Leibniz Links (for research and teaching):
- Here is a great collection of Leibniz Resources
- Leibniz Bibliography (Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek)
- The Leibniz Edition’s Catalogue (a searchable database of Leibniz’s writings)
- The database of Leibniz’s correspondents
- Akademie Edition (some volumes are available online)
- Gerhardt, Philosophische Schriften (page scans, from archive.org)
- Gerhardt, Philosophische Schriften (searchable, from Past Masters; requires subscription)
- ECHO: Collection of Historical Sources Related to Leibniz (contains, for instance, the Dutens edition)
- Huggard’s translation of the Theodicy (Project Gutenberg)
- Lloyd Strickland’s collection of translations
- Complete text (in English translation) of Leibniz’s Discourse on Metaphysics
- A translation of the Leibniz-Bouvet Correspondence by Alan Berkowitz and Daniel J. Cook
- The page of the Leibniz Society of North America (LSNA), with information about their essay contest and their conferences
Other Early Modern Links:
- The Early Modern Philosophy Calendar
- Project Vox (resources about women philosophers in the early modern period)
- Blog “The Mod Squad”
- Texts by David Hume
Other Philosophy Links:
- The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Past Masters (online versions of many central texts from the humanities; requires subscription)
- Filosofia.fi (a huge collection of classic philosophical texts)
- Corpus Thomisticum (Thomas Aquinas’s writings in Latin, with search function, a glossary, and other resources)
- The Digital Library of the Catholic Reformation (many important sources, in the original languages; requires subscription)
- The Digital Library of Classic Protestant Texts (many important sources, in the original languages; requires subscription)
- Phil Papers
- What is it like to be a Woman in Philosophy?
- Feminist History of Philosophy (a blog)
- Feminist Philosophers (another great blog)
- Philosophy TV
- Philosophy Bites (podcasts of interviews with top philosophers)
- The American Philosophical Association
- The Society for Women in Philosophy (SWIP)
- Minorities and Philosophy (MAP), a collection of students in North American philosophy departments that aims to examine and address issues of minority participation in academic philosophy
Teaching Resources:
- Wireless Philosophy (Wiphi): open access, entertaining introductory philosophy videos on many different topics
- Teach Philosophy 101
- The MIT Philosophy Department’s teaching resources (includes many links to other teaching resources on the web)
- The University of Michigan’s Center for Research on Learning and Teaching
- Jim Pryor’s teaching resources (guides on writing a philosophy paper, reading philosophical texts, and an introduction to philosophical terms and methods)
- Journal Teaching Philosophy
Philosophy Humor:
- The “Lighter Report“
- Philosophical Powers (Philosophy action figures)
- Proofs that p
- David Chalmers’s collection of philosophical humor
- a game based on Zeno’s paradox (and other games based on Greek punishments; type ‘z’ for the Zeno game)