14 websites to make you a more intelligent person

project gutenberg, ebooks, free, books

Welcome to everybody who has found this page via StumbleUpon! For some reason, this post has taken off over the past couple months. I hope you find these links helpful and I encourage you to check out some of the other articles I have written. If you like what you see, it might make sense to subscribe via RSSemail, or to follow me on Twitter. Thanks, and enjoy!

——————————————————————————-

One of the values I try to live is “growth.” As part of that quest, taking control of my continued education and intellectual improvement is crucial.  We live in an age of such democratization of access to resources that can be used to learn– we just have to take advantage of them.  Lots of online self-education lists focus on giving the largest amount of links possible, regardless of how useful they actually are.  Instead of copying that format, I decided to focus more on the quality of the websites.  The following sites are a great base for your own growth as an intellectual individual.

Ebooks
1. Project Gutenberg: Over 30,000 free ebooks. Consists of books that have expired copyrights in the United States. If it is an old book, chances are you can find it here.  Downloadable in many formats so you are sure to find one that works best for you.
Recommended Reading: Theodore Roosevelt; an Autobiography.

2.ManyBooks.net: Over 25,465 free ebooks available for download.  A much prettier site than Project Gutenberg. It has some cool features like “special collections,” “user’s public bookshelves,” and “cover image gallery.”
Recommended Reading: The Art of War by Sun Tzu.

3.Bartleby.com: Another expansive ebook directory. Also includes impressive reference and poetry sections.
Recommended Reading: Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United States.

Video (non-lecture)
4. Hulu News & Information Channel: Most of you probably realize that Hulu is a great resource for watching T.V. shows online. However, not only is it a great place to catch your favorite prime-time shows, but also many educational programs.  This channel has full episodes from National Geographic, NOVA, Biography, The History Channel and many others.
Recommended Watching: The Last Days of World War II

5. PBS Video: Tons of free and full-length episodes of all sorts of educational videos.  Anything you’ve seen on PBS you can probably find on this website.
Recommended Watching: American Experience.

6. MoviesFoundOnline.com: This site provides links to a multitude of documentaries found on YouTube, Google Video, and other streaming video services. The quality of the movies varies greatly however, so beware.
Recommended Watching: 10 MPH

Scholarly Journals
7. Directory of Open Access Journals: The aim of the website is to increase the visibility and ease of use of scholarly journals. It focuses on open access (i.e. free to use) scientific and scholarly journals.

8. Google Scholar: The premier web search for finding information from articles, theses, books, abstracts and court opinions.  Like regular Google Search’s really smart older brother.

Lectures (video and/or audio)
9. TED: TED is a conference held every year that brings innovators, inventors, intellectuals and ideas together.  Most of the talks are approximately twenty minutes long and cover an incredible range of topics.  It is impossible to spend time on this website and not be inspired.
Recommended Watching: Lewis Pugh swims the North Pole or John Wooden on true success

10. Academic Earth: From their website, “Academic Earth is an organization founded with the goal of giving everyone the access to a world-class education.” Here you can find entire courses worth of lectures on a huge array of subjects from some of the world’s top Universities and professors, including Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and MIT.
Recommended Watching: The Philosophy of Death by Shelly Kagan

11. Forum Network: A website formed of a partnership between PBS and NPR that gives access to video lectures by some of the world’s foremost scholars, authors, artists, scientists, and policymakers.
Recommended Watching: NPR’s “Who Needs Libraries?” Series

12. iTunes U: Within the iTunes store you have access to a growing library of lectures from some of the world’s top universities.  The iTunes Store interface makes it easy to locate lectures based on topic and best of all, it is all free.  Download the lectures to your iPod for some serious learning on the move.
Recommended Listening: Introduction to Ancient Greek History by Yale professor Donald Kagan (iTunes link)

Intellectual Reading
13. The Browser: “Give us 15 minutes of your time, and we will give you everything that matters in the world.”  This website collects journalism from around the internet which they judge likely to be of lasting value to the general intelligent reader.  Also has a section where they invite experts to recommend the best reading in their given fields of interest.
Recommended Reading: America wakes up to the shift in global power from Times Online

14. Longreads: This twitter feed provides links to “long reads” throughout the internet.  If you’re craving something longer than the average blog post, check this site out.  Works great in conjunction with Instapaper.

Tools

Instapaper: Found something to read but don’t have time to read it right now?  Maybe you want to read it on your iPhone later?  Use this website and it’s bookmarklet to easily save articles for later reading.
Check This Out: Instapaper Frequently Asked Questions

Evernote: Great note taking app and database manager. It can hold any piece of information you throw at it, including articles, notes, pictures, audio files and more.
Check This Out: 14 Practical Ways to Use Evernote

Related Posts with Thumbnails

This entry was posted on Monday, December 14th, 2009 at 5:00 am and is filed under critical thinking, personal, technology, video. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

  • Jhpavelko
    You should really add one more site and make it 15 Web sites to make you smarter

    The Christian Classics Ethereal Library is a digital library of hundreds of classic Christian books selected for edification and education. The online www.ccel.org server reaches several million different users each year.

    CCEL texts are stored in our own Theological Markup Language, which is an XML application. Texts are converted automatically into other formats such as HTML or PDF.
  • Vahn66
    No I don't believe that this is a very good article. Not very well worth it, wasted 2 minutes of my life
  • I'm feeling smarter already.....just by reading the blog post! :)
  • Useful ... thanks :)
  • thanx for the list. It's not that easy to find good sources of reading materials in the internet that are free.
  • Vahn666
    you probably haven't heard of Google if that's the case
  • Stumble from Iowa - I am loving this post. Thanks!
  • neat! super neat! thxs 4 the info :)
  • tulkas
    some great sites on this list, good job! (stumble from denver)
  • Thanks a lot for sharing such a valuable information.
    I like your post very much.
    Keep blogging.
  • jill
    Hey, great site!
    I missed Fora.tv in the section 'Lectures (video and/or audio)' though.
  • This is great, thanks! I found Evernote on my Apps for my iPhone. Bookmarked some of the book sites. I appreciate the information. :)
  • منتدى ملتقى السنة
    http://www.soonaa.com/vb/
  • This site is very very great *-*
  • Thank you :)
  • academic earth rocks
  • Oh man cool I am reading so many books now , I just love that there are more like me.
  • Thanks for this huge list of good sites. All of this sites will help me a lot to gain more knowledge.
  • hi, to everybody who has found this page! For some reason, this post has taken off over the past couple months. I hope you find these ...
  • tango001
    This is great. Thanks very much!
  • Kim
    Great suggestions, but may I comment that these websites won't make you more intelligent - intelligence is a measure of one's ability and capacity to learn and reason - they'll make you more knowledgeable and cultured.
  • That's true, Kim. Unfortunately, I feel it's too late to go back and change anything. Thanks for your input though!
  • MsAdventures
    This is exactly what I was looking for, thank you so much. Greatly appreciated. <3
  • Glad I could help!
  • JT
    www.Fora.tv
    great for lectures and talks
  • interesting...
  • kathnel18
    this is soooooo great and it is really helpful!! thanks!
  • More bed time reading, what DID I do before internet
  • Great question :)
  • Great question :)
  • schumpert
    This is a great run-down – I love Instapaper and use it daily to keep track of good reads!
  • I love Instapaper on my iPod. So great to be able to sit down and have a ton of stuff to read no matter where I am.
  • http://www.openculture.com/ fits into ever category above.

    http://www.aldaily.com/ also falls under intellectual reading
  • Steve O.
    "Ton’s of free and full-length episodes of all sorts of educational videos."
    "Ton’s"

    I can tell the creator of this site has been hard at working increasing his/her intelligence.
  • Typos happen and I thank you for your oh so constructive methodology for pointing it out to me. Thank you.
  • me
    Just ignore the arrogant folks. You have done well here.
  • I do my best. Thanks for the kind words.
  • ''We live in an age of such democratization of access to resources that can be used to learn– -''

    You should practise what you preach, perhaps add another link to a website educating people about grammar and sentence-forming. I am not going to give you a fish or show you how to fish; I am saying that you're fishing pole is defect and that you should figure out a way to fix it, because any other way would not contribute anything to your intellect
  • clonewolf
    "Your" use of the English language is "defect".

    I love it when smug self-righteous arrogant people attempt to correct the grammar of someone else and make a million grammar mistakes in the process.

    fail
  • Haha! With all due respect, you may want to be sure you understand the correct usage of "you're" before you rip my grammar. I'm also not sure how something can be "defect" (perhaps defective?). Thanks for your valuable contribution. I'm not really sure what I'd do without people a s helpful as yourself.
  • Stumble.
    You guys should also add http://www.wepapers.com - hundreds of thousands of free academic lectures and researches about any subject you can learn in college.
  • nkakber
    Thanks Alex, I am very very happy to visit this "wepapers.com" site. I was not known to me .
    Thanks again.
    nkakber, Bangladesh.
  • Excellent choice!
  • Thank you so much ..
  • steven
    http://msc.phys.rug.nl/quantummechanics/potenti...

    go and learn the basics of something that actually requires intelligence to grasp, not a pretentious poem, written for self indulgence or to look too deep into...
  • rudycarrera
    You may want to consider Arts & Letters Daily (www.aldaily.com).
  • colincm
    hi might like to try out some science videos on www.pulse-project.org
  • ancientvedas
    http://www.roseabsorbtion.blogspot.com/

    A choice, or as some say after they choose, it becomes a decision...
  • Dee
  • msphilo
    thank you for this list of great resources. hopefully people will disconnect long enough from their i phones, twitter and the like long enough to READ some of this stuff.
  • We definitely live in a world of constant connectedness. Stepping away from technology can be really scary for a lot of people. It's something I have been trying to practice more and more.
  • DrBix
    This is great. Thanks very much!
  • You're welcome very much!
  • Glad to see TED is on your list! (stumble from Cali)
  • TED is definitely one of my favorite sites. So many different topics, styles, and ideas. Love it.
  • Arts & Letters Daily is a superb portal to long form think pieces from the monthly glossy magazines.
  • Indeed it is. Thanks for the comment!
  • lukinhaa
    é manero esse jogo tom legal eu adorei!!!!!!!
  • Jach
    To improve your rationality, check out the sequences over at http://www.lesswrong.com
  • Thanks for the link! Looks like a really interesting community over there.
  • I second FORA.tv.
  • Thanks for the submission! I'm going to take some time soon to dig into this resource.
  • Thank you! A fabulous resource. I retweeted immediately!
  • Thank you so much! I really appreciate it.
  • Brian
  • Thanks for adding this resource! This site will be perfect for little tidbits of knowledge to start my classes with. My students and I thank you.
  • zepode
  • Jessica
  • Glad to see that Wikipedia did not make your list. The fact is, you never know what you are going to get because on any given day, anyone can write anything about any subject an make it seem athoritative.
  • Marius Andersen
  • Axel
  • deirdre
    Thanks!! I'd like the add that the NPR (National Public Radio) website is kickass. You can listen to any show they have featured. I highly recommend the show Fresh Air.
  • Trevor Rotzien
    You missed http://www.Fora.tv - intelligent videos, wider ranging than TED.
  • Sam
    @Trevor Rotzien

    I only included websites that I have personal experience with. Somehow I missed Fora.tv. I looked at it real briefly and it seems promising. Thanks for the tip!
blog comments powered by Disqus
 

Optimized by SEO Ultimate