Supplementary
readings - includes web materials, lists of reserve items, and
lists
of materials to be found in Fenwick Library. Some of these are required
reading and some are optional.
Link to your primary Aristotle reading: W.D. Ross’ classic translation of Book I (also known as Book A) of Aristotle’s Metaphysics. (Click on this link, then click on Book I.)
Notes
on Aristotle's Metaphysics A1-2 (Book I, Ch. 1-2)
Criteria
for good writing in philosophy: recommended reading. This is a list
of general features that all philosophy papers should have, things
philosophy professors look for in grading. The list was compiled by the
Philosophy Department and the Writing Center.
Examples
of Plagiarism vs. Examples of Legitimate Use of Material Written by
Others
A
nicely detailed and well-explained page on plagiarism from Indiana
University
Prof.
Cherubin's
main web page
1. As noted in class, a better term for what we will be studying is "ancient Mediterranean philosophy." Ancient Mediterranean philosophy does form part of the history of Western philosophy, but it also forms part of the history of some non-Western philosophy: Islamic philosophy, for example, draws upon and further develops Greek philosophy. Also, there was plenty of interaction between the Greeks, the Romans, and the Egyptians and East Africans. In addition, there are some conceptual similarities between Greek and Sanskrit thought. So, what you learn in this course will be of use in other courses on e.g. the Middle East, the Near East, North Africa, East Africa, sometimes South Asia, etc.
It is also helpful to remember that the Greeks and Romans did not
see
themselves as part of a "Western" culture or civilization; the notion
of
a "Western" culture or civilization did not exist. Moreover,
geographically
speaking, the Greeks and Romans saw themselves as at or close to the
middle:
there was some disagreement among ancient geographers, but they tended
to put the center of the earth's surface either at the Nile Delta or at
Delphi (in Greece). (back)