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text search capability. The work, edited by Michael Groden and Mar-tin Kreiswirth, includes references to the social and physical sciences as well as connections to historical, philosophical, and cultural theories.
4. Meta-Encyclopedia of Philosophy.5 A dynamic resite by Andrew Chrucky accesses the following sources: Dagobert D. Runes (ed.), Dictionary of Philosophy, 1942, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Dictionary of the Philosophy of Mind, The Ism Book, The Catholic Encyclopedia (1913), and A Dictionary of Philosophical Terms and Names.
5. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.6 This continuously updated reference work is a publishing project of the Metaphysics Research Lab at the Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI) at Stanford University. The general editor of the Stanford Encyclopedia is Edward N.
Zalta. Authors of subject entries are well-known scholars in their fields; even so, the subjects discussed are authoritative and well balanced. The Encyclopedia is the most scholarly general source for philosophy on the Internet and is essential as a starting point and background research for philosophy term papers.
6. Thoemmes Encyclopedia.7 Biographical and bibliographical database including major figures in the history of ideas has a search function as well as a list of key personages. Thoemmes Press (pronounced as "Thomas") originated from Thoemmes Antiquarian Books and specializes in publishing the scholars of intellectual history. The biographical sources on this site are authoritative, accurate, and helpful background summaries of the life and thought of important figures in the Western intellectual tradition.
7. The 1911 Edition Encyclopedia.8 The 11th Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica contains articles from experts in their fields is still a widely used reference and a classic resource for the state of knowledge in 1911.
Our first consideration for this book is to make primary sources accessible to a wide variety of readers—including readers curious about the subjects presented, readers with disabilities, readers in developing countries, as well as college, high school, and home schooling students on a budget.
Please send your questions and inquiries of interest to the “Editors” at
<philbook@philosophy.lander.edu>
5.
http://www.ditext.com/encyc/frame.html
6.
http://plato.stanford.edu/
7.
http://www.thoemmes.com/encyclopedia/list1.htm.asp
8.
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/
Siddhartha: An Open-Source Text
iii
Part I.