Mortimer J.Adler

How To Read A Book — A Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading

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  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    9. YOU MUST BE ABLE TO SAY, WITH REASONABLE CERTAINTY, “I UNDERSTAND,” BEFORE YOU CAN SAY ANY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING THINGS: “I AGREE,” OR “I DISAGREE,” OR “I SUSPEND JUDGMENT.”
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    Can you point to some experience you have had that the proposition describes or to which the proposition is in any way relevant? Can you exemplify the general truth that has been enunciated by referring to a particular instance of it?
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    if you cannot get away at all from the author’s words, it shows that only words have passed from him to you, not thought or knowledge. You know his words, not his mind. He was trying to communicate knowledge, and all you received was words.
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    The Second Stage of Analytical Reading, or Rules for Finding What a Book Says (Interpreting Its Contents)

    5. Come to terms with the author by interpreting his key words.

    6. Grasp the author’s leading propositions by dealing with his most important sentences.

    7. Know the author’s arguments, by finding them in, or constructing them out of, sequences of sentences.

    8. Determine which of his problems the author has solved, and which he has not; and as to the latter, decide which the author knew he had failed to solve.
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    What is the book about as a whole?
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    The First Stage of Analytical Reading, or Rules for Finding 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 these parts as you have outlined the whole.

    4. Define the problem or problems the author is trying to solve.
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    RULE 4. FIND OUT WHAT THE AUTHOR’S PROBLEMS WERE. The author of a book starts with a question or a set of questions. The book ostensibly contains the answer or answers.
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    of which the first part is about so and so, the second part is about such and such, the third part is about this, the fourth part about that, and the fifth part about still another thing. (2) The first of these major parts is divided into three sections, of which the first considers X, the second considers Y, and the third considers Z. (3) In the first section of the first part, the author makes four points, of which the first is A, the second B, the third C, and the fourth D. And so on and so forth.
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    A formula can be stated for operating according to this third rule. It will guide you in a general way. According to the second rule, we had to say: The whole book is about so and so and such and such. That done, we might obey the third rule by proceeding as follows: (1) The author accomplished this plan in five major parts
  • Zengani Mhangohas quoted8 months ago
    RULE 3. SET FORTH THE MAJOR PARTS OF THE BOOK, AND SHOW HOW THESE ARE ORGANIZED INTO A WHOLE, BY BEING ORDERED TO ONE ANOTHER AND TO THE UNITY OF THE WHOLE.
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