of an Author] (first sixteen chapters, 1873) A Raw Youth (1875) A Gentle Creature (1876) The Dream of a Ridiculous Man (1877) A Diary of a Writer (1877) The Brothers Karamazov (1879-80) The Speech on Pushkin (1880) Another Man’s Wife and The Husband Under the Bed Bobok The Crocodile From the Diary of an Unknown Man A Gentle Spirit

107. Feminist History Of Philosophy
1.1 Explicit Statements of Misogyny in Philosophical texts; 1.2 Gendered Interpretations of Philosophical Concepts; 1.3 Synoptic Interpretations of the
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/feminism-femhist/
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Feminist History of Philosophy
The past two decades have seen an explosion of feminist writing on the philosophical canon, a development that has clear parallels in other disciplines like literature and art history. Since most of the writing is, in one way or another, critical of the tradition, a natural question to ask is: Why does the history of philosophy have importance for feminist philosophers? This question assumes that the history of philosophy is of importance for feminists, an assumption that is warranted by the sheer volume of recent feminist writing on the canon. This entry explores the different ways that feminist philosophers are interacting with the Western philosophical tradition. Feminist philosophers engaged in a project of re-reading and re-forming the philosophical canon have noticed two significant areas of concern. The first is the problem of historical exclusion. Feminist philosophers are faced with a tradition that believes that there are no women philosophers and, if there are any, they are unimportant. Of course, women are not entirely absent from the history of philosophy, and that brings us to the second challenge we face. Canonical philosophers have had plenty to say about women and what we are like. In general terms, we often find that philosophical norms like reason and objectivity are defined in contrast to matter, the irrational or whatever a given philosopher associates with women and the feminine. Our tradition tells us, either implicitly through images and metaphors, or explicitly in so many words, that philosophy itself, and its norms of reason and objectivity, exclude everything that is feminine or associated with women.

108. Boethius: Consolation Of Philosophy
Background information and Latin and English texts of this classic. The English text is drawn from Cooper's 1902 translation.
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/jod/boethius/boethius.html
Boethius: Consolatio Philosophiae
About this document

109. HPS Research Methods Guide: History Of Philosophy: Working On 18th-Century Texts
History of philosophy Working on EighteenthCentury texts. Marina Frasca-Spada. The difficulty with this area of research is that it is up to you to decide
http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/research/hpwect.html
window.defaultStatus="Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge" Department of
History and Philosophy of Science RESEARCH METHODS GUIDE HOME SEARCH CONTACT
History of Philosophy: Working on Eighteenth-Century Texts
Marina Frasca-Spada
The difficulty with this area of research is that it is up to you to decide in what way you want to combine history and philosophy in your work - how historical, or how philosophical, you want to be. It is also, of course, its great attraction. What follows is a very idiosyncratic personal recipe. If you are not researching such topics as the history of the reception of Malebranche in England, or of the editions of Locke's Essay , always read canonical works in a standard edition-for instance: Nidditch for Locke's Essay Treatise and Enquiries , N. Kemp Smith for Hume's Dialogues . Even if you work on reception, it is convenient to have the standard edition as a point of reference, to possess your own copy if possible, etc. In any case avoid present-day abridgements or selections (except if you are working on, say, the position of Locke in the canon of today's analytic philosophy-in which case they may be among your primary sources). If your philosopher writes in a language you don't know, consider learning it. For such authors as Locke, Hume, and Kant there are specialised biographies, bibliographies and journals- Locke Newsletter, Hume Studies, Kant-Studien

110. The Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy
Draws from public domain sources for both its classic philosophical etexts collection and for portions of some articles. James Fieser, Ph.D., general editor.
http://www.iep.utm.edu/
Alphabetical Index (choose a letter):
A B C D ...
James Fieser, Ph.D.
, founder and general editor Bradley Dowden, Ph.D. , general editor Call for Submissions and Volunteers IEP Editors About the IEP

111. LMU Yoga Philosophy Program
Courses in the core texts of yoga as well as the study of the Sanskrit and Tibetan languages and the traditions associated with Yoga practice. These include Classical Yoga, various schools of Hinduism (Shaiva, Vaishnava, and various forms of devotionalism), Buddhism, and Jainism.
http://extension.lmu.edu/yoga/
location.replace("http://www.lmu.edu/pages/12935.asp"); CRS HOME SUMMER 2003
THEOLOGY
Graduate Courses ... Spirituality Week CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: Bible Institutes C.O.P.I.M. Hispanic Ministry Parish Administration ... DeMello Retreat ABOUT CRS: Staff Advisory Board Mission and Vision Recommended Links ... SEARCH THIS SITE

deepen your understanding of yoga
Yoga Philosophy Program - Loyola Marymount University
We are pleased to announce a special program:
Cultivating Peace:

A Weekend Buddhist Meditation Retreat

Saturday - Sunday, August 2-3, 2003
Join us for a special Information Session
August 25, 2003 at 6:15-7:15 pm in University Hall 1840,
to find out more about our Certificate Program and meet our instructors and students!

112. Intercultural Philosophy - Philosophical Texts Published By IFK
Philosophical texts by Heinz Kimmerle and other intercultural philosophers, an index of our publishing work on the web.
http://home.concepts-ict.nl/~kimmerle/frameTexts.htm
Texts and research In this section of IFK's website we want to publish texts about intercultural philosophy in general, and about African philosophy in particular. Our aim is to provide the interested reader, especially students of philosophy, with texts which are of general importance for intercultural philosophy or which have been written or edited in connection with IFK. Another special focus is the interactive relation between intercultural philosophy and art. Texts in written in Dutch and German , have their own sections at this site. Text 1
Sensus communis
in Multi- and Intercultural Perspective
On the Possibility of Common Judgments in Arts and Politics
have already been published in the above mentioned book. Sensus communis
Clarification of a Kantian Concept on the Way to an Intercultural Dialogue

Between Western and Indian Thought
Antoon Van den Braembussche, Rotterdam Sensus communis and Modernity as a Common Horizon
A Contribution to the Theory of Intercultural Communication
Gerrit Steunebrink, Nijmegen

113. Sterf's Site
Includes downloadable books and texts on the occult, mysticism, scientific curiosities, philosophy, and the author's other interests. Also provides related links.
http://users.telenet.be/sterf/

114. Tao Speaks
Discussions of Taoist texts, Chinese characters, and Taoist philosophy.
http://members.boardhost.com/Zentao00/

Post a Message
Welcome to Tao Speaks!

115. Jade Purity :: Philosophical Taoism
Houses the main texts of the Taoist philosophy and religion.
http://www.daozang.com/
home lao tzu chuang tzu siji tzu emailE=('siji@' + 'mac.com') document.write( '' + 'contact' + '' )
welcome zen thoughts ch'an community blog ... map
In a valley below Shadow Mountain sits an unimpressive hut. A path leads from the mountain pass along the river to this dwelling. There are no distinguishing marks about this structure other than a simple Chinese character above the main entrance; marking it as the dwelling of the timeless sage, Siji Tzu.
Within this hut are the central documents that root the philosophical system known as Daoism. These documents teach one how to live in universal harmony and how to cultivate ones highest and purest sense of their true nature (Jade Purity).
The two ancient sages in which I focus within these pages are Lao Tzu (author of the Dao De Jing ) and Chuang Tzu . I believe the thoughts and principles laid out by these two philosophers form the solid core of Daoism which I follow.
I also introduce a new sage here named Siji Tzu ; a timeless sage living the ideas given by Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu and delivering my interpretations of Daoism through the use of poetry, koan and fable.

116. Ecclesia Gnostica Universalis
Thelemite gnostic church based on the teachings of Aleister Crowley. Introduction, sacred texts, information on membership and philosophy, rites, saints, and additional writings.
http://www.egnu.org/
The unfragmentary non-atomic fact of my universality
Then saith the prophet and slave of the
beauteous one: who am I, and what shall
be the sign? So she answered him, bending
down, a lambent flame of blue, all-touching,
all penetrant, her lovely hands upon the
and her soft feet not hurting the
little flowers: Thou knowest! And the sign
shall be my ecstasy, the consciousness of
the continuity of existence, The unfragmentary
non-atomic fact of my universality.
( Write this in whiter words ) ( But go forth on Liber AL page 0/6
Links and Rings
A.O.T.O.A.'. The Aro gTér Ask Uncle Al Book of Gate ... Web of the Law This site is a member of WebRing. To browse visit here Search WWW Search egnu.org Learn more about Thelema First Open Source Gnostic Church

117. WI Philosophy 100-level
This, Tiles teaches, is philosophy the close interrogation of texts and the sharing of insights with others also interested in those texts.
http://mwp01.mwp.hawaii.edu/resources/philosophy100.htm
100-Level Philosophy: Morals and Society (Writing-Intensive)
WRITING PHILOSOPHY
Reading and writing intertwine in all academic fields but perhaps no where more tightly than in philosophy. As a result, Professor James Tiles maintains, "You can't teach philosophy without writing." Tiles starts his first-time philosophy students writing on the first day of class, asking them to attempt to write philosophy before most have read any. This early writing gives students an added impetus to want to read philosophy. The reading in turn invites students to write again, then to read more, and so on, as the interconnections between the two are emphasized again and again. Tiles leads students through a carefully constructed sequence of reading/writing assignments. Students are asked to undertake increasingly complex tasks that build upon the earlier, simpler skills they have already practiced. Tiles's students thus are prepared by the end of their first semester's course to engage with such final assignments as, "Write problems does Mill's theory of justice leave? Can these problems be overcome?" and "Write an essay addressing the question: Is it possible to do anything ethically improper to oneself?" To understand how Tiles prepares students for such ambitious culminating tasks, we will look

118. John Post's Philosophy Place -- Big Questions Handled With Care
Professor of philosophy, Emeritus at Vanderbilt University. Abundant online texts.
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/~postjf/
JOHN POST's PHILOSOPHY PLACE
The real drama in philosophy remains where it has always been, in pairing the rage for order with delight in near chaotic variety. And the highest challenge is to express the two entwined, to express them by a harmony of argument and metaphor, of logic and passion, so that we may understand and respond with all that is best in us.

john.f.post@vanderbilt.edu

John Post is Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, at Vanderbilt University. He has published in metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of language, logic, philosophy of science, meta-ethics, and philosophy of religion. He is currently writing a book in metaethics: From Nature to Norm (draft Chapters 1-3 of 4, in PDF). His other book in progress, Minimal Epistemology , is temporarily on a back burner. Here are some further links (under construction) to his work:
Metaphysics:

119. Teaching Ancient Philosophy - Resources, Texts
Home Teaching Ancient philosophy. Ancient Philosophical texts (at this site). The internet can be a useful resource for materials such as electronic texts
http://www.john.sellars.btinternet.co.uk/tap/resources_texts.html
Ancient Philosophical Texts (at this site)
The internet can be a useful resource for materials such as electronic texts, but sites go down or get moved and links can become out of date. With this in mind, I include copies of a selection of electronic texts of ancient philosophical works as part of this site (arranged chronologically), as a supplement to the complete list
Plato
Aristotle
Epictetus
Diogenes Laertius
Plotinus
Next Section: Chronology of Ancient Philosophers This site was created by Dr John Sellars for the PRS-LTSN

120. InteLex Corporation (NLX) - Home Page
Intelex creates authoritative databases in the humanities, and electronic texts in Literature, History, philosophy, Classics, Economics, Political Theory and Religious Studies.
http://www.nlx.com/homepage.htm
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