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VI—Resources
The University’s main library (Jerome Library) has an extensive collection of philosophical materials, including numerous
reference books, monographs, and journals. Many of the library’s journals are accessible on-line.
There are several valuable philosophy resources available online:
The Guide to Philosophy on the Internet, maintained by Peter Suber of Earlham College, is an extensive and fully searchable
list of philosophy websites, newsgroups, job postings, bibliographies, quotations, mailing lists, E-texts, and humor. http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/philinks.htm
The American Philosophical Association lists grants, fellowships, contests, conferences, institutes, calls for papers and
other philosophy websites. http://www.apa.udel.edu/apa/index.html
The Philosophical Gourmet Report contains a ranking of graduate philosophy programs in the English-speaking world, as well
as other comparative information on different philosophy departments. http://www.blackwellpublishers.co.uk/gourmet/
The canon of philosophy—the most influential and frequently-cited works of the discipline—has been in development for literally
thousands of years. Here are a dozen works that every serious philosophy student should own and read:
The Republic—Plato Nicomachean Ethics—Aristotle Meditations—Rene Descartes Treatise on Human Nature—David Hume Critique of Pure Reason—Immanuel Kant Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals—Immanuel Kant Utilitarianism—John Stuart Mill On Liberty—John Stuart Mill Language, Truth and Logic—A.J. Ayer Philosophical Investigations—Ludwig Wittgenstein Word and Object—W.V.O. Quine A Theory of Justice—John Rawls
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