Remember, in addition to these web based resources there is another
wonderful resource called the library.
Use it. The ten volume Routledge
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by Edward Craig, is a helpful
place to start and is available in the reference section of the Belk Library
(B51 .R68 1998). Another helpful reference tool is the Philosopher's
Index, available in the reference section of Belk (B1 .P47) as
well as on-line.
A guide to using the print version of the Philosopher's Index can
be found
here.
The Appalachian State library also maintains an extensive list of on-line
resources to help you search.
General philosophy resources:
Guide
to Philosophy on the Internet, a comprehensive
guide to philosophy resources on the internet by Peter Suber of Earlham
College, including more
links for many of the philosophers we are reading.
A Timeline of Western
Philosophers, by Garth Kemerling, browse as much as you like, but be
sure to look up the philosophers we will be reading this semester.
Pages specific to the philosophers we will
be reading this semester:
Thales,
details what is thought to be known about this founding figure of Western
philosophy. Discussion of Thales
by John Burnet. Information on Thales
and mathematics.
The
Life of Plato, an excellent site edited
by Anthony Beavers providing texts and searches of works by and about Plato.
An e-text of the Meno
is also available from the Perseus Project, although in a slightly different
translation from our own.