I need a good righteous rant every once in a while..the hysteria around impeachment — StreetlightX
The argument that there exists a type of fascism in the form of Trump is not an extreme hysterical reaction. — Amity
Synder is not particularly bright when it comes to political analysis. — StreetlightX
BTW I enjoyed your righteous ranting about impeachment recently in one of the Trump threads. — jamalrob
from video :"I do hear this argument that this is a proto-Nazi, a kind of fascist development in American society, that one must stand in opposition to it. It's an extreme, almost hysterical reaction, I think. It's an indication of people who have for too long have had their way at the editorial pages and in college classrooms and so on. — StreetlightX
quoting from jamalrob's video: ''The notion that we got to get him out at all cost worries me deeply. I worry about this because those people are not going to go away, even if president Trump goes away. If you don't defeat those people at the ballot box, if you usurp their expression of democratic intent through extraordinary means, you invite the reaction. The way to defeat Trump is to get 50.1% of the vote, and vote him and those who support him out of office". — StreetlightX
But I voted for him in the first place because of misguided optimism that he would actually shake things up and focus on practical things that mattered. — Terrapin Station
There is a desire to understand what led people to vote the way they did, rather than dismiss them. Their concerns should be ours. — jamalrob
Johnson is an amiable buffoon compared to the Donald. But hopefully they will hold hands and ride off into the sunset. — Wayfarer
I agree Trump is impulsive, dangerously so. However, it arguably takes place within an overall strategy.never mistake anything Trump does for a strategy. It's only ever impulse. — Wayfarer
We mod each other, you're welcome to report me. — StreetlightX
At some other time I might have agreed, but not now and have doubts about doing so on this forum. — Fooloso4
If you were to teach this text, how would you structure the process ?
— Amity
Pretty much the same as with any other text. Two interrelated paths. One is to do an analysis and synthesis of the text. Start at the beginning, identify key passages, break them down in order to figure out what is being say, and as we move forward make connections from passage to passage. The other is to discuss key ideas. — Fooloso4
A good teacher opens the book up so you can enter a world that is not apparent to the casual reader, and can help you do the same by way of example. — Fooloso4
Too often it becomes an intransigent clash of opinion and a need to win the argument, to demonstrate one's own superiority. — Fooloso4
The book begins:
Rhetoric is the counterpart of Dialectic
That is where I would start. Again, along two tracks. How does he explain and support this? What follows from this? How does this inform one's own reading and writing? — Fooloso4
Which edition are you reading ?
— Amity
http://www.bocc.ubi.pt/pag/Aristotle-rhetoric.pdf translated by W. Rhys Roberts — Fooloso4
How would reading Aristotle's Rhetoric help in getting to 'know thyself' ?
— Amity
As with the "examined life", to know oneself is a lifelong pursuit. Perhaps a consideration of the role persuasion plays in your life. — Fooloso4
How do you keep track of main points and ideas and any interconnected views ?
— Amity
I don't have a method or at least not one that I have formalized. There are things that catch my attention and many that escape my attention. Writing about or teaching a text forces me to be much more attentive and rigorous then just reading, but the practice of the former helps with the latter. — Fooloso4
Understood. Teaching and learning has to start somewhere with someone outlining their understanding.Best comprehension is always relative and falls short of what is there to be understood. — Fooloso4
What do you think of the idea that a discussion thread might prove of benefit
— Amity
That might be of some benefit but I think it is more a matter of practice and discovering what is possible by looking at what others have done. I find that writing is a way of thinking. If I am working on something it is often the case that I do not know what I am going to say until I say it and revise it and see how well agrees with the text. — Fooloso4
Indeed. However, I don't think it impossible to attempt some kind of a structured thread.On a forum like this there will be a lot of obstacles. I think it works much better in a more structured environment. — Fooloso4
So, how or where would you start dissecting Aristotle's Rhetoric ? Which edition are you reading ?I think a careful dissection of the text works best together with the guidance of secondary sources. A survey of the literature may be helpful but for me at least it is a matter of taste and temperament as to which secondary sources I trust. — Fooloso4
Or does it depend on the nature or purpose of the reader ...
— Amity
That is an important and often overlooked or rejected aspect. To treat philosophy as if it were an objective, universal science is in my opinion a mistake. I am guided by the admonition know thyself. It is the from which and to which philosophical inquiry moves. — Fooloso4
What could be worse? :sad: — TheMadFool
I just know I'm confused. I don't know how to describe it. It's something like being alone on the boat of confusion and watching the ship of knowledge full of people who've, in some sense, got it sail by. — TheMadFool
After this, a thread might be started to try and improve understanding.
— Amity
I'm tempted, but would you do the honors. Imo it's an excellent idea and could make a great thread! — tim wood
I started reading Aristotle's Rhetoric again a few months ago — Fooloso4
Unlike some here who, based on the "Currently Reading" topic can quickly read through books, I am a slow reader. I will die before I read everything on my bookshelf, but continue to buy more. — Fooloso4
Synoptic reading is the art of exploring a question or subject by reading widely. It’s not about reaching conclusions. Instead, it’s about putting together a really good map. It’s about discovering and noting the landmarks, the sights and the hazards so that when you do set out on the journey, you’re the best-informed traveller out there.
The most significant shift here is from a book-focussed perspective to a subject-focussed one. Where analytical reading treats a book as an end in itself, synoptic reading treats a book as a means; as an input to a wider discussion.
That’s why the first part of synoptic reading is less about “how” and more about “what”...
The methods for criticism are framed within the larger task of analysis: — Valentinus
I see it more as a challenge to myself than as a rule or method that leads to particular results. — Valentinus
My objection is also fueled by M Adler's arguments in his other works regarding the promotion of "common sense" articulations of philosophical thought over the uses of the esoteric. While the pragmatism of this approach is commendable as a means to improve our public discourse, it avoids the difficulties of hearing many works through their own voices. — Valentinus
To me there's much to be confused about. — TheMadFool
Very briefly: the dialogues typically end in aporia, but the danger is what he calls misologic or nihilism. Plato presents a salutary public teaching - Forms, recollection, transcendence, but dialectic always falls short of knowledge of Forms. The public teaching is philosophical poetry. Plato, like Socrates, was a zetetic skeptic. The philosopher is a lover of wisdom is always in pursuit of it and never in possession of it. The image of knowledge is static and timeless but the dialogues are in motion and in continual transition and transformation. They are not based on knowledge the philosopher does not posses but on an examination of opinion. — Fooloso4
I wonder though if they're all in some sense on the same ground, on equal footing, or if some thing or single class of things underlies reading in all its manifestations and purposes. — tim wood
Underlying is love; — tim wood
the hazard of misreading is always there — tim wood
Floating in a sea or sigh of incomprehension...
— Amity
When you asked sink or swim my immediate thought was float. — Fooloso4
What I dislike in Adler's description of criticism is the assumption that all ideas can be stated as arguments that we can stand outside of and view together. Taken to an extreme, the encyclopedia comes to replace the knowledge it would organize. — Valentinus
B. Special criteria for points of criticism
12. Show wherein the author is uninformed
13. " " " " " misinformed
14. " " " " " illogical
15. " " " author's analysis is incomplete.
Of these last four, the first three are criteria for disagreement. Failing in all of these, you must agree, at least in part, although you may suspend judgment on the whole, in view of the last point.
The final step in skim reading is to:
Decide whether to read the book or not.
If you only live for 700,000 hours (~80 years), do you really want to invest ~6 of them in this book? Is reading this book going to rock your world? Is it one of the ~1,000 good or ~100 truly great books that Adler and Doren suggest might exist?
If not, you may want to read something else.
Hopefully, you can see how a quick upfront skim and one simple question can save hundreds of hours of frustration and effort.
there must be an optimum method right? — TheMadFool
Synthesis of ideas is never static; it's always in movement. This is how one might avoid a tendency to "materialize" one's beliefs and render them totalitarian, absolutely correct. I learned this from reading Theodor Adorno. Hillel also says, "Learning not increased is learning decreased." I think that about says it all. — uncanni
Adorno..was a dialectical materialist, so this is a world view about as far away from Platonic concepts as you can get, since (historical) contexts and meanings are in continual transition and transformation. — uncanni
This brief summary may not help at all to explain, but it's the best I can do. Adorno taught me never to "cling" to my ideas: it's not healthy. — uncanni
In as much as the list included Kant's three Critiques and Hegel, you can see it would be no joke to complete it. Also, that the experience, pressed onto the young, could only be more-or-less wasted on many of them. — tim wood
My own training was based on reading primary texts and asking questions about them - "What does Plato mean when he says this?" "Why would he say this?" "Is it true?" We were not given any introduction and knew nothing of secondary literature. It was up to us to try and make sense of it. It was up to us to form our own opinions about the issues raised. While there are certainly limits to this approach, the benefit was to learn to engage with the text rather than have it explained. — Fooloso4
I trust you're far enough along to both have realized and to some extent experienced just how problematic - to be kind - the "sink or swim you're on your own" approach can be. — tim wood
Yes.There may be rare cases of autodidacts who can do it alone, but far more common are those who fancy themselves autodidacts who cannot. — Fooloso4
The St. John's Great Books program is (I'm pretty sure) in part based on Adler's own ideas about great book ...
— tim wood
That is not the case. See the Wiki articles on Great Books and Saint John's. — Fooloso4
At St.John's... Its ''great books'' list, the work of a seven-person committee elected by the faculty, has changed some in half a century: Montesquieu, Dickens and 50 or so other authors are no longer read, while Melville, Schrodinger and Faulkner, among others, are now included. But the program itself remains much as it was 50 years ago, an island of idealism in the currently pragmatic educational sea. In sum, according to George Doskow, who has been on the faculty since 1965, ''We read the best books we can find and talk about them as well as we can.'' — Robert Kanigel
In seminar, the first rule freshmen encounter is: No unsupported opinions. ''You have to come to your point reasonably, or find something in the text that deals with it,''...
...In time, the early freshness fades. The reading is interminable, sometimes approaching a thousand pages a week, as John Schiavo's wife, Monika, also a graduate, recollects.
St. John’s College was founded in 1696 and is best known for the Great Books curriculum that was adopted in 1937. While the list of books has evolved over the last century, the tradition of all students reading foundational texts of Western civilization remains.
Works listed are studied at one or both campuses, although not always in their entirety.
VIEW THE ENTIRE ST. JOHN’S GREAT BOOKS READING LIST AS A PDF
Somewhat similar to StreetlightX, I will gravitate towards a topic (e.g. ethics, politics, economics, pessimism), but usually not for too long because of my terrible ADHD, so I typically bounce around topics. — Maw
I also tend to read clusters of books with similar themes or authors, so I can cross-relate readings as I go. Helps to build a more robust picture of whatever it is that you're reading on. Like, I plan to do a bunch of Spinoza study soon, and have a whole series of Spinoza related books lined up.
Occasionally I'll start a thread here in order to pursue a theme that I want to articulate better. I think the absolute best way to demonstrate understanding to yourself is to put arguments or points of view in your own words. Trying to respond to criticisms also helps to really show yourself that you grasp a point of view. The most fun is in connecting different topics that you wouldn't have considered 'connectible' had you not discussed it. — StreetlightX
It is difficult to hear what is being said if the words already have a place in the commonly received collection of what has already been said. From that point of view, there is no reason to say anything more than has already been said. Reading should catch you alone and unaware of the dangers that lie ahead. — Valentinus
Adler's depiction of criticism does not include a place for that form of life. — Valentinus