I started Fear and Trembling not too long ago and didn't get through it. A thread on it might remotivate me. I got caught up in the weeds too much I think. I didn't see Abraham's faith in God as so heroic. I didn't even see it as faith actually. He had empirical proof of God's power, having experienced a direct miracle in Sara's pregnancy at 70 years old.
Anyway, I vote for that.
How about Kierkegaard's Concept of Anxiety? — Valentinus
It explores the psychology of sin while looking at the limits of such an endeavor. — Valentinus
On the way, he makes observations about adolescence and child rearing that are interesting in themselves, even if the reader rejects many of his premises. — Valentinus
Provide some companion to work with if you don't mind. I want to see more psychologizing about psychologizing here. — Wallows
Are you mostly interested in seeing what is there or talking about how we talk about it? — Valentinus
Getting an outline made by some other reader of what is going on in a text is different from getting to see into the process of how the writer worked. Regarding the latter, authors vary greatly in their difference of expression between what is published and what is not. If one is looking to work less hard, pursuing notebooks is not the way to go. — Valentinus
Generally speaking, commentaries and companions are a bad idea in reading groups. Whoever takes part in a reading group should work through the original along with everyone else, and only consult the secondary literature occasionally, to supplement and clarify the reading.
If you're not willing to properly take part in a reading group, why would you think it okay to ask the people who are doing the work to do it in a way that suits you? — jamalrob
Doesn't it make more sense for each member to use secondary work of their own choosing and use that to help them interpret the primary source before posting in the group?
Anyway, I'll butt out now: the participants can decide for themselves. — jamalrob
Hi, I'm with you 100% about YouTube. — Daniel Cox
I'm not much on sticking to rules, having mods & "leaders" curating my speech. — Daniel Cox
I, for one, do not appreciate the concept of ongoingness; stretching a single thread to eternity.
To avoid this:
Sensible Guidelines from the TPF admin and mods would be most welcome. — Amity
Let's imagine that a book is being read by an amateur. How to proceed ? — Amity
No one can think a thought for me in the way that no one can don my hat for me. — Wittgenstein, Culture and Value
Secondary sources may help but are too often used as source of answers that are parroted. Of course the philosophers themselves may be parroted.
With this in mind:
No one can think a thought for me in the way that no one can don my hat for me.
— Wittgenstein, Culture and Value — Fooloso4
The problem is [...] we may become reliant on the opinions of the teacher or secondary source. We may come to see the book through their eyes. — Fooloso4
YouTube — Daniel Cox
Watching and listening a YouTube video in my opinion is dramatically better than reading. — Daniel Cox
Kierkegaard does for Christianity what Freud does for the Greek myths; as the Greek gods are many, so, to compensate for the unity of the Trinity, there are many Kierkegaards - discuss. — unenlightened
Regarding the ism about how reading groups ought to go about. I suppose we can borrow the template from how MOOC's (really, the future of education for the poor) are conducted.
I have no bounty on my head here, so progress as desired. — Wallows
That is not a register self identified psychologists employ. — Valentinus
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