The St. John's Great Books program is (I'm pretty sure) in part based on Adler's own ideas about great book, what and which they are, and how to read them — tim wood
Follow the masters of interpretation. I am partial to Leo Strauss and Jacob Klein, especially their readings of the ancients, but the skills are transferable to reading others as well. — Fooloso4
It's very important that I start "dialoguing" with the book by beginning my own writing process. There was a book that I read repeatedly and ended up erasing and whiting out notes once I had moved far beyond them, in order to begin synthesizing my own ideas, putting what I understood into my own language. — uncanni
With this particularly difficult text, translated from the Russian, on the first couple of reads, I summarized each main idea and numbered it on each page. Then I'd start at 1 again on the next page. This helped me to remember the sequence of the construction of particularly complex concepts/arguments. (Actually, it was Bakhtin, which we are discussing on my Bakhtin topic.) — uncanni
There are a series of movements in the act of synthesis, as ideas can be synthesized in different ways and combinations. — uncanni
For me, this entire exercise has always been about creating my own ideas and syntheses; I've never been good at spouting dogma. I always look for what hasn't been said. — uncanni
No, I meant "can," but I had to rush off after I wrote that part.
What I don't understand is why your hopes were dashed; surely you have a system of your own that helps you to tackle the more difficult texts. I'm wondering if you're putting me on.
I don't think that someone else can teach me to be a good, close reader; that's something I have to teach myself with lots of practice. — uncanni
In my experience (of others' books), the margins are filled with notes, questions, answers, ideas, challenges, the book itself having been taken over by the reader and turned into a personal memoir of the acquisition of the author's ideas contained — tim wood
I have myself got inexpensive composition books (sewn-in pages, about $1 at Walmart) and tried to build a something similar to accompany the text. — tim wood
But to start I have to learn not to fall asleep reading it. — tim wood
I've not read Adler. What is above looks good as stated - bearing in mind in most cases I am doing most of this at the mental level only. D A Carson contrasts the 1972 edition of Adler unfavourably with the first edition. — Fine Doubter
In the beginning was the herd ... :fire: — 180 Proof
There must have been this overwhelmimg need in man, right from the "beginning" — Daniel C
I'll wait, though, for your 4-1-1 — 180 Proof
Do you read differently each time and with a different purpose?
— Amity
Interesting question: Do we ever read the exact same thing when we re-read? For myself, each reading deepens and broadens the interconnections I make among ideas and concept. — uncanni
Each reading fills in some of the blank spaces that weren't synthesized on the previous reading. Also, keep in mind that in between readings, I may read various other things that make the next reading easier. — uncanni
I can describe the process to you, because all the notes are in my books, and of course the article itself is different.. — uncanni
I might say something more about it when my first read's done. — 180 Proof
I have found that the books I've read 8-10 times are the ones I understand really well. I always have my trusty pencil in hand and write copious notes and responses in the margins. — uncanni
I speed read nowadays, that is easier than struggling. I increasingly take notes during this process. Then I go back to favourite bits in more detail. — Fine Doubter
The more I dip into science, philosophy, history, you name it, the more I can "place" what I am reading. — Fine Doubter
What follows is a one-page summary, mainly chapter and section headings. — tim wood
One thing Adler does not mention is learning how to ask questions of a text and listen for the answers. In line with this is noting apparent contradictions and figuring out how the author reconciles them or how these contradictions point to a higher level of understanding beyond the contradictions. — Fooloso4
Reading actively means mastering four levels of reading:
Elementary reading – Turning symbols into information;
Inspectional reading – Getting the most from a book in a given time;
Analytical reading – Thorough and complete reading for understanding;
Synoptic reading – Exploring a subject through wide reading.
I don't get it. What does morning have to do with red blood cells? — T Clark
Why do you call it an intervention in politics? Why not say it is a decision based on constitutional principles? — Benkei
The most important task is to decide as quickly as we can how we are going to move forward on Brexit. It’s not true, which is being repeated over and over again by ministers, that everybody who’s involved in parliament is just trying to stop Brexit, defy the people … I voted for Brexit three times with a deal on these three preliminary points. I think the best thing to do is to produce a majority in parliament on a cross-party basis – — Ken Clarke
All thanks to Gina Miller.
— Punshhh
Not just her. There were 2 cases being discussed and I think one was by a group of MPs. — Michael
That should only be brought in if it wins in a referendum. We don't need another referendum on it, I'd say. The results would probably be more or less the same as last time. I would vote against it if given the option.
— S
Would you vote for AV rather than PR? — Michael
https://www.supremecourt.uk/live/court-01.htmlJudgment hand-down 24 September 2019 10:30 Courtroom 1
The Supreme Court has now heard the two prorogation-related judicial review cases. These took place between 17 and 19 September 2019.
The judgment hand-down will take place on 24 September at 10:30 in Courtroom 1.
Live coverage of the judgment hand-down can be watched online via Supreme Court Live.
Both the judgment and full video on demand coverage of the Court sittings can be found online via one of the following links:
R (on the application of Miller) (Appellant) v The Prime Minister (Respondent)Cherry and others (Respondents) v Advocate General for Scotland (Appellant) (Scotland)
...one of the great joys of our creaking, pink-edged tumble into autumn and the misty creep of winter in the willows is that regular, full-fat, white-flour schlubs can start to live through beautiful sunrises almost every day...
...I am not just crepuscular, but matutinal – one who glories in the dawn... — Nell Frizzell
Im looking forward to the intervention of John Major tomorrow. — Punshhh
The point is that the EU appears blind to the demographic consequences of its expansion. — Punshhh
the EU appears blind to the consequences of expansion is far more accurate. It is a political vision to have the entirety of continental Europe included in the EU but it's a vision that's not shared by the EU27 electorate. — Benkei
[my bolds]SUMMARY
The results of the European Parliament election confront EU leaders with a considerable challenge: navigating a new, more fragmented, and polarised political environment.
This was a ‘split screen’ election: electors rarely used their vote to endorse the status quo, but they requested different things. Some want to take on climate change and nationalism; others want to regain national sovereignty and tackle Islamic radicalism.
This need not mean a ‘split screen’ Europe: the desire for change is real across the board, and the new EU institutions will need to provide answers for voters on these issues.
To meet this challenge, the larger political families should prepare to work with parties beyond the mainstream, some of which became stronger on the domestic political scene thanks to the election results. They must do this while preserving red lines on European values.
The high turnout in the election gives the EU a mandate to prove it can respond to voters’ concerns. But this mandate is not open-ended – volatility in the electorate could benefit anti-system parties much more the next time Europe goes to the polls.
...This report studies five ‘maps’ which should guide the formation of these new, shifting majorities; the next generation of EU institution leaders should also study these maps carefully to help them identify where best to focus their energy and attention...
There's actually a lot of criticism directed towards the EU starting up with the bureaucracy of the organization, the lack of transparency, the peculiar illogical things like the EU Parliament hopping from Brussels to Strasbourg and back. — ssu
It was issues brought about by free movement of people which was causing anti EU sentiment i — Punshhh
The real problem is that what the EU needs is self-criticism and a debate how to improve it, which way should it go. It's hardly not only about two options: a) the EU has to be formed to be like the US or b) It's a monstrosity that has to be done away with quickly. — ssu
the EU was unable to provide sufficient flexibility. — Punshhh
Wallows sadly* — Wallows
I'll need a deal more than that for my kiss and tell stories. — unenlightened