Hippias: Limited
Area Search of Philosophy on the Internet; Peter Suber, general
editor.
The
contents of the current issues of the main English
language philosophy journals: All on one page! Maintained by
the Taiwanese Philosophical Association. The site has Chinese
characters in the title, which may cause your browser to tell you to
install the missing fonts. You don't need to install the fonts to
look at the site, though, because the content's in English.
The Society for Exact
Philosophy: A society for "discussion among researchers who
believe that rigorous methods have a place in philosophical
investigations."
EpistemeLinks.com: A
good philosophy resource with links to philosophers, departments,
journals, etc.
On-line
Resources on Philosophy: All sorts of philosophy links,
including some to syllabi on the web and to analytic philosophy
papers on the web. Maintained by Marcelo Vásconez, a
philosopher in Ecuador.
Xrefer.com: An excellent
searchable database of many reference books, including The Oxford
Companion to Philosophy and The Oxford English Reference
Dictionary.
Try it:
The Philosophers'
Imprint: A free, Web-based philosophy journal produced at the
University of Michigan, edited by Stephen Darwall and J. David
Velleman. Here's a paragraph taken from their mission statement:
There is a possible future in which academic libraries no longer
spend millions of dollars purchasing, binding, housing, and
repairing printed journals, because they have assumed the role of
publishers, cooperatively disseminating the results of academic
research for free, via the Internet. Each library could bear the
cost of publishing some of the world's scholarly output, since it
would be spared the cost of buying its own copy of any scholarship
published in this way. The results of academic research would then
be available without cost to all users of the Internet, including
students and teachers in developing countries, as well as members
of the general public.
Language
Brian
Weatherson's Vagueness page: Contains a draft of his book
manuscript on vagueness; some online papers on vagueness, and
links to other people with on line papers on vagueness. (Should
have posted this link a while ago, don't know how I overlooked
doing it.)
Classics in
Formal Semantics and Pragmatics: I just discovered this one on
the website of Frank Veltman.
Veltman describes the list as containing "40 studies written in
the period 1960-2000 which everybody working in the field of
formal semantics and pragmatics should have read." I was happy to
discover that I'd read most of this stuff, and would also describe
most things on the list as excellent, some of them essential,
reading for people doing philosophical logic (I can't bring myself
to use the term "philosophical logician") and for philosophers of
language (although in some cases, only for linguisticky-oriented
ones like myself). Even Fine's "Vagueness, Truth and Logic" is on
the list!
Vagueness: An Evolving
Resource. By Justin Needle.: This site contains links to online
papers about vagueness, an extensive bibliography of works on
vagueness, and various other vagueness resources. The site is now
being kept up to date. (Check out the bibliography!)
Justin Needle is doing us wonderful service.
Vagueness: Entry
(by Roy Sorensen) in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Sorites
Paradox: Entry (by Dominic Hyde) in the Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy.
semanticsarchive.net:
Maintained by Chris
Barker and Peter Lasersohn, this
site is building to be a comprehensive archive of research papers of
interest to those working in natural language semantics.
Semantics Web
Resources: Maintained by Kai von Fintel at M.I.T.,
this site includes links to home pages of linguists and philosophers
with online papers of interest to those doing research in natural
language semantics and philosophy of language.
November's Great
Moments in Logic: A page from Greg Restall's website
introducing a logician a day (with pictures) for each day in
November (2001).
Interactive Real
Analysis: Officially, this is an online,
interactive textbook for Real Analysis or Advanced Calculus in one
real variable. Students of Logic will find the page helpful and
interesting for its introductions to set theory,
infinity/infinities, mathematical induction, continuity and more,
as well as for its "historical tidbits" on logicians such as
Bolzano, De Morgan, and Peano.
The
Epistemology Page: Maintained by Keith DeRose, this site
has many resources for those doing teaching or research in
epistemology.
The
Epistemology Research Guide: This site includes lots of links
to epistomologists' web sites, online papers in epistemology, and
teaching resources (syllabi, lecture notes, etc.) for epistemology
classes. Maintained by Dr. Keith Korcz at the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette (formerly the University of Southwestern
Louisiana).
This page created and maintained by Delia Graff
URL:
http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/research/graff/philosophy.html
Last modified: "Sunday, 01 Jan 06, 13:52"