Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Science - Philosophy
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 6     101-120 of 191    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Philosophy:     more books (88)
  1. South Park and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today(The Blackwell Philosophy & Pop Culture Series)
  2. True Blood and Philosophy: We Wanna Think Bad Things with You (The Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series)
  3. Philosophy of Education by Nel Noddings, 2006-07-26
  4. Thinking through Philosophy: An Introduction by Chris Horner, Emrys Westacott, 2000-10-02
  5. This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women
  6. Questions that Matter: An Invitation to Philosophy by Ed. Miller, Jon Jensen, 2008-03-10
  7. A Preface to Philosophy by Mark B. Woodhouse, 2006-01-19
  8. The Philosophy of Andy Warhol : (From A to B and Back Again) by Andy Warhol, 1977-04-06
  9. Ashtanga Yoga: Practice and Philosophy by Gregor Maehle, 2007-08-28
  10. Introduction To Mathematical Philosophy (1920) by Bertrand Russell, 2010-09-10
  11. Theory and Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science (Science and Its Conceptual Foundations series) by Peter Godfrey-Smith, 2003-08-01
  12. Three Books of Occult Philosophy (Llewellyn's Sourcebook) by Henry Cornelius Agrippa, James Freake, et all 1992-01-08
  13. History of Philosophy, Volume 5 by Frederick Copleston, 1993-12-01
  14. What is Analytic Philosophy? by Hans-Johann Glock, 2008-04-21

101. HYLE--International Journal For Philosophy Of Chemistry
Hyle, philosophy of Chemistry, International Journal, philosophy and History of Science, philosophy, Epistemology, Methodology, Ethics, Aesthetics, Education
http://www.hyle.org/
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PHILOSOPHY OF CHEMISTRY ISSN 1433-5158 Home Board Issues Latest ... Open Navigation Bars
Editor
Joachim Schummer
Scientific Board
Prof. Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent (Paris, France) Prof. Jaap van Brakel (Leuven, Belgium) Prof. Martin Carrier (Bielefeld, Germany) Prof. Luigi Cerruti (Torino, Italy) Prof. Giuseppe Del Re (Napoli, Italy) Prof. Kostas Gavroglu (Athens, Greece) Prof. Roald Hoffmann (Ithaca/NY, USA) Prof. Paul Hoyningen-Huene (Hannover, Germany) Prof. Peter Janich (Marburg, Germany) Prof. Hans Lenk (Karlsruhe, Germany) Prof. Klaus Mainzer (Augsburg, Germany) Prof. Daniel Rothbart (Fairfax/VA, USA) Prof. Klaus Ruthenberg (Coburg, Germany) Prof. Eric R. Scerri (Los Angeles/CA, USA) Prof. Stephen J. Weininger (Worcester/MA, USA)
Call for Papers
" Nanotech Challenges " Latest Electronic Issue
HYLE 10.1

(Spring 2004) Latest Print Volume
HYLE 9

(Fall 2003) Back Issues
The Journal Special Services General Information
About HYLE
Editorial Board
Contact Navigation Help ... Order Print Version Information for Online Readers Subscribe to E-mail List Latest Issue Back Issues Preview ... Search HYLE Information for Authors Guidelines for Submissions Guidelines for Referees (PDF) New: Virtual Art Exhibition "Chemistry in Art"

102. Department Philosophy
Faculty listing and short description of the department.
http://philosophy.evansville.edu/
1800 Lincoln Ave. - Evansville, IN 47722 - 800.423.8633 - www.evansville.edu
T he philosophy program at the University of Evansville has many purposes. First, the program explores ideas about knowledge, ethics and reality which have been instrumental in shaping the human condition. Second, it teaches students to become critical thinkers and readers, aiding in the development of skills in analyzing arguments, uncovering hidden assumptions and bringing alternative viewpoints to consciousness. The philosophy program encourages the critical examination of the philosophical presuppositions of science, law, art, religion and other areas of human concern.
The Department of Philosophy and Religion believes that the search for meaningful life work must be balanced by an education that guides and enlightens. Students who study philosophy find challenging course work in the liberal arts and sciences, experienced faculty and a campus brimming with vitality. E-mail: philosophy@evansville.edu

103. Library Philosophy And Practice Title Page
Peer reviewed online journal specializing in applied library science research. Articles available
http://www.uidaho.edu/~mbolin/lp&p.htm
LPP home page has moved. Click here or wait to be redirected.

104. A Short Biography Of Franklin Merrell-Wolff
A biography of Franklin MerrellWolf. Includes information on his philosophy.
http://www.om-guru.com/html/saints/wolff.html
O M- G URU
Saints, Teachers, and Seekers in the Indian Tradition F ranklin M errell-Wolff
American Sage of Vedanta Philosophy

Franklin Merrell-Wolff Franklin Merrell-Wolff was an American living in rural California who documented his spiritual awakening in a journal published under the title Pathways Through to Space . Franklin grew up in California, the son of a clergyman and graduated Stanford University Phi Beta Kappa in 1911 majoring in mathematics with minors in philosophy and psychology. He did graduate work at Stanford and Harvard. He also taught mathematics briefly at Stanford. At this point, he withdrew from the academic world and began his spiritual search. Franklin does not include much additional personal information in his diary. Thus, this biography is more about spiritual experience and contains less background information on his life. In 1937, Franklin had been studying and meditating on the Indian philosopher Shankara’s thought reading his books in English translation. He felt a great affinity with the writings of this sage, and his view of Vedanta. Franklin had also been spending a great deal of time alone as a gold-prospector, and this solitude helped him contemplate and understand the subtle philosophical issues in some depth. He describes his initial spiritual realization as follows:
Franklin Merrell Wolff

105. Philosophy And Theology
This page is no longer being maintained. Please visit labyrinth.georgetown.edu. philosophy and Theology. Primary Texts. Aristotle Aristotle s
http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/philosophy/phil.html
This page is no longer being maintained. Please visit labyrinth.georgetown.edu
Philosophy and Theology
Primary Texts
Aristotle
Aristotle's Works at The Tech Archive (MIT) Aristotle, Metaphysics (Trans. W. D. Ross) Aristotle De interpretatione (Trans. E. M. Edghill) Aristotle, On the Soul (Trans. J. A. Smith) and an html edition (prepared by James O'Donnell) Aristotle, Physics (Trans. R. P. Hardie and R. K. Gaye) Aristotle, Poetics (Trans. S. H. Butcher) Aristotle, Rhetoric (Trans. W. Rhys Roberts)
Augustine
Latin text of the Confessions (HTML edition by Chris Mitchell) Directory of the Confessions for access by individual book, or the Entire text as one long file. (E. B. Pusey, trans.) Key word search of the Pusey trans. Augustine, De dialectica . (Text and trans., James Marchand; HTML ed., James O'Donnell.) Enchiridion (Albert Outler, trans.) De musica (Latin ed.)
Boethius
Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English, at UVA Etext Center) Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English with commentary and other resources, ed. James O'Donnell, at U Penn.) De institutione musica (Latin ed.)

106. Kluwer Academic Publishers - Linguistics And Philosophy
Focuses on issues related to structure and meaning in natural language. Includes description, subscription information, editorial board, author instructions and journal contents. Online version available.
http://www.kluweronline.com/issn/0165-0157/
This web page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

107. Heisenberg's Physics And Philosophy
History of QM and Copenhagen Interpretation
http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/heisenb2.htm
Werner Heisenberg (1958)
Physics and Philosophy
Source Physics and Philosophy , 1958; Chapters 2 (History), 3 (Copenhagen interpretation) and 5 (HPS), reproduced here;
Published : by George Allen and Unwin Edition, 1959.

The History of Quantum Theory
The idea that energy could be emitted or absorbed only in discrete energy quanta was so new that it could not be fitted into the traditional framework of physics. An attempt by Planck to reconcile his new hypothesis with the older laws of radiation failed in the essential points. It took five years until the next step could be made in the new direction. This time it was the young Albert Einstein, a revolutionary genius among the physicists, who was not afraid to go further away from the old concepts. There were two problems in which he could make use of the new ideas. One was the so-called photoelectric effect, the emission of electrons from metals under the influence of light. The experiments, especially those of Lenard, had shown that the energy of the emitted electrons did not depend on the intensity of the light, but only on its colour or, more precisely, on its frequency. This could not be understood on the basis of the traditional theory of radiation. Einstein could explain the observations by interpreting Planck's hypothesis as saying that light consists of quanta of energy travelling through space. The energy of one light quantum should, in agreement with Planck's assumptions, be equal to the frequency of the light multiplied by Planck's constant.

108. Philosophy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
philosophy. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. philosophy is the critical rather than these usages. Western and Eastern philosophy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy

109. Buddhism - The History, Philosophy And Practice Of Buddhism - Start Page
An easily understood, nonsectarian introduction to Buddhist history, philosophy and practice.
http://www.acay.com.au/~silkroad/buddha
The
History,

Philosophy
and
Practice

of Buddhism Click here to discover
"Funky Meditations"

by the author of this site
Study Web Award "One of the best educational resources on the Web"
History
Philosophy Practice Meditation Room Any of the material on this site may be used by students or for teaching on a not-for-profit basis
provided that, w here material from this site is used on a web page, a link to www.buddha101.com must be included;
Questions or comments regarding the content of this site are welcome.
Please e-mail Mary Hendriks at

110. Techné: Research In Philosophy And Technology
Techné Research in philosophy and Technology. was previously published as Techné Journal of the Society for philosophy and Technology.
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/SPT/
was previously published as
Editor: Davis Baird bairdd@gwm.sc.edu
DLA Ejournal Home
Access Data 1996-2003
ISSUES:
Volume 7, Number 2: Spring 2004

111. Voluntary Euthanasia
A comprehensive entry with background information on the issue.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/euthanasia-voluntary/
version history
HOW TO CITE

THIS ENTRY
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A B C D ... Z
This document uses XHTML-1/Unicode to format the display. Older browsers and/or operating systems may not display the formatting correctly. last substantive content change
MAY
Voluntary Euthanasia
The entry sets out five individually necessary conditions for anyone to be a candidate for legalised voluntary euthanasia (or, in some usages, physician-assisted suicide), outlines the moral case advanced by those in favour of legalising voluntary euthanasia, and discusses six of the more important objections made by those opposed to the legality of voluntary euthanasia.
1. Introduction
Our concern will be with voluntary euthanasia that is, with those instances of euthanasia in which a clearly competent person makes a voluntary and enduring request to be helped to die. There shall be occasion to mention non-voluntary euthanasia instances of euthanasia where a person is either not competent to, or unable to, express a wish about euthanasia, and there is no one authorised to make a substituted judgment (wherein a proxy chooses as the no longer competent patient would have chosen had she remained competent) in the context of considering the claim that permitting voluntary euthanasia will lead via a slippery slope to permitting non-voluntary euthanasia. Nothing will be said here about

112. Philosophy - Academic Info
Academic Info philosophy Directory of Online Resources Sections include Digital Library ; General Links ; Ancient philosophy ; Medieval philosophy ; Modern
http://www.academicinfo.net/phil.html
Academic Info
Philosophy - Directory of Online Resources
Sections include: Digital Library ; General Links ; Ancient Philosophy ; Medieval Philosophy ; Modern Philosophy ; Existentialism ; Philosophy of the Mind ; African Philosophy ; Chinese Philosophy ; Indian Philosophy.
Home
Search Index Contact ... Humanities Philosophy Table of Contents
Digital Library

General Links

Reference Shelf

Ancient Philosophy
...
Indian Philosophy
See Also
China Studies: Religious Studies

Classical Studies
Comparative Literature History Gateway ... GRE Prep Sponsored Links Sponsor
this page for $200 per year. Find Books: Philosophy Western Civilization Learn Greek Learn German ... University of Phoenix Online Earn your degree 100% online. Questia TheFreeDictionary.com FreeEncyclopedia ESL - Improve Your English ... Text Link Advertising - The Weight Loss Institute offers research on weight loss and diet pills Online Education.net Online Degrees College-Campus.com ... Auto Insurance Cheap Degree Programs Online Degrees Business Criminal Justice Culinary Arts ... Technical Colleges Test Prep Resources DAT Nursing GRE SAT / ACT ... Sponsor this page for $200 per year.

113. Fun Is Fine: Toward A Philosophy Of Game Design
Acticle reviewing David Kennerly's philosophy.
http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~kennerly/game_design/fun_is_fine.html
Fun is Fine
Toward a Philosophy of
Game Design
David Kennerly, 22 June 2003. This is by no means the philosophy of game design, but these notions may help an aspiring game designer before he begins his work and in reviewing not just his work but the fitness of his goals. Toward a Philosophy of Game Design What is the Sound of One Hand Designing? A Unique Medium ... Endnotes
What is the Sound of One Hand Designing?
"[Do not] mistake yourself for an 'artist.' Our goal is to create newer and more fun games. Art is not our goal." Tetsuya Nomura, Final Fantasy character designer The Entertainment versus Art debate flares perennially. These participants may be having fun, but the dichotomy is uniquely inappropriate to games. For example among MMORPGs, to Jessica Mulligan, fun subsumes art ; whereas, to Raph Koster, art subsumes entertainment. I will challenge the dichotomy itself. Crafting fun is the art of the game. To paraphrase Stephen King: Put your game design desk in the corner to remind yourself every day that Art supports Life, not the other way around. By the end of this article, we may disentangle the faulty dichotomy. After reconsidering what we think we know about a game, fun, and art we may come to discover that Nomura

114. Toward A Buddhist Philosophy Of Science
An essay examining science, technology, and related topics from a Buddhist perspective.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Atrium/8240/
Toward a Buddhist Philosophy of Science
Science is the cornerstone of the European-American culture that has transformed the entire globe over the last few centuries. Buddhism is a deeply rooted religious tradition of Asia, now emerging as a powerful global voice. Science and Buddhism both address the nature of human experience, but in quite different ways. Science elaborates and refines a collection of interconnected theories, facts, procedures, and equipment, constituting an ever more powerful tool for working with and in the world. Buddhism focusses more on the mind and how our way of thinking affects our experience. Both science and Buddhism show how everyday appearances arise from underlying structures. By understanding these structures one gains new freedom, to choose among alternatives by working effectively with the cause and effect relations. Science has given us great power to understand and change the world. But this power has also let us create new and bigger problems for ourselves. Without examining how the dynamics of mind underlies our experience, it might seem that the evolutionary path of science and technology is a matter beyond our choice or responsibility. But the profound insights of Buddhism reveal that our perceptions and actions arise in habitual self-reinforcing cycles, and the methods taught in the Buddhist tradition enable us to intervene in these cycles. Science and technology in some form or other, which is to say some way of thinking about and working with the world, are a fundamental dimension of human existence. Modern science has blossomed by driving the refinement of ideas through public debate grounded in clear evidence. Buddhism shows the dynamics underlying any such evolving pattern of experience, and provides tools to open these patterns to boundless freedom and joy.

115. SOSIG: Philosophy
SOSIG Home Help SOSIG Home, philosophy, Editor Social Science Information Gateway. You are here Home philosophy. About SOSIG What s new in philosophy.
http://www.sosig.ac.uk/philosophy/
Philosophy Editor: Social Science Information Gateway You are here : Home > Philosophy
in Philosophy
What is My Account
Member: Login
New user: Register
What is Grapevine Related...
Conferences

Courses

Events

Departments
...
Philosophy
Resource Type Search in whole catalogue current section Top 50 sites in Philosophy Advanced Search Thesauri Map of the Philosophy section Browse Sub-Sections Aesthetics Metaphysics Philosophical Systems Philosophy of Law ... Philosophy of Religion Browse Related Sections Research Tools Women and Philosophy Internet Resources Listed By Type alphabetically Europe UK For a short description click the title. To access the resource directly click Editor's Choice (key resources in this subject) American Philosophy Association CogPrints Contemporary Philosophy, Critical Theory and Postmodern Thought Royal Institute of Philosophy (The) ... TPM Online Bibliographic Databases Up British Library of Economic and Political Science (BLPES) COPAC: University Research Library Catalogue IBSS (International Bibliography of the Social Sciences) On-line ... Routledge Philosophy Arena Bibliographies Up Bibliography on History of Ideas in Colonial Latin America Feminism and Philosophy Hypertext Bibliography of Measures of Complexity ... Philosophy of Liberal Education Books/Book Equivalents Up Aristotle's Theory of Substance: the Categories and Metaphysics Zeta by Michael V. Wedin (book extract)

116. Philosophy Documentation Center
The philosophy Documentation Center is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing affordable access to the widest possible range of philosophical
http://www.pdcnet.org/
Search:
The Philosophy Documentation Center is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing affordable access to the widest possible range of philosophical materials. Established in 1966, the PDC has earned a reputation for excellence with the publication of scholarly journals, reference materials, conference proceedings, and instructional software. This year the PDC is pleased to welcome Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought Newman Studies Journal , and Radical Philosophy Review . Subscriptions to each journal can now be placed online, and current subscribers can renew their subscriptions or update their personal contact information through our secure website. Subscription, membership renewals, and related correspondence may also be sent by regular mail, phone, fax, or e-mail as follows: Philosophy Documentation Center
P. O. Box 7147, Charlottesville, Virginia 22906-7147
Tel. 434-220-3300, Fax: 434-220-3301, E-mail order@pdcnet.org The PDC is committed to providing affordable access to all back issues of the journals it publishes, and this year we will complete the digitization of the back issues of Augustinian Studies Idealistic Studies International Journal of Applied Philosophy , and New Vico Studies . Within the next 18 months we will also digitize all back issues of International Philosophical Quarterly , and over a hundred issues of American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly

117. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Stoics And Stoic Philosophy
The Stoic School was founded in 322 B.C. by Zeno of Cittium and existed until the closing of the Athenian schools (A.D. 429).
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14299a.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... S > Stoics amd Stoic Philosophy A B C D ... Z
Stoics amd Stoic Philosophy
The Stoic School was founded in 322 B.C. by Zeno of Cittium and existed until the closing of the Athenian schools (A.D. 429), (it took the name from the Stoa poikile , the painted hall or colonnade in which the lectures were held.) Its history may be divided into three parts: (1) Ancient Stoicism Middle Stoicism New Stoicism (1) Ancient Stoicism (322-204) eimarmene, logos ); Zeus, or providence, the eternal principle of finality adapting all other things to the needs of rational beings; the law determining the natural rules that govern the society of men and of the gods; the artistic fire, the expression of the active force which produced the world one, perfect, and complete from the beginning, with which it will be reunited through the universal conflagration, following a regular and ever recurring cycle. The popular gods are different forms of this force, described allegorically in myths. This view of nature is the basis for the optimism of the Stoic moral system; confidence in the instinctive faculties, which, in the absence of a perfect knowledge of the world, ought to guide man's actions; and again, the infallible wisdom of the sage, which Chrysippus tries to establish by a dialectic derived from Aristotle and the Cynics. But this optimism requires them to solve the following problems: the origin of the passions and the vices; the conciliation of fate and liberty; the origin of evil in the world. On the last two subjects they propounded, all the arguments that were advanced later up to the time of Leibniz.

118. Main.chinesephilosophy.net
This site draws together a list of Chinese philosophy resources available on the Internet.
http://main.chinesephilosophy.net/
If you can see this, your browser does not support frames.
Please click the link below
http://members.iinet.net.au/~saandss/chinesephilosophy/

119. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Cynic School Of Philosophy
Founded at Athens about 400 B.C., continued in existence until about 200 B.C. It sprang from the ethical doctrine of Socrates regarding the necessity of moderation and selfdenial.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04582a.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... C > Cynic School of Philosophy A B C D ... Z
Cynic School of Philosophy
The Cynic School, founded at Athens about 400 B.C., continued in existence until about 200 B.C. It sprang from the ethical doctrine of Socrates regarding the necessity of moderation and self-denial. With this ethical element it combined the dialectical and rhetorical methods of the Eleatics and the Sophists. Both these influences, however, it perverted from their primitive uses; the Socratic ethics was interpreted by the Cynics into a coarse and even vulgar depreciation of knowledge, refinement, and the common decencies, while the methods of the Eleatics and the Sophists became in the hands of the Cynics an instrument of contention (Eristic Method) rather than a means of attaining truth. The Cynic contempt for the refinements and conventions of polite society is generally given as the reason for the name dogs ) by which the first representatives of the school were known. According to some authorities, however, the name Cynic arose from the fact that the first representatives of the school were accustomed to meet in the gymnasium of Cynosarges.

120. :: Paths Of Physics ::.
Research activities, essays, databases, books, meetings in History and philosophy of Physics. A section is dedicated to the development of Physics in Italy.
http://matsci.unipv.it/percorsi/
History, Philosophy and Foundations of Physics The site has moved to: http://fisicavolta.unipv.it/percorsi/

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 6     101-120 of 191    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter