I entered the house where the Mom smiled. Her 'kiddos', Jimmy and Gina both had puppy smells except Gina's was like she rolled in fresh cut grass and flowers whereas Jimmy just smelled like the inside of a shoe. Their dad, Tom, smelled liked cars, since he made his living crawling under them.
I liked Tom. He actually talked to me. Most adults just ignored me (easily done since I was in my invisible phase) or mumbled in my direction.
"See these?" he said, pointing at some books.
"You mean the books?"
"Yeah.
"Read them and the Bible if you want wisdom."
"Really?"
"They are called the great books of the western world. A man named Mortimer put them together and he made a Syntopicon for them."
"What's a sin-topic-con?"
"Good question.
"It's like one of those Indians you watch on your TV Westerns. It's like a guide to help you get some place.
"You see, Mortimer believes that the bedrock of our civilization are our myths and stories. The ancient Greeks and Hebrews wrote these stories down and then wrote about what the stories mean.
"People then read what they wrote and made comments. This became like a conversation across time.
"The Syntopicon guides you through threads in the conversation.
"You can read on your own, but the best way to become wise is for you and a couple of friends to read an idea at the same time and talk about it."
I was 9 when Tom introduced me to the Great Books. I was intriqued! I wanted to be WISE! Did I read these books? Well, the books didn't live in MY house did they? So, no.
When I was 25 I welcomed a set of the great books into my home. Did I read them then? No.
Now I'm 76 and I figured, "Why not?"
But, me being me, rather than taking a volume off the shelf and just begin reading, I needed to do some research:
QUES: It's been 72 years since the Great Books were published. Have there been additions or deletions?
ANS: The 1952 original publication includes 54 volumes. The second edition in 1990 has 60 volumes and made additions to 11 of the existing books.
QUES: The books included were selected by a small group (Mortimer Adler, Robert Hutchins, and William Benton). Has anyone else developed a similar list?
ANS: Mortimer wasn't the first to identify books that a thinking citizen should be familiar with. At the beginning of the 20th century, the President of Harvard, Charles W. Eliot, thought his (Dr Eliot's) Five-Foot Shelf of Books could provide a person with the foundations of a liberal education. He compiled and edited a list of literature and historical documents that were published in 1909-1910 in a 50 volume. This became known as the Harvard Classics.
During his tenure at Columbia University, in 1920 John Erskine created the General Honors Course to help develop students into more complete human beings. The process he adopted was for each student to read a great book each week and discuss it in a small group. Mortimer J. Adler was an instructor in this course in the 1920s (1923?). The current incarnation of the General Honors Course can be found in Columbia's Literature Humanities and Contemporary Civilization courses. Books on the reading lists for these two courses are highlighted in purple in the table below.
Mortimer Adler was the adamant champion of what became the Great Books of the Western World. His quest began in 1941 and was accomplished in 1952.
Joseph Brodsky, the 1987 Nobel Prize winner in Literature, created the List of 83 Books You Should Read to Have an Intelligent Conversation.
Shane Sherman maintains The Greatest Western Books of All Time which he compiles from various "Best Book" lists. (A combination of thoughtful and popular?)
Of course universities have their reading lists. It would be intriguing to compile a reading list which spans the various departments in a university (similar to Columbia's The Core Curriculum).
(NOTE: Since I posted this I've learned about
QUES: What books and documents are included in the Great Books of the Western World (GBWW)?
ANS: A list of documents organized by its 60 Volume is included in the GBWW wikipedia article.
I copied the list to a spreadsheet, notated a date for each. I added some items and include them at the top of the list:
- item 1, included by Joseph Brodsky on his list of books you should read to have an inteligent conversation. It is also included on the Literature Humanities reading list.
- items 2 and 3, the two versions of the Bible referenced in the GBWW (but not included in the GBWW list!)
- items 4, 5, and 6, included in the Harvard Classics Volumes 44 or 45, Sacred Writings
- item 6, the Qur'an, which Mortimer lamented as not being included in the versons of GBWW.
- items 7 - 10, included in the Harvard Classics Volume 49, Epic and Saga
There are 398 works in list. Doing some searches to find book lengths, that's 41,914 pages!
QUES: So now what? I've made this spiffy list that I can waste my time sorting, what's the plan?
ANS: Well, 398 books seems a bit much and 41,914 pages are overwhelming (How do you eat an elephant comes to mind), so I have a bit of planning to do.
I'll do some sorting to pare down the list to something manageable on my next post. Then I'll come up with a plan.
(NOTE: Books on Columbia's 2024 Literature Humanities and Contemporary Civilization reading lists are highlighted in purple.)
TITLE | AUTHOR | VOL | DATE | ITEM |
The Epic of Gilgamesh | | | -1200 | 1 |
the Bible (King James version) | | | 1769 | 2 |
the Bible (Douay version) | | | 1752 | 3 |
The Bhagavad Gita | | | -500 | 4 |
Analects (The Sayings of Confucius) | | | -220 | 5 |
Qur'an | | | 632 | 6 |
Beowulf | | | 1025 | 7 |
The Song of Roland | | | 1115 | 8 |
The Destruction of Dá Derga’s Hostel | | | 1782 | 9 |
The Story of the Volsungs and Niblungs | | | 1877 | 10 |
The Great Conversation | Robert Maynard Hutchins (Editor) Mortimer J. Adler (Editor) | 1 | 1952 | 11 |
The Great Ideas I : ANGEL to LOVE | Robert Maynard Hutchins (Editor) Mortimer J. Adler (Editor) | 2 | 1952 | 12 |
The Great Ideas II : MAN to WORLD | Robert Maynard Hutchins (Editor) Mortimer J. Adler (Editor) | 3 | 1952 | 13 |
The Iliad | Homer | 4 | -700 | 14 |
The Odyssey | Homer | 4 | -700 | 15 |
The Suppliant Maidens | Aeschylus | 5 | -458 | 16 |
The Persians | Aeschylus | 5 | -472 | 17 |
Seven Against Thebes | Aeschylus | 5 | -467 | 18 |
Prometheus Bound | Aeschylus | 5 | -424 | 19 |
The Oresteia | Aeschylus | 5 | -450 | 20 |
Agamemnon | Aeschylus | 5 | -450 | 21 |
Choephoroe | Aeschylus | 5 | -450 | 22 |
The Eumenides | Aeschylus | 5 | -450 | 23 |
Oedipus the King | Sophocles | 5 | -429 | 24 |
Oedipus at Colonus | Sophocles | 5 | -401 | 25 |
Antigone | Sophocles | 5 | -450 | 26 |
Ajax | Sophocles | 5 | -450 | 27 |
Electra | Sophocles | 5 | -450 | 28 |
The Trachiniae | Sophocles | 5 | -425 | 29 |
Philoctetes | Sophocles | 5 | -409 | 30 |
Rhesus | Euripides | 5 | -440 | 31 |
Medea | Euripides | 5 | -431 | 32 |
Hippolytus | Euripides | 5 | -428 | 33 |
Alcestis | Euripides | 5 | -438 | 34 |
Heracleidae | Euripides | 5 | -430 | 35 |
The Suppliants | Euripides | 5 | -458 | 36 |
The Trojan Women | Euripides | 5 | -415 | 37 |
Ion | Euripides | 5 | -412 | 38 |
Helen | Euripides | 5 | -412 | 39 |
Andromache | Euripides | 5 | -425 | 40 |
Electra | Euripides | 5 | -414 | 41 |
Bacchantes | Euripides | 5 | -405 | 42 |
Hecuba | Euripides | 5 | -424 | 43 |
Heracles Mad | Euripides | 5 | -416 | 44 |
The Phoenician Women | Euripides | 5 | -425 | 45 |
Orestes | Euripides | 5 | -404 | 46 |
Iphigenia in Tauris | Euripides | 5 | -412 | 47 |
Iphigenia in Aulis | Euripides | 5 | -406 | 48 |
The Acharnians | Aristophanes | 5 | -425 | 49 |
The Knights | Aristophanes | 5 | -424 | 50 |
The Clouds | Aristophanes | 5 | -423 | 51 |
The Wasps | Aristophanes | 5 | -422 | 52 |
Peace | Aristophanes | 5 | -421 | 53 |
The Birds | Aristophanes | 5 | -414 | 54 |
The Frogs | Aristophanes | 5 | -405 | 55 |
Lysistrata | Aristophanes | 5 | -411 | 56 |
Thesmophoriazusae | Aristophanes | 5 | -411 | 57 |
Ecclesiazousae | Aristophanes | 5 | -391 | 58 |
Plutus | Aristophanes | 5 | -388 | 59 |
The History | Herodotus | 6 | -430 | 60 |
History of the Peloponnesian War | Thucydides | 6 | -400 | 61 |
Dialogues | Plato | 7 | -370 | 62 |
Charmides | Plato | 7 | -390 | 63 |
Lysis | Plato | 7 | -387 | 64 |
Laches | Plato | 7 | -390 | 65 |
Protagoras | Plato | 7 | -390 | 66 |
Euthydemus | Plato | 7 | -367 | 67 |
Cratylus | Plato | 7 | -367 | 68 |
Phaedrus | Plato | 7 | -367 | 69 |
Ion | Plato | 7 | -390 | 70 |
Symposium | Plato | 7 | -367 | 71 |
Meno | Plato | 7 | -367 | 72 |
Euthyphro | Plato | 7 | -390 | 73 |
Apology | Plato | 7 | -390 | 74 |
Crito | Plato | 7 | -390 | 75 |
Phaedo | Plato | 7 | -367 | 76 |
Gorgias | Plato | 7 | 390 | 77 |
The Republic | Plato | 7 | -375 | 78 |
Timaeus | Plato | 7 | -387 | 79 |
Critias | Plato | 7 | -387 | 80 |
Parmenides | Plato | 7 | -367 | 81 |
Theaetetus | Plato | 7 | -367 | 82 |
Sophist | Plato | 7 | -361 | 83 |
Statesman | Plato | 7 | -387 | 84 |
Philebus | Plato | 7 | -387 | 85 |
Laws | Plato | 7 | -367 | 86 |
The Seventh Letter | Plato | 7 | -352 | 87 |
Categories | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 88 |
On Interpretation | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 89 |
Prior Analytics | Aristotle | 8 | -350 | 90 |
Posterior Analytics | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 91 |
Topics | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 92 |
Sophistical Refutations | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 93 |
Physics | Aristotle | 8 | -350 | 94 |
On the Heavens | Aristotle | 8 | -350 | 95 |
On Generation and Corruption | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 96 |
Meteorology | Aristotle | 8 | -340 | 97 |
Metaphysics | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 98 |
On the Soul | Aristotle | 8 | -350 | 99 |
Minor biological works | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 100 |
On Sense and the Sensible | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 101 |
On Memory and Reminisence | Aristotle | 8 | -350 | 102 |
On Sleep and Sleeplessness | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 103 |
On Dreams | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 104 |
On Prophesying by Dreams | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 105 |
On Longevity and Shortness of Life | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 106 |
On Youth and Old Age, On Life and Death, On Breathing | Aristotle | 8 | -322 | 107 |
History of Animals | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 108 |
Parts of Animals | Aristotle | 9 | -350 | 109 |
On the Motion of Animals | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 110 |
On the Gait of Animals | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 111 |
On the Generation of Animals | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 112 |
Nicomachean Ethics | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 113 |
Politics | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 114 |
The Athenian Constitution | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 115 |
Rhetoric | Aristotle | 9 | -322 | 116 |
Poetics | Aristotle | 9 | -335 | 117 |
The Hippocratic Oath | Hippocrates | 10 | -370 | 118 |
On Ancient Medicine | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 119 |
On Airs, Water, and Places | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 120 |
The Book of Prognostics | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 121 |
On Regimen in Acute Diseases | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 122 |
Of the Epidemics | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 123 |
On Injuries of the Head | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 124 |
On the Surgery | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 125 |
On Fractures | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 126 |
On the Articulations | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 127 |
Instruments of Reduction | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 128 |
Aphorisms | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 129 |
The Law | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 130 |
The Ulcer | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 131 |
On Fistulae | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 132 |
On Hemorrhoids | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 133 |
On the Sacred Disease | Hippocrates | 10 | -400 | 134 |
On the Natural Faculties | Galen | 10 | 199 | 135 |
The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements | Euclid | 11 | -300 | 136 |
On the Sphere and Cylinder | Archimedes | 11 | -225 | 137 |
Measurement of a Circle | Archimedes | 11 | -250 | 138 |
On Conoids and Spheroids | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 139 |
On Spirals | Archimedes | 11 | -225 | 140 |
On the Equilibrium of Planes | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 141 |
The Sand Reckoner | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 142 |
The Quadrature of the Parabola | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 143 |
On Floating Bodies | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 144 |
Book of Lemmas | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 145 |
The Method Treating of Mechanical Problems | Archimedes | 11 | -212 | 146 |
On Conic Sections | Apollonius of Perga | 11 | -190 | 147 |
Introduction to Arithmetic | Nicomachus of Gerasa | 11 | 120 | 148 |
On the Nature of Things | Lucretius | 12 | 1473 | 149 |
The Discourses | Epictetus | 12 | 108 | 150 |
The Meditations | Marcus Aurelius | 12 | 180 | 151 |
Eclogues | Virgil | 13 | -38 | 152 |
Georgics | Virgil | 13 | -29 | 153 |
Aeneid | Virgil | 13 | -19 | 154 |
The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans | Plutarch | 14 | 100 | 155 |
The Annals | P. Cornelius Tacitus | 15 | 117 | 156 |
The Histories | P. Cornelius Tacitus | 15 | 105 | 157 |
Almagest | Ptolemy | 16 | 170 | 158 |
On the Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres | Nicolaus Copernicus | 16 | 1543 | 159 |
Epitome of Copernican Astronomy (Books IV–V) | Johannes Kepler | 16 | 1621 | 160 |
The Harmonies of the World (Book V) | Johannes Kepler | 16 | 1619 | 161 |
The Six Enneads | Plotinus | 17 | 250 | 162 |
The Confessions | Augustine of Hippo | 18 | 400 | 163 |
The City of God | Augustine of Hippo | 18 | 426 | 164 |
On Christian Doctrine | Augustine of Hippo | 18 | 426 | 165 |
Summa Theologica | Thomas Aquinas | 19 | 1274 | 166 |
Summa Theologica | Thomas Aquinas | 20 | 1274 | 167 |
Divine Comedy | Dante Alighieri | 21 | 1321 | 168 |
Troilus and Criseyde | Geoffrey Chaucer | 22 | 1385 | 169 |
The Canterbury Tales | Geoffrey Chaucer | 22 | 1476 | 170 |
The Prince | Niccolò Machiavelli | 23 | 1532 | 171 |
Leviathan | Thomas Hobbes | 23 | 1651 | 172 |
Gargantua and Pantagruel | François Rabelais | 24 | 1564 | 173 |
Essays | Michel Eyquem de Montaigne | 25 | 1592 | 174 |
The First Part of King Henry the Sixth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1591 | 175 |
The Second Part of King Henry the Sixth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1591 | 176 |
The Third Part of King Henry the Sixth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1591 | 177 |
The Tragedy of Richard the Third | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1594 | 178 |
The Comedy of Errors | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1594 | 179 |
Titus Andronicus | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1593 | 180 |
The Taming of the Shrew | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1593 | 181 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1593 | 182 |
Love's Labour's Lost | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1595 | 183 |
Romeo and Juliet | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1596 | 184 |
The Tragedy of King Richard the Second | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1595 | 185 |
A Midsummer Night's Dream | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1595 | 186 |
The Life and Death of King John | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1595 | 187 |
The Merchant of Venice | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1596 | 188 |
The First Part of King Henry the Fourth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1597 | 189 |
The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1599 | 190 |
Much Ado About Nothing | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1599 | 191 |
The Life of King Henry the Fifth | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1599 | 192 |
Julius Caesar | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1599 | 193 |
As You Like It | William Shakespeare | 26 | 1599 | 194 |
Twelfth Night; or, What You Will | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1602 | 195 |
The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1601 | 196 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1602 | 197 |
Troilus and Cressida | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1602 | 198 |
All's Well That Ends Well | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1608 | 199 |
Measure for Measure | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1604 | 200 |
Othello, the Moor of Venice | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1603 | 201 |
King Lear | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1605 | 202 |
Macbeth | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1606 | 203 |
Antony and Cleopatra | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1607 | 204 |
Coriolanus | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1608 | 205 |
Timon of Athens | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1606 | 206 |
Pericles, Prince of Tyre | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1609 | 207 |
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1611 | 208 |
The Winter's Tale | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1623 | 209 |
The Tempest | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1611 | 210 |
The Famous History of the Life of King Henry the Eighth | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1623 | 211 |
Sonnets | William Shakespeare | 27 | 1605 | 212 |
On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies | William Gilbert | 28 | 1893 | 213 |
Dialogues Concerning the Two New Sciences | Galileo Galilei | 28 | 1638 | 214 |
On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals | William Harvey | 28 | 1657 | 215 |
On the Circulation of Blood | William Harvey | 28 | 1628 | 216 |
On Animal Generation | William Harvey | 28 | 1651 | 217 |
The History of Don Quixote de la Mancha | Miguel de Cervantes | 29 | 1605 | 218 |
The Advancement of Learning | Sir Francis Bacon | 30 | 1605 | 219 |
Novum Organum | Sir Francis Bacon | 30 | 1620 | 220 |
New Atlantis | Sir Francis Bacon | 30 | 1627 | 221 |
Rules for the Direction of the Mind | René Descartes | 31 | 1701 | 222 |
Discourse on the Method | René Descartes | 31 | 1637 | 223 |
Meditations on First Philosophy | René Descartes | 31 | 1641 | 224 |
Objections Against the Meditations and Replies | René Descartes | 31 | 1642 | 225 |
The Geometry | René Descartes | 31 | 1649 | 226 |
Ethics | Benedict de Spinoza | 31 | 1677 | 227 |
On the Morning of Christ's Nativity | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 228 |
A Paraphrase on Psalm 114 | John Milton | 32 | 1645 | 229 |
Psalm 136 | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 230 |
The Passion | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 231 |
On Time | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 232 |
Upon the Circumcision | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 233 |
At a Solemn Musick | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 234 |
An Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 235 |
Song on May Morning | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 236 |
On Shakespeare | John Milton | 32 | 1630 | 237 |
On the University Carrier | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 238 |
Another on the same | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 239 |
L'Allegro | John Milton | 32 | 1645 | 240 |
Il Penseroso | John Milton | 32 | 1646 | 241 |
Arcades | John Milton | 32 | 1634 | 242 |
Lycida | John Milton | 32 | 1638 | 243 |
Comus | John Milton | 32 | 1634 | 244 |
On the Death of a Fair Infant | John Milton | 32 | 1628 | 245 |
At a Vacation Exercise | John Milton | 32 | 1631 | 246 |
The Fifth Ode of Horace | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 247 |
Sonnets (I, and VII—XIX) | John Milton | 32 | 1655 | 248 |
On the New Forcers of Conscience | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 249 |
On the Lord General Fairfax at the Siege of Colchester | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 250 |
To the Lord General Cromwell | John Milton | 32 | 1652 | 251 |
To Sir Henry Vane the Younger | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 252 |
To Mister Cyriack the Skinner upon his Blindness | John Milton | 32 | 1673 | 253 |
Psalms (I—VIII & LXXX—LXXXVIII) | John Milton | 32 | 1653 | 254 |
Paradise Lost | John Milton | 32 | 1667 | 255 |
Samson Agonistes | John Milton | 32 | 1674 | 256 |
Areopagitica | John Milton | 32 | 1644 | 257 |
The Provincial Letters | Blaise Pascal | 33 | 1657 | 258 |
Pensées | Blaise Pascal | 33 | 1670 | 259 |
Scientific and mathematical essays | Blaise Pascal | 33 | 1658 | 260 |
Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy | Sir Isaac Newton | 34 | 1687 | 261 |
Optics | Sir Isaac Newton | 34 | 1704 | 262 |
Treatise on Light | Christiaan Huygens | 34 | 1690 | 263 |
A Letter Concerning Toleration | John Locke | 35 | 1689 | 264 |
Concerning Civil Government, Second Essay | John Locke | 35 | 1690 | 265 |
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding | John Locke | 35 | 1689 | 266 |
The Principles of Human Knowledge | George Berkeley | 35 | 1710 | 267 |
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding | David Hume | 35 | 1748 | 268 |
Gulliver's Travels | Jonathan Swift | 36 | 1726 | 269 |
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman | Laurence Sterne | 36 | 1759 | 270 |
The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling | Henry Fielding | 37 | 1749 | 271 |
The Spirit of the Laws | Charles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu | 38 | 1748 | 272 |
A Discourse on the Origin of Inequality | Jean Jacques Rousseau | 38 | 1754 | 273 |
A Discourse on Political Economy | Jean Jacques Rousseau | 38 | 1755 | 274 |
The Social Contract | Jean Jacques Rousseau | 38 | 1762 | 275 |
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations | Adam Smith | 39 | 1776 | 276 |
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Part 1) | Edward Gibbon | 40 | 1776 | 277 |
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Part 2) | Edward Gibbon | 41 | 1781 | 278 |
Critique of Pure Reason | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1781 | 279 |
Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1785 | 280 |
Critique of Practical Reason | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1788 | 281 |
The Metaphysics of Morals | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1797 | 282 |
Preface and Introduction to the Metaphysical Elements of Ethics with a note on Conscience | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1797 | 283 |
General Introduction to the Metaphysic of Morals | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1797 | 284 |
The Science of Right | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1797 | 285 |
The Critique of Judgement | Immanuel Kant | 42 | 1790 | 286 |
Declaration of Independence | American State Papers | 43 | 1776 | 287 |
Articles of Confederation | American State Papers | 43 | 1777 | 288 |
The Constitution of the United States of America | American State Papers | 43 | 1787 | 289 |
The Federalist | Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay | 43 | 1788 | 290 |
On Liberty | John Stuart Mill | 43 | 1859 | 291 |
Considerations on Representative Government | John Stuart Mill | 43 | 1861 | 292 |
Utilitarianism | John Stuart Mill | 43 | 1861 | 293 |
The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. | James Boswell | 44 | 1791 | 294 |
Elements of Chemistry | Antoine Laurent Lavoisier | 45 | 1789 | 295 |
Analytical Theory of Heat | Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier | 45 | 1878 | 296 |
Experimental Researches in Electricity | Michael Faraday | 45 | 1832 | 297 |
The Philosophy of Right | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel | 46 | 1821 | 298 |
The Philosophy of History | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel | 46 | 1837 | 299 |
Faust | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | 47 | 1829 | 300 |
Moby Dick; or, The Whale | Herman Melville | 48 | 1951 | 301 |
The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection | Charles Darwin | 49 | 1859 | 302 |
The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex | Charles Darwin | 49 | 1871 | 303 |
Capital | Karl Marx | 50 | 1894 | 304 |
Manifesto of the Communist Party | Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels | 50 | 1848 | 305 |
War and Peace | Count Leo Tolstoy | 51 | 1867 | 306 |
The Brothers Karamazov | Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky | 52 | 1880 | 307 |
The Principles of Psychology | William James | 53 | 1918 | 308 |
The Origin and Development of Psycho-Analysis | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1910 | 309 |
Selected Papers on Hysteria | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1909 | 310 |
The Sexual Enlightenment of Children | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1907 | 311 |
The Future Prospects of Psycho-Analytic Therapy | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1912 | 312 |
Observations on "Wild" Psycho-Analysis | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1910 | 313 |
The Interpretation of Dreams | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1900 | 314 |
On Narcissism | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1914 | 315 |
Instincts and Their Vicissitudes | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1915 | 316 |
Repression | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1915 | 317 |
The Unconscious | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1915 | 318 |
A General Introduction to Psycho-Analysis | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1917 | 319 |
Beyond the Pleasure Principle | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1920 | 320 |
Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1921 | 321 |
The Ego and the Id | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1923 | 322 |
Inhibitions, Symptoms, and Anxiety | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1926 | 323 |
Thoughts for the Times on War and Death | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1915 | 324 |
Civilization and Its Discontents | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1930 | 325 |
New Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis | Sigmund Freud | 54 | 1933 | 326 |
Institutes of the Christian Religion | John Calvin | 20 | 1536 | 327 |
The Praise of Folly | Erasmus | 23 | 1509 | 328 |
The School for Wives | Molière | 31 | 1662 | 329 |
The Critique of the School for Wives | Molière | 31 | 1663 | 330 |
Tartuffe | Molière | 31 | 1666 | 331 |
Don Juan | Molière | 31 | 1665 | 332 |
The Miser | Molière | 31 | 1668 | 333 |
The Would-Be Gentleman | Molière | 31 | 1670 | 334 |
The Imaginary Invalid | Molière | 31 | 1673 | 335 |
Bérénice | Jean Racine | 31 | 1670 | 336 |
Phèdre | Jean Racine | 31 | 1677 | 337 |
Candide | Voltaire | 34 | 1759 | 338 |
Rameau's Nephew | Denis Diderot | 34 | 1774 | 339 |
Fear and Trembling | Søren Kierkegaard | 43 | 1843 | 340 |
Beyond Good and Evil | Friedrich Nietzsche | 43 | 1886 | 341 |
Democracy in America | Alexis de Tocqueville | 44 | 1835 | 342 |
Cousin Bette | Honoré de Balzac | 45 | 1846 | 343 |
Emma | Jane Austen | 46 | 1815 | 344 |
Middlemarch | George Eliot | 46 | 1871 | 345 |
Little Dorrit | Charles Dickens | 47 | 1857 | 346 |
Huckleberry Finn | Mark Twain | 48 | 1885 | 347 |
A Doll's House | Henrik Ibsen | 52 | 1879 | 348 |
The Wild Duck | Henrik Ibsen | 52 | 1884 | 349 |
Hedda Gabler | Henrik Ibsen | 52 | 1890 | 350 |
The Master Builder | Henrik Ibsen | 52 | 1892 | 351 |
Pragmatism | William James | 55 | 1907 | 352 |
An Introduction to Metaphysics | Henri Bergson | 55 | 1903 | 353 |
Experience and Education | John Dewey | 55 | 1938 | 354 |
Science and the Modern World | Alfred North Whitehead | 55 | 1925 | 355 |
The Problems of Philosophy | Bertrand Russell | 55 | 1912 | 356 |
What Is Metaphysics? | Martin Heidegger | 55 | 1929 | 357 |
Philosophical Investigations | Ludwig Wittgenstein | 55 | 1953 | 358 |
The Word of God and the Word of Man | Karl Barth | 55 | 1933 | 359 |
Science and Hypothesis | Henri Poincaré | 56 | 1902 | 360 |
Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers | Max Planck | 56 | 1947 | 361 |
An Introduction to Mathematics | Alfred North Whitehead | 56 | 1911 | 362 |
Relativity: The Special and the General Theory | Albert Einstein | 56 | 1920 | 363 |
The Expanding Universe | Arthur Eddington | 56 | 1940 | 364 |
Atomic Theory and the Description of Nature (selections) | Niels Bohr | 56 | 1934 | 365 |
Discussion with Einstein on Epistemology | Niels Bohr | 56 | 1949 | 366 |
A Mathematician's Apology | G. H. Hardy | 56 | 1940 | 367 |
Physics and Philosophy | Werner Heisenberg | 56 | 1958 | 368 |
What Is Life? | Erwin Schrödinger | 56 | 1944 | 369 |
Genetics and the Origin of Species | Theodosius Dobzhansky | 56 | 1937 | 370 |
The Nature of Life | C. H. Waddington | 56 | 1961 | 371 |
The Theory of the Leisure Class | Thorstein Veblen | 57 | 1899 | 372 |
The Acquisitive Society | R. H. Tawney | 57 | 1920 | 373 |
The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money | John Maynard Keynes | 57 | 1936 | 374 |
The Golden Bough | Sir James George Frazer | 58 | 1890 | 375 |
Essays in Sociology | Max Weber | 58 | 1920 | 376 |
The Autumn of the Middle Ages | Johan Huizinga | 58 | 1919 | 377 |
Structural Anthropology | Claude Lévi-Strauss | 58 | 1949 | 378 |
The Beast in the Jungle | Henry James | 59 | 1903 | 379 |
Saint Joan | George Bernard Shaw | 59 | 1924 | 380 |
Heart of Darkness | Joseph Conrad | 59 | 1902 | 381 |
Uncle Vanya | Anton Chekhov | 59 | 1899 | 382 |
Six Characters in Search of an Author | Luigi Pirandello | 59 | 1921 | 383 |
Remembrance of Things Past: "Swann in Love" | Marcel Proust | 59 | 1927 | 384 |
A Lost Lady | Willa Cather | 59 | 1923 | 385 |
Death in Venice | Thomas Mann | 59 | 1912 | 386 |
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man | James Joyce | 59 | 1916 | 387 |
To the Lighthouse | Virginia Woolf | 60 | 1927 | 388 |
The Metamorphosis | Franz Kafka | 60 | 1915 | 389 |
The Prussian Officer | D. H. Lawrence | 60 | 1914 | 390 |
The Waste Land | T. S. Eliot | 60 | 1922 | 391 |
Mourning Becomes Electra | Eugene O'Neill | 60 | 1931 | 392 |
The Great Gatsby | F. Scott Fitzgerald | 60 | 1925 | 393 |
A Rose for Emily | William Faulkner | 60 | 1930 | 394 |
Mother Courage and Her Children | Bertolt Brecht | 60 | 1939 | 395 |
The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber | Ernest Hemingway | 60 | 1936 | 396 |
Animal Farm | George Orwell | 60 | 1945 | 397 |
Waiting for Godot | Samuel Beckett | 60 | 1952 | 398 |