I bought it because I didn't know how to read a book, but then I realized that I couldn't read How to Read a Book, either.
Finally someone explained to me that the first step is to open the cover. — Terrapin Station
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 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
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
Do you read differently each time and with a different purpose? — Amity
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
the effect that a work of the imagination has on you. — tim wood
Here is an online summary. Apparently, it takes 17 minutes to read.
https://fastertomaster.com/how-to-read-a-book-mortimer-j-adler/ — Amity
I often read the last chapter first and then the chapters in reverse order. This helps me form a mental scheme of logical relations. 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
There was a recent thread I found really interesting - Is meaning something separate from words. In that thread, I tried to make the case that non-verbal art, e.g. music and painting, the art doesn't mean anything until someone puts it into words. The paradox of fiction is that, even though it is an art of words, it also doesn't mean anything until someone puts that meaning into (different) words. Seems like Adler is describing a process for extracting meaning from a book. For non-fiction, I am less at odds with Adler's approach than I am with fiction.
Fiction can be experienced without words in the same way that visual art or music can. In reading fiction, it is the experience, not the meaning that is important. Here is a link to a passage from a book by John Gardner - October Light - that I used in that previous thread:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/326674
Fiction can be experienced in the same way that the French horn player describes for music in the linked passage. I think that is the important thing for us to get out of fiction - the experience, not the meaning. I'll write more later. — T Clark
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 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 think you meant to write 'can't' - my initial hopes dashed.
I didn't expect you to draw an arrow from your book notes to the finished product. — Amity
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
Perhaps I was/am looking for a magic wand...witchcraft or wizardry in the art of... — Amity
I see a paradox though. If you don't know how to read how can you learn it from a book which you, obviously, have to read? — TheMadFool
No need. For my purpose, the thread was - is - about how to read a book, with the implication that really reading a book and understanding it - understanding before interpretation - is sometimes not-so-easy. So perhaps the question to you might be how you handle a book you want to understand but that at first seems opaque?Since the topic is Adler I will leave it here. — Fooloso4
But for the rest, you've got a lot going on. I buy the idea - not my idea - that at one time generally, but now mainly with children, and in those occasional moments when experience irrupts into adult consciousness, as with poetry, or again with an experience of redintegration, or music, that words were not as they are now, i.e. mainly the abstract signs of abstract categories of things, but rather the names of things the things themselves being the source of experience, and their names then becoming a secondary source of that same experience. — tim wood
Whereas words as signs - univocal - are shorn not of meaning but of significance, shorn of the immediate experience of them, leaving only their abstract "gesturing/pointing" at objects we have little or no real interest in, being, rather, disinterested observers/watchers of them. — tim wood
Fiction can be experienced without words in the same way that visual art or music can. In reading fiction, it is the experience, not the meaning that is important. — T Clark
In short, in reply I'd venture that what you encounter in art is a lost part of yourself that is not easily recognizable as such, and attribute it to the art itself - which is also legitimate because it reminded you of that which makes for you possible the experience of the art as art. — tim wood
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
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