Teaching Supplements (COMING SOON)
Waves of Thought: A Global & Historical Philosophy Reader
This primary source reader is designed as a supplement to Inventing Knowledge: A Global & Historical Introduction to Philosophy.
Philosophy Timeline
PowerPoint Slides
Multiple Choice Question & Answer Bank [Instructors Only]:
Common Cartridge & DOCX available.
Please contact the author to request this resource.
Email requests must either 1) be sent from an institutional email address or 2) contain proof of institutional affiliation.
OER Resources
For those seeking a topical-survey style Introduction to Philosophy textbook, the author recommends Introduction to Philosophy, edited by Nathan Smith (Houston Community College).
For those seeking an Introduction to Formal Logic textbook, the author recommends forall x by P.D. Magnus (University at Albany, SUNY).
For those seeking more advanced textbooks in formal logic, the author recommends the Open Logic Project instigated by Richard Zach (University of Calgary) and its many derivative works.
For those seeking online software for running logic problems and exercises, the author recommends carnap.io, developed by Graham Leach-Krouse (Kansas State University) and J. Ehrlich.
For those seeking introductory texts on a variety of other specific areas of philosophy, the author recommends the Introduction to Philosophy series by The Rebus Community.
For those seeking introductory texts and more advanced monographs on a variety of other specific areas of philosophy, the author recommends the many books released by Open Book Publishers and Punctum Books respectively.
For those seeking an introductory video lecture series on formal logic, the author recommends Introduction to Formal Logic by Mark Thorsby (Lone Star College).
For those seeking video lecture series covering a wide range of topics at a variety of comprehension levels, the author recommends the Free Online Philosophy Courses list, compiled by Open Culture.