Online resources at the Library
Guest post by Anne Knafl
For those of you moving your courses online, these online resources may be of help.
The Philosophy Research Guide includes primary source databases such as Intelex Past Masters (including works of many important philosophers, from Anselm to Wittgenstein), and Early English Books Online, and secondary source databases like PhilPapers.
There are research guides in all major areas, for example Mathematics. The Electronic Full Text Sources guide lists databases across areas. Many portions of the Library's rare and archival collections have been digitized. We have access to digitized newspapers, both current and historical, including The Chicago Tribune and Chicago Defender.
All our ebooks are available through the Library catalog. Note that access to ebooks varies widely, both in terms of how many people can access an ebook at once and how many pages you can download at one time. (Pro tip: if you need to download more than the allowed number of pages, simply close the ebook and reopen it and the limit will reset.)
Anne K. Knafl, Bibliographer for Religion, Philosophy, and Jewish Studies, is available to help locate other online materials and purchase ebooks for teaching and research.
Guest post by Anne Knafl
For those of you moving your courses online, these online resources may be of help.
The Philosophy Research Guide includes primary source databases such as Intelex Past Masters (including works of many important philosophers, from Anselm to Wittgenstein), and Early English Books Online, and secondary source databases like PhilPapers.
There are research guides in all major areas, for example Mathematics. The Electronic Full Text Sources guide lists databases across areas. Many portions of the Library's rare and archival collections have been digitized. We have access to digitized newspapers, both current and historical, including The Chicago Tribune and Chicago Defender.
All our ebooks are available through the Library catalog. Note that access to ebooks varies widely, both in terms of how many people can access an ebook at once and how many pages you can download at one time. (Pro tip: if you need to download more than the allowed number of pages, simply close the ebook and reopen it and the limit will reset.)
Anne K. Knafl, Bibliographer for Religion, Philosophy, and Jewish Studies, is available to help locate other online materials and purchase ebooks for teaching and research.
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