The following databases will provide you with journal articles, book reviews, essays, Greek texts (TLG), and more in the area of philosophy. Take a look at some of the handouts in the box to the right for instructions on effective database searching.
The subject-specific databases listed in the 'Philosophy Databases' section are the best places to start searching for philosophy materials, but you will probably also benefit from searching in some of the multi-disciplinary databases. Here are a few that are recommended:
APU has close to 100 databases to assist you in your research. Most of these databases will help you find journal articles. However, there are many more types of content that you will discover in these databases, such as streaming music (Classical Music Library), electronic books (Ebrary and NetLibrary), art images (Art Museum Image Gallery), just to name a few.
To access the databases...
Want an overview of how to find journal articles at APU? Take a look at the following guide:
There are usually a couple of scenarios in which you find yourself needing to know if APU Libraries can provide you with a particular journal article: 1) you found a journal article listed in a bibliography, or a syllabus, or elsewhere, and you'd really like to get it, or 2) you're searching in one of the many journal article databases, and you find an article in the results list that you want, but you don't see a full-text link. In the first case, a tool called 'Article Finder' will be helpful, and in the second case, the 'Full Text Finder' links will assist you.
Have a Particular Article You Want to Find? Use Article Finder!
When you want to know if APU Libraries can provide you with a particular journal article you have citation information for, Article Finder is the tool for you. Follow these steps:
Found a Great Article in a Database but No Full Text? Use Full Text Finder!
Before following the instructions below, note that not all of our databases will have Full Text Finder links (but most will).