 Hi, I'm Chris Straber, the librarian for philosophy at Boston College. Philosophy and business are often interested in the same topics, but they often don't describe them the same way. The best keywords for searching in philosophy are people, philosophical schools of thought, and arguments, problems, or issues. You'll see them described all three ways. Once you have those things for your topic, it's much easier to make sense of the philosophy literature. You can use library resources to teach yourself about your topic as you do research. Here's one way. Starting at library.bc.edu, click on databases and do a search for Philosopher's Index, one of our main databases on philosophy. Philosopher's Index comes from the same publisher as business source, so it should look familiar. It's an attempt to put all of the important scholarly literature of philosophy in one place for you to search. You can use it to search for journal articles, books, book chapters, dissertations, and other kinds of things. It's a worldwide database, so the results are going to be in many languages, mostly English. Let's try a search for autonomous vehicles, and I'll show you the key features. Philosopher's Index is designed to make it easy for you to find a large amount of related material quickly, and it uses the people, schools of thought, and problems that I mentioned earlier to do that. Everything on this details page that's a link is a search, so if this article is helpful and you'd like to read more by that author, all you have to do is click on the author's name. Similarly, and more importantly, that's also true for the subject, which will often give you clues to the problem, such as Charlie problem or trade-off, or to the school of philosophy like utilitarianism. Again, if you click on them, they'll do a search for that topic across the whole database. Pro tip, if you do a search for utilitarianism, it's a good idea to add keywords like autonomous vehicles to that search so that you get more precise results. The database is also designed to give you a quick summary of the article, so you always know whether what you're looking at is going to be relevant for you. It's mostly a full text database and partly a list of literature that lives in other places. If there's no PDF link, click find it at BC, and we'll try to point you in the right direction. This is a very brief introduction. My colleagues and I are available to help you dig deeper on your topic. My contact information and some additional suggested sources will appear on the research guide that this video lives in.