Felsefe Bölümü Ana Sayfa       BÖLÜM: Genel Bilgi       Bölüm Elemanları       Lisans Programı       Lisansüstü Programı         ENGLISH VERSION OF THE PAGE     

Φ

   Bölümden Son Dakika       Öğrenciler İçin Bilgiler       Araştırmacılar İçin Bilgiler       DERGİ: Felsefe Tartışmaları       İletişim Bilgileri       Boğaziçi Üniv. Ana Sayfa   
   

phi

 

B. Ü. FELSEFE BÖLÜMÜ

AKADEMİSYENLERE YÖNELİK YARARLI BİLGİLER
(Bilgilerin çoğu İngilizcedir)

 

§ Endeksli Dergilerin Listesi
§ Eser Yayınlamaya İlişkin Bilgi
§ Kurumlar ve Genel Bilgiler

§ Yurtdışındaki Felsefe Bölümleri
§ Eğitime Yönelik Bilgi ve Bağlantılar
§ BÜ Fel. BA, MA ve PhD Programları


 

LISTS OF INDEXED JOURNALS


THE PHILOSOPHER'S INDEX
http://www.philinfo.org/journals.htm

ARTS AND HUMANITIES INDEX
http://www.isinet.com/cgi-bin/jrnlst/jloptions.cgi?PC=H

SOCIAL SCIENCES INDEX
http://www.isinet.com/cgi-bin/jrnlst/jloptions.cgi?PC=J
 

é başa dön

 

PUBLISHING PAPERS


Journals File:
http://homepages.ed.ac.uk/pmilne/links_html/journals.html
Description of the site: alphabetical listing of journals, listing by subject.

Guidebook for Publishing Philosophy:
http://sophia.smith.edu/~jmoulton/guidebook/
Description of the site: how to publish, evaluation of journals, detailed information about the publishing standards of each journal.

Guide to Philosophy on the Internet:
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/philinks.htm
Description of the site: philosophers, topics, institutions, journals. (You have to go down the page, it is a long one)
 

é başa dön

 

ORGANIZATIONS AND GENERAL PHILOSOPHICAL INFO


Philosophical Society of Turkey:
http://www.tfk.org.tr/

The American Philosophical Association:
http://www.apa.udel.edu/apa/

The Canadian Philosophical Association:
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~worc0337/phil_uni_can.html

Philosopher's Information Center:
http://www.philinfo.org/

Episteme Links (general info on philosophy):
http://www.epistemelinks.com/

Philosophy in cyberspace (general info on philosophy):
http://www-personal.monash.edu.au/~dey/phil/

The Gutenberg Project (the catalogue of free on-line books):
http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (on-line):
http://plato.stanford.edu/contents.html

The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (on-line):
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/

Some humor
: "The Postmodernism Generator" (Each time you visit or reload this site, the software program automatically creates a post-modern essay!)
http://www.elsewhere.org/cgi-bin/postmodern/
 

é başa dön

 

LINKS TO OTHER PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENTS


Philosophy Departments in the U.S.A. and Canada (APA's List):
http://www.apa.udel.edu/apa/asp/departments.asp

AMERICAN philosophy departments:
http://www.campusprogram.com/programs/subjects/Philosophy.html

CANADIAN philosophy departments:
http://www.acpcpa.ca

Top American philosophy departments listed by their MAIN INTEREST AREA:
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/guides/realguide.html

Philosophy Graduate Schools Friendly to CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY:
http://www.earlham.edu/~phil/gradsch.htm

Philosophical Gourmet (rankings of philosophy departments in N. America):
http://www.philosophicalgourmet.com/


Philosophy Departments ALL AROUND THE WORLD:

http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/MainDept.aspx

http://directory.google.com/alpha/Top/Society/Philosophy/Academic_Departments/

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~worc0337/phil_universities.html

http://www.gradschools.com/listings/menus/philosophy_menu.html
 

é başa dön

 

 

EDUCATIONAL AIDS

HELP ON PHILOSOPHY PAPERS


A WRITING GUIDE

The Main Page of the Writing Center of the Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison  (This is one of the best and most comprehensive essay-writing guides available in the Internet):
http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/index.html

HOW TO PLAN

by Jeff McLaughlin
http://www.cariboo.bc.ca/ae/php/phil/mclaughl/courses/howplan.htm

HOW TO READ

by Jeff McLaughlin
http://www.cariboo.bc.ca/ae/php/phil/mclaughl/courses/howread.htm

HOW TO WRITE

by James Pryor
http://www.princeton.edu/~jimpryor/general/writing.html

by John Nolt
http://web.utk.edu/~nolt/courses/HOWTOWRT.html

by Jeff McLaughlin
http://www.cariboo.bc.ca/ae/php/phil/mclaughl/courses/howrit.htm

FORMAL RULES OF PAPER WRITING

by Michael Harvey
http://nutsandbolts.washcoll.edu/punctuation.html
 

é başa dön

 

ABOUT PLAGIARISM

(By The Department of Western Languages of B.Ü.)

Plagiarism is a serious ethical offense that carries severe penalties. A student who is found guilty of plagiarism on any type of written assignment, take-home examination, term paper, report, project, or research paper receives a grade of F for that work and may be reported to the disciplinary committee. It is every student's responsibility to know what constitutes plagiarism and to use proper documentation when using others' words and ideas in his or her writing. Please read the following information adapted from the MLA Handbook carefully and check your references before turning in any type of written work in your courses.

Also be aware that submitting in a course a paper done for another course is self-plagiarism, that is, another form of cheating. If you want to rework a paper that you prepared for another course, you should ask your current instructor for permission to do so and submit both versions of your paper. If there are going to be significant overlaps between the papers you are preparing for two different courses you are currently taking, you should obtain permission from both instructors and submit both papers to both instructors.

Plagiarism refers to a form of cheating that has been defined as "the false assumption of authorship: the wrongful act of taking the product of another person's mind, and presenting it as one's own" (Alexander Lindey, Plagiarism and Originality [New York: Harper, 1952] 2). To use another person's ideas or expressions in your writing without acknowledging the source is to plagiarize. Plagiarism, then, constitutes intellectual theft.

At all times during research and writing, guard against the possibility of inadvertent plagiarism by keeping careful notes that distinguish between your own musings and thoughts and the material you gather from others. Forms of plagiarism include the failure to give appropriate acknowledgment when repeating another's wording or particularly apt phrase, when paraphrasing another's argument, or when presenting another's line of thinking.

You may certainly use other persons' words and thoughts in your research paper, but the borrowed material must not seem your creation. Suppose, for example, that you want to use the material in the following passage, which appears on page 625 of an essay by Wendy Martin in the book Columbia Literary History of the United States:

       Some of Dickinson's most powerful poems express her firmly
       held conviction that life cannot be fully comprehended without an
       understanding of death.

If you write the sentence above without any documentation, you have committed plagiarism. However, you may use the same sentence if you use quotation marks and cite its source:

       "Some of Dickinson's most powerful poems express her firmly
       held conviction that life cannot be fully comprehended without an
       understanding of death" (Martin, 625).

If you change this sentence and put it into your own words and then use it without proper documentation, as it is done below, you have committed plagiarism again:

       Emily Dickinson strongly believed that we cannot understand
       life fully unless we also comprehend death.

But you may present the material if you cite your source:

       As Wendy Martin has suggested, Emily Dickinson strongly
       believed that we cannot understand life fully unless we also
       comprehend death (625).

Or:

       Emily Dickinson strongly believed that we cannot understand
       life fully unless we also comprehend death (Martin, 625).

The source is indicated, in accordance with MLA style, by the name of the author and by a page reference in parentheses. The name refers the reader to the corresponding entry in the works-cited list, which appears at the end of the paper:

Martin, Wendy. "Emily Dickinson." Columbia Literary History of
    the United States
. Emory Elliott, gen. ed. New York: Columbia UP,
    1988, 609-26.

In writing your research paper, then, you should document everything that you borrow-not only direct quotations and paraphrases but also information and ideas. Of course, common sense as well as ethics should determine what you document. For example, you rarely need to give sources for familiar proverbs ("You can't judge a book by its cover"), well-known quotations ("We shall overcome"), or common knowledge ("George Washington was the first president of the United States"). But you must indicate the source of any appropriated material that readers might otherwise mistake for your own. If you have any doubt about whether or not you are committing plagiarism, cite your source or sources.

MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 5th ed., New
    York: Modern Language Association of America, 1999, 30-33.

There are several sources on the internet that you can consult for further explanations and examples of plagiarism, legitimate quotations and paraphrases. The University of Wisconsin-Madison Writing Center Writer's Handbook is a particularly helpful one:

http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/QPA_plagiarism.html
 

é başa dön

 

 

B. Ü. PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE (MASTER'S & DOCTORAL) PROGRAMS

(detailed info about degree requirements)

 

B. Ü. Felsefe Böl. Lisans Programı:
http://www.phil.boun.edu.tr/t3underg.html

B. Ü. Felsefe Böl. Lisansüstü Programı (Ana Sayfa):
http://www.phil.boun.edu.tr/t4grad.html

B. Ü. Felsefe Böl. Master Programı:
http://www.phil.boun.edu.tr/masters.html

B. Ü. Felsefe Böl. Doktora Programı:
http://www.phil.boun.edu.tr/phd.html
 

é başa dön

 

 

 
   Felsefe Bölümü Ana Sayfa       BÖLÜM: Genel Bilgi       Bölüm Elemanları       Lisans Programı       Lisansüstü Programı         ENGLISH VERSION OF THE PAGE     

Φ

   Bölümden Son Dakika       Öğrenciler İçin Bilgiler       Araştırmacılar İçin Bilgiler       DERGİ: Felsefe Tartışmaları       İletişim Bilgileri       Boğaziçi Üniv. Ana Sayfa   
   

phi