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The Yale University Library houses one of the
premier research collections in the world. The Library consists of the
central libraries--Sterling Memorial Library, Cross Campus Library, the
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, and the Seeley G. Mudd Library
(a high-density storage facility which also houses the Government Documents
and Information Center)--and twenty school and departmental libraries,
as well as small collections within each of the twelve residential colleges.
Second largest among the university libraries in the United States, the
Yale Library contains more than eleven million volumes, well over one-third
of which are in Sterling Memorial Library (major humanities, social science,
and area studies collections) and the Cross Campus Library (primarily
an intensive-use collection for undergraduates). Each year the Yale Library
adds approximately 175,000 new volumes as well as numerous maps, sound
recordings, microforms, manuscripts, coins, musical scores, art works,
computer files and databases. Descriptions of the Library's holdings may
be found in Orbis, the online
catalog, the Library's card catalogs, Eureka,
the online database of the Research Libraries Group, and WorldCat.
The philosophy collection at Yale is
nearly as old as the college itself. The Yale Library's first printed
catalogue of books, compiled in 1743 by Thomas Clap, then President of
Yale College, lists a number of philosophical treatises including works
by Descartes, Gassendi, Newton, Watts, Crousaz and Evelyn. Many of these
came as part of a gift of books from George Berkeley, the Irish philosopher
and Anglican bishop. Among other titles in Berkeley's collection were
editions of Aristotle, St. Augustine, Erasmus, Malebranche, Locke, Bacon,
Grotius, and Machiavelli, as well as one of Berkeley's later works, Alciphron,
or the Minute Philosopher. These titles are now part of the "1742
Library" and are kept at the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Today most of the philosophy collection
at Yale resides on floors 6M (LC Classification B) and 7 (Yale Classification
K) of Sterling Memorial Library. A small collection of heavily used journals
and major critical editions is kept in the Philosophy Study (rooms 609-610
in Sterling).
The library also owns several relevant collections
in microform, including the papers of Martin Buber, Charles S. Peirce,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, John Locke, and David Hume. Full-text databases
include The
Philosopher's Index, Past
Masters, Early
English Books Online, Eighteenth
Century Collection Online, Evans
Digital Edition, and ARTFL.
In addition to Sterling, several other libraries
maintain growing philosophy collections. The Divinity
Library collects extensively in religious philosophy and ethics;
the Law Library, in addition
to jurisprudence, collects ethics, political philosophy and the history
of philosophy. The Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library owns a number of important historical
texts and manuscripts, including the papers of Ernst
Cassirer and Felix
S. Cohen, a large collection of Islamic philosophical manuscripts,
and thousands of early printed works, including the 1578 Strasburg edition
of Plato's Works printed by Henri Estienne. The Art
and Architecture Library, the Social
Science Library, the Kline
Science Library and the Classics
Library also have collections of interest. Most of their holdings
can be found in Orbis.
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