Login
Thursday, September 02, 2010
Home
Home
Return to Faculty Homepage Directory
Return to NCC Homepage
About Me
Contacting Me
Course Information
FAQs
Documents
Announcements
Department of Philosophy
Professor Francesco Pupa
read more ...
Philosophy of Religion - Hume Reading
I mistakenly posted a version of the reading without my explanatory footnotes. Since the website server is down, I cannot post the one with the footnotes. So, I sent that version to your NCC email accounts.
read more ...
Date Last Updated: 9/1/2010
Web Resources
CUNY Cognitive Science Symposium
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
...
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews is entirely devoted to publishing substantive, high-quality book reviews (normal length: 1500-2500 words). Our goal is to review a good majority of the scholarly philosophy books issued each year and to have the review appear within six to twelve months of the book's publication. The journal will be published only on-line (available free, both through e-mail subscription and on this website). Reviews are commissioned and vetted by a distinguished national and international Editorial Board.
Philosophical Lexicon
...
The pantheon of philosophy has contributed previous little to the English language, compared with other fields. What can philosophy offer to compare with the galvanizing volts, ohms and watts of physics, the sandwiches, cardigans, and raglan sleeves of the British upper crust, the sado-masochism of their Continental counterparts, or even the leotards of the circus world? We speak of merely platonic affairs, and Gilbert Ryle has given his name to a measure of beer (roughly three-quarters of a pint), but the former is inappropriate to say the least, and the latter is restricted to the patois used in certain quarters of Oxford. There are, of course, the legion of pedantic terms ending in "ian" and "ism", such as "neo-Augustinian Aristotelianism", "Russellian theory of descriptions", and such marginally philosophic terms as "Cartesian coordinate" and "Machiavellian", but these terms have never been, nor deserved to be, a living part of the language. To remedy this situation we propose that philosophers make a self-conscious effort to adopt the following new terms. With a little practice these terms can become an important part of your vocabulary, to the point that you will wonder how philosophy ever proceeded without them.
The Semantics Archive
...
This archive is intended to make it easier to find and distribute papers of interest to natural language semanticists.
The Linguist List
...
The LINGUIST List is dedicated to providing information on language and language analysis, and to providing the discipline of linguistics with the infrastructure necessary to function in the digital world. LINGUIST maintains a web-site with over 2000 pages and runs a mailing list with over 25,000 subscribers worldwide. LINGUIST also hosts searchable archives of over 100 other linguistic mailing lists and runs research projects which develop tools for the field, e.g., a peer-reviewed database of language and language-family information, and recommendations of best practice for digitizing endangered languages data.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
...
Welcome to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP). From its inception, the SEP was designed so that each entry is maintained and kept up to date by an expert or group of experts in the field. All entries and substantive updates are refereed by the members of a distinguished Editorial Board before they are made public. Consequently, our dynamic reference work maintains academic standards while evolving and adapting in response to new research. You can cite fixed editions that are created on a quarterly basis and stored in our Archives (every entry contains a link to its complete archival history, identifying the fixed edition the reader should cite). The Table of Contents lists entries that are published or assigned. The Projected Table of Contents also lists entries which are currently unassigned but nevertheless projected.
Student Resources
How to Write Philosophy
Why Study Philosophy?
Privacy Statement
|
Terms Of Use
|
Disclaimer
Copyright (c) 2010 Professor Pupa