The Great Ideas Homepage
Welcome!
What is Great Ideas?
Great Ideas is an interdisciplinary course offered through the
College of Arts and Sciences here at Bowling Green State University that
is a survey of several fundamental ideas which have
shaped modern culture in general and Western culture in particular.
It is important to note that the ideas discussed in this class are
not the only "Great Ideas"
out there, or even that these "Great Ideas" are necessarily "good." As such,
the goal of this course is for the participants to explore these ideas by
being
curious and open-minded on the one hand, and questioning and skeptical on the
other. We will use our reason and imagination to try to gain an introductory
understanding of the historical context that framed these ideas, and we will
try to further our knowledge about how these ideas are relevant for us
today.
Feel free to contact me about any of the course materials or Internet
Resources you see mentioned here. If you are using Lynx, Netscape, or
another Web browser that supports e-mail, you can send e-mail to me by
clicking here.
Available
Course Materials
Available Student Essays
The students in this course have put together a lot of interesting writing projects,
some of which are available by clicking here.
Available Net Resources
This space will be changing a lot during this semester, so if this is your
first visit, be sure to stop back. The resources listed here are loosely
categorized according to the "Great Ideas" discussed in the
course.
By the way, most of the resources listed here were located simply by
doing a key word search with one of the many search engines
available on the Web. Click
here to be taken to Netscape's collection of Search
Engines
Classical Greek Humanism
Religion
There are A LOT of net resources on religions of all types. Here
are just a few places to get started.
- The WWW
Library of Religion, which contains lots and lots of information
on Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Bahai. This
page also contains links to other religion-oriented pages and
discussion groups.
- EiNet
Galaxy Religion Page, which is similar to the WWW Library page.
EiNet also has a Religion (Arts and Humanities) Page, which includes a lot of links to academic resources and discussions on religion.
- The WWW Library "Secular
Issues" Page. This is sort of a diverse collection of readings and
newsgroups that are about modern humanism, atheism, skepticism, and the
like. Be sure to check out the link to the "Freethought Page" when you
visit here.
-
"Guide to Early Church Documents."
- Worlds of Late
Antiquity.This is information about a course taught at the University of
Pennsylvania. Some of the topics include Augustine and the Christian Bible.
Democracy
This first list includes some information about the writers we read about
in class that might be particularily interesting and useful.
I've also included a number of
what might be better called "political WWW resources" in this section.
- The BGSU Coalition
Against the Contract on America. Here's a grass-roots campus
organization working with national student organizations that are
protesting the changes in the student loan program suggested by the new
Republican majority. No matter what your personal politics, if you have
a student loan or on work-study or have a grant, you should check this
stuff out.
- The
Yahoo
Government Page. If you want to find out more information about
government in general on the Web, this is a great place to start.
- The Yahoo
Politics Page.Just like the above entry, this is a great place to
start for information about politics in genral on the web.
-
The Mother Jones "Monitoring Anti-Democratic Movements" Page.
- The
Progressive Pages, which is a liberal/progressive clearinghouse of
WWW material.
- The Newt
Gingrich Activities Page, a collection of various quotes and such
from the current Speaker of the House.
- Progress and Freedom Foundation
Homepage, a politically conservative collection of government
information and projects.
- House of Representatives WWW
Page, which has lots of connections to other places as well.
- The Senate Gopher, which is
current info about the Senate.
-
"Preserving Democracy in Cyberspace: The Need for a New Literacy," an
interesting and informative article about issues of freedom and the
Internet.
Scientific Revolution
The resources that I've been able to find to date are really about
"science" in general, but some of them do provide some interesting
information.
Marxism
- The
Marxism Homepage, the best place to start on the 'net for info on
Marx, Communism, and other political/government issues.
Feminism
Postmodernism
-
Postmodern Culture is a scholarly journal about all sorts of different
aspects of postmodernism. While some of this is fairly dense, all of it
is quite interesting.
- Alternative
X, which "is a continuing barrage of Avant-Pop fiction, Internet
columns, interviews, manifestos, post-PoMo essays and lots more!"
Some fun and interesting things.
- C-Theory,
which is a collection of books reviews and other writings on culture and
theory.
- Cardiff's
Moviedatabase on Natural Born Killers, which is the film we saw
with this unit. This link includes all sorts of information about the
film and links to a really great database, too.
- A List of
Hypertexts to explore from Eastgate Press, which is a company that
publishes a variety of hypertext tools and such.
General Internet Resources
Steve Krause/ Department of English/ Bowling Green State University/
Bowling Green, OH 43401 USA/ (419) 353-5104/ skrause@bgnet.bgsu.edu /All of the
Standard Disclaimers Apply