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How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading

Page 1

by Mortimer J. Adler




  How

  to

  Read

  a

  Book

  Revised And Updated Edition

  by

  Mortimer J. Adler

  and

  Charles Van Doren

  A TOUCHSTONE BOOK

  Published by Simon & Schuster

  New York London Toronto Sydney Tokyo Singapore

  Contents

  Preface

  Part One – The Dimensions of Reading

  Chapter 1 – The Activity And Art Of Reading

  Active Reading

  The Goals of Reading: Reading for Information and Reading for Understanding

  Reading as Learning: The Difference Between Learning by Instruction and Learning by Discovery

  Present and Absent Teachers

  Chapter 2 – The Levels Of Reading

  Chapter 3 – The First Level Of Reading: Elementary Reading

  Stages of Learning to Read

  Stages and Levels

  Higher Levels of Reading and Higher Education

  Reading and the Democratic Ideal of Education

  Chapter 4 – The Second Level Of Reading: Inspectional Reading

  Inspectional Reading I: Systematic Skimming or Pre-reading

  Inspectional Reading II: Superficial Reading

  On Reading Speeds

  Fixations and Regressions

  The Problem of Comprehension

  Summary of Inspectional Reading

  Chapter 5 – How To Be A Demanding Reader

  The Essence of Active Reading: The Four Basic Questions a Reader Asks

  How to Make a Book Your Own

  The Three Kinds of Note-making

  Forming the Habit of Reading

  From Many Rules to One Habit

  Part Two – The Third Level of Reading: Analytical Reading

  Chapter 6 – Pigeonholing A Book

  The Importance of Classifying Books

  What You Can Learn from the Title of a Book

  Practical vs. Theoretical Books

  Kinds of Theoretical Books

  Chapter 7 – X-Raying A Book

  Of Plots and Plans: Stating the Unity of a Book

  Mastering the Multiplicity: The Art of Outlining a Book

  The Reciprocal Arts of Reading and Writing

  Discovering the Author’s Intentions

  The First Stage of Analytical Reading

  The First Stage of Analytical Reading, or Rules for Finding What a Book Is About

  Chapter 8 – Coming To Terms With An Author

  Words vs. Terms

  Finding the Key Words

  Technical Words and Special Vocabularies

  Finding the Meanings

  Chapter 9 – Determining An Author’s Message

  Sentences vs. Propositions

  Finding the Key Sentences

  Finding the Propositions

  Finding the Arguments

  Finding the Solutions

  The Second Stage of Analytical Reading

  The Second Stage of Analytical Reading, or Rules for Finding What a Book Says (Interpreting Its Contents)

  Chapter 10 – Criticizing A Book Fairly

  Teachability as a Virtue

  The Role of Rhetoric

  The Importance of Suspending Judgment

  The Importance of Avoiding Contentiousness

  On the Resolution of Disagreements

  Chapter 11 – Agreeing Or Disagreeing With An Author

  Prejudice and Judgment

  Judging the Author’s Soundness

  Judging the Author’s Completeness

  The Third Stage of Analytical Reading

  I. The First Stage of Analytical Reading: Rules for Finding What a Book Is About

  II. The Second Stage of Analytical Reading: Rules for Interpreting a Book’s Contents

  III. The Third Stage of Analytical Reading: Rules for Criticizing a Book as a Communication of Knowledge

  Chapter 12 – Aids To Reading

  The Role of Relevant Experience

  Other Books as Extrinsic Aids to Reading

  How to Use Commentaries and Abstracts

  How to Use Reference Books

  How to Use a Dictionary

  How to Use an Encyclopedia

  Part Three – Approaches to Different Kinds of Reading Matter

  Chapter 13 – How To Read Practical Books

  The Two Kinds of Practical Books

  The Role of Persuasion

  What Does Agreement Entail in the Case of a Practical Book?

  Chapter 14 – How To Read Imaginative Literature

  How Not to Read Imaginative Literature

  General Rules for Reading Imaginative Literature

  Chapter 15 – Suggestions For Reading Stories, Plays, And Poems

  How to Read Stories

  A Note About Epics

  How to Read Plays

  A Note About Tragedy

  How to Read Lyric Poetry

  Chapter 16 – How To Read History

  The Elusiveness of Historical Facts

  Theories of History

  The Universal in History

  Questions to Ask of a Historical Book

  How to Read Biography and Autobiography

  How to Read About Current Events

  A Note on Digests

  Chapter 17 – How To Read Science And Mathematics

  Understanding the Scientific Enterprise

  Suggestions for Reading Classical Scientific Books

  Facing the Problem of Mathematics

  Handling the Mathematics in Scientific Books

  A Note on Popular Science

  Chapter 18 – How To Read Philosophy

  The Questions Philosophers Ask

  Modern Philosophy and the Great Tradition

  On Philosophical Method

  On Philosophical Styles

  Hints for Reading Philosophy

  On Making Up Your Own Mind

  A Note on Theology

  How to Read “Canonical” Books

  Chapter 19 – How To Read Social Science

  What Is Social Science?

  The Apparent Ease of Reading Social Science

  Difficulties of Reading Social Science

  Reading Social Science Literature

  Part Four – The Ultimate Goals of Reading

  Chapter 20 – The Fourth Level Of Reading: Syntopical Reading

  The Role of Inspection in Syntopical Reading

  The Five Steps in Syntopical Reading

  The Need for Objectivity

  An Example of an Exercise in Syntopical Reading: The Idea of Progress

  The Syntopicon and How to Use It

  On the Principles That Underlie Syntopical Reading

  Summary of Syntopical Reading

  I. Surveying the Field Preparatory to Syntopical Reading

  II. Syntopical Reading of the Bibliography Amassed in Stage I

  Chapter 21 – Reading And The Growth Of The Mind

  What Good Books Can Do for Us

  The Pyramid of Books

  The Life and Growth of the Mind

  Appendix A – A Recommended Reading List

  Appendix B – Exercises and Tests at the Four Levels of Reading

  Introductory

  I. Exercises and Tests at the First Level of Reading: Elementary Reading

  John Stuart Mill 1806-1873

  Test A: Questions about the biographical sketch of John Stuart Mill

  Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1727

  Test B: Questions about the biography o
f Sir Isaac Newton

  II. Exercises and Tests at the Second Level of Reading: Inspectional Reading

  Dante Alighieri 1265-1321

  Table of Contents of the Divine Comedy

  Test C: First series of questions about the Divine Comedy of Dante

  Test D: Further questions about Dante’s Divine Comedy

  Charles Darwin 1809-1882

  Table of Contents of The Origin of Species

  Test E: Questions about Darwin and about The Origin of Species

  Test F: Further questions about Darwin and The Origin of Species

  III. Exercises and Tests at the Third Level of Reading: Analytical Reading

  IV. Exercises and Tests at the Fourth Level of Reading: Syntopical Reading

  From Book I of Aristotle’s Politics

  From Book I of Rousseau’s The Social Contract

  Test G: Here is the first set of questions about Aristotle and Rousseau

  Test H: Here is the second set of questions

  Answers to Questions

  Footnotes

  Index

  Publication Information

  About How to Read a Book

  Copyright Notice

  eBook Version Notes

  Preface

  p. ix How to Read a Book was first published in the early months of 1940. To my surprise and, I confess, to my delight, it immediately became a best seller and remained at the top of the nationwide best-seller list for more than a year. Since 1940, it has continued to be widely circulated in numerous printings, both hardcover and paperback, and it has been translated into other languages—French, Swedish, German, Spanish, and Italian. Why, then, attempt to recast and rewrite the book for the present generation of readers?

  The reasons for doing so lie in changes that have taken place both in our society in the last thirty years and in the subject itself. Today many more of the young men and women who complete high school enter and complete four years of college; a much larger proportion of the population has become literate in spite of or even because of the popularity of radio and television. There has been a shift of interest from the reading of fiction to the reading of nonfiction. The educators of the country have acknowledged that teaching the young to read, in the most elementary sense of that word, is our paramount educational problem. A recent Secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, designating the seventies as the Decade of Reading, has dedicated federal funds in support of a wide variety of efforts to improve p. x proficiency in this basic skill, and many of those efforts have scored some success at the level at which children are initiated into the art of reading. In addition, adults in large numbers have been captivated by the glittering promises made by speed-reading courses—promises to increase their comprehension of what they read as well as their speed in reading it.

  However, certain things have not changed in the last thirty years. One constant is that, to achieve all the purposes of reading, the desideratum must be the ability to read different things at different—appropriate—speeds, not everything at the greatest possible speed. As Pascal observed three hundred years ago, “When we read too fast or too slowly, we understand nothing.” Since speed-reading has become a national fad, this new edition of How to Read a Book deals with the problem and proposes variable-speed-reading as the solution, the aim being to read better, always better, but sometimes slower, sometimes faster.

  Another thing that has not changed, unfortunately, is the failure to carry instruction in reading beyond the elementary level. Most of our educational ingenuity, money, and effort is spent on reading instruction in the first six grades. Beyond that, little formal training is provided to carry students to higher and quite distinct levels of skill. That was true in 1939 when Professor James Mursell of Columbia University’s Teachers College wrote an article for the Atlantic Monthly entitled “The Failure of the Schools.” What he said then, in two paragraphs that I am now going to quote, is still true.

  Do pupils in school learn to read their mother tongue effectively? Yes and no. Up to the fifth and sixth grade, reading, on the whole, is effectively taught and well learned. To that level we find a steady and general improvement, but beyond it the curves flatten out to a dead level. This is not because a person arrives at his natural limit of efficiency when he reaches the sixth grade, for it has been shown again and again that with special tuition much older children, and also adults, can make enormous improvement. Nor does it mean that most sixth-graders read well enough for all p. xi practical purposes. A great many pupils do poorly in high school because of sheer ineptitude in getting meaning from the printed page. They can improve; they need to improve; but they don’t.

  The average high-school graduate has done a great deal of reading, and if he goes on to college he will do a great deal more; but he is likely to be a poor and incompetent reader. (Note that this holds true of the average student, not the person who is a subject for special remedial treatment.) He can follow a simple piece of fiction and enjoy it. But put him up against a closely written exposition, a carefully and economically stated argument, or a passage requiring critical consideration, and he is at a loss. It has been shown, for instance, that the average high-school student is amazingly inept at indicating the central thought of a passage, or the levels of emphasis and subordination in an argument or exposition. To all intents and purposes he remains a sixth-grade reader till well along in college.

  If there was a need for How to Read a Book thirty years ago, as the reception of the first edition of the book would certainly seem to indicate, the need is much greater today. But responding to that greater need is not the only, nor, for that matter, the main motive in rewriting the book. New insights into the problems of learning how to read; a much more comprehensive and better-ordered analysis of the complex art of reading; the flexible application of the basic rules to different types of reading, in fact to every variety of reading matter; the discovery and formulation of new rules of reading; and the conception of a pyramid of books to read, broad at the bottom and tapering at the top—all these things, not treated adequately or not treated at all in the book that I wrote thirty years ago, called for exposition and demanded the thorough rewriting that has now been done and is here being published.

  The year after How to Read a Book was published, a parody of it appeared under the title How to Read Two Books; and Professor I. A. Richards wrote a serious treatise entitled How to Read a Page. I mention both these sequels in order to p. xii point out that the problems of reading suggested by both of these titles, the jocular as well as the serious one, are fully treated in this rewriting, especially the problem of how to read a number of related books in relation to one another and read them in such a way that the complementary and conflicting things they have to say about a common subject are clearly grasped.

  Among the reasons for rewriting How to Read a Book, I have stressed the things to be said about the art of reading and the points to be made about the need for acquiring higher levels of skill in this art, which were not touched on or developed in the original version of the book. Anyone who wishes to discover how much has been added can do so quickly by comparing the present Table of Contents with that of the original version. Of the four parts, only Part Two, expounding the rules of Analytical Reading, closely parallels the content of the original, and even that has been largely recast. The introduction in Part One of the distinction of four levels of reading—elementary, inspectional, analytical, and syntopical—is the basic and controlling change in the book’s organization and content. The exposition in Part Three of the different ways to approach different kinds of reading materials—practical and theoretical books, imaginative literature (lyric poetry, epics, novels, plays), history, science and mathematics, social science, and philosophy, as well as reference books, current journalism, and even advertising—is the most extensive addition that has been made. Finally, the discussion of Syntopical Reading in Part Four is wholly new.

  In the work of updating, r
ecasting, and rewriting this book, I have been joined by Charles Van Doren, who for many years now has been my associate at the Institute for Philosophical Research. We have worked together on other books, notably the twenty-volume Annals of America, published by Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., in 1969. What is, perhaps, more relevant to the present cooperative venture in which we have been engaged as co-authors is that during the p. xiii last eight years Charles Van Doren and I have worked closely together in conducting discussion groups on great books and in moderating executive seminars in Chicago, San Francisco, and Aspen. In the course of these experiences, we acquired many of the new insights that have gone into the rewriting of this book.

  I am grateful to Mr. Van Doren for the contribution he has made to our joint effort; and he and I together wish to express our deepest gratitude for all the constructive criticism, guidance, and help that we have received from our friend Arthur L. H. Rubin, who persuaded us to introduce many of the important changes that distinguish this book from its predecessor and make it, we hope, a better and more useful book.

  MORTIMER J. ADLER

  Boca Grande

  March 26, 1972

  How

  to

  Read

  a

  Book

  p. xv

  Part One – The Dimensions of Reading

  Chapter 1 – The Activity And Art Of Reading

  p. 3 This is a book for readers and for those who wish to become readers. Particularly, it is for readers of books. Even more particularly, it is for those whose main purpose in reading books is to gain increased understanding.

  By “readers” we mean people who are still accustomed, as almost every literate and intelligent person used to be, to gain a large share of their information about and their understanding of the world from the written word. Not all of it, of course; even in the days before radio and television, a certain amount of information and understanding was acquired through spoken words and through observation. But for intelligent and curious people that was never enough. They knew that they had to read too, and they did read.

  There is some feeling nowadays that reading is not as necessary as it once was. Radio and especially television have taken over many of the functions once served by print, just as photography has taken over functions once served by painting and other graphic arts. Admittedly, television serves some of these functions extremely well; the visual communication of news events, for example, has enormous impact. The ability of radio to give us information while we are engaged in doing other things—for instance, driving a car—is remarkable, and a great saving of time. But it may be seriously questioned p. 4 whether the advent of modern communications media has much enhanced our understanding of the world in which we live.

 

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