By now your research has hopefully been an interesting browse through a variety of ideas, questions, and potential answers.
The main goal for today is to clarify which philosopher(s) you will use for your project. The steps you can use toward this involve using the search engines I gave you on the right side of the blog:
To effectively use these search engines you will need to use keywords - terms people discussing your issue typically use. How do you identify what these are? Basically it comes from trial and error. Try a word or two, see what types or articles it takes you to, read those to see how they are treating the issue, see what other words people are using, and repeat.
I also have several of my own books available for you to use. I will bring these to the computer lab each day. They are organized by topics and questions and I think you'll find them to be helpful.
One *optional* goal for today is to send me your "Philosopher Proposal" (the form is on the blog under "handouts") - don't stress over this one - it's just a way of keeping in touch with me about how your search is going. Please note this is a step that can be as formal or informal as you like, and can even be completed by just having a brief conversation with me.
The other goal for today is to find the actual texts written by the author you plan to use.
There are a variety of sites that will be helpful for that, starting with the links we already have.
- Go to Philosophy Pages. Click on "dictionary" at the top of the page. Click the letter of the person you are searching for then look for him / her on the list. Click "Life and Works" and you will find links to many of the full-text versions of their works!
- Go to Project Gutenberg's Philosophy Bookshlef. Simply scroll down this page and I think you'll easily be able to find a link to the work you are looking for.
- Do a Google search! It’s actually not as hard as you think – you’re just a Goolge search away from finding just about any essay I think you’ll need for this project. Just read through the overviews on the topic you are interested in provided on the websites listed above. Then, once you have discovered a writer and the name of a particular essay, just plug those into Google using a formula like this:(Author Last Name) + (One or Two key words from title) + “full text”Here are three quick examples I did:Essay: David Hume’s “Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding”I Googled “Hume Enquiry Full Text”and found it here: http://18th.eserver.org/hume-enquiry.htmlEssay: Rene Descartes’ “Meditations on First Philosophy”I Googled “Descartes First Full Text”And found it here: http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/descartes/meditations/meditations.htmlEssay: William James’ “On the Varieties of Religious Experience”I Googled “William James Varieties Religious full Text”All three of those are either the first or second link to come up in the Google search. Even after you find it, don’t just print it! Take the time to read it and work though it – you may only need to print a section of it.
Again if you've read this far you deserve a reward. Today's music selection - a great one for a Monday morning - is Van Morrison's "Moondance" record. Enjoy.
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