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 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
This is new to me. I would like to hear more about this. What are the series of movements ? — Amity
understanding before interpretation - is sometimes not-so-easy — tim wood
So perhaps the question to you might be how you handle a book you want to understand but that at first seems opaque? — tim wood
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
Where can I follow any 'how to' descriptions or prescriptions on close reading ?
Or did they not spell it out ? — Amity
This all sounds too prescriptive...a bit like the Do's and Don'ts of Tim's outline. — Amity
If this is confusing - it confuses me - think about a time you have attempted to share, say, some Bach or Beethoven with an adolescent (younger children, especially young children, can be transfixed - stopped in their tracks - by those composers), only to have that adolescent not comprehend even a little bit what he's hearing, certainly incapable of any appreciation. — tim wood
That is not the case. See the Wiki articles on Great Books and Saint John's. — Fooloso4
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
Many years ago when I was in graduate school I met privately one on one with Gadamer who taught periodically at Boston College. I was considering doing work on the interpretation of texts, the meaning and significance of interpretation and its relation to originality. Being the kind and gentle man he was he simply suggested I first spend the next twenty-five years doing interpretation. I think it was good advice. — Fooloso4
And I shall remind myself to think twice and twice again if I imagine to suppose you're mistaken about anything on these matters again! — tim wood
P. C. Smith — tim wood
The Hermeneutics of Original Argument — tim wood
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
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
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
What if all paradoxes aren't real?Not a real paradox. How did you learn anything? And there's an ambiguity in (y)our use of "read." — tim wood
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
there must be an optimum method right? — TheMadFool
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.
How did you cope and engage with the St.John's approach ? As a student or teacher? — Amity
Was it really a case of 'sink or swim' ? — Amity
At that age, I would probably sit in silence and listen. — Amity
Floating in a sea or sigh of incomprehension... — Amity
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.
For one thing, he 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
I. The first stage of analytical reading: rules for finding out what a book is about
1. Classify the book according to kind and subject matter
2. State what the whole book is about with the utmost brevity
3. Enumerate its major parts in their order and relation, and outline those parts as you have outlined the whole
4. Define the problem(s) the author has tried to solve. — M Adler
However, I am not sure how well I synthesize ideas...especially when reading. There is still a tendency to pick out only those passages that fit own agenda. Important parts might be disregarded... — Amity
I think this line gets close to the heart of the matter. Not that you or I misread this or that book, but that the hazard of misreading is always there. And the matter is multi-layered. In one sense one might think in terms of a continuum at one end of which is the idea that the meaning (of the text) is a something in particular, and that I'm obliged to "get" it, and if I don't then I've failed and will repent my failure in sackcloth and ashes - certainly the case with a manual on auto repair! At the other end the notion that what it means is what I say it means to me in this my moment of reading, period, which it is my understanding (I may be mistaken) is the way and the only correct way to read the Koran.I think that this is based on a common but fundamentally misguided reading of — 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
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