Stages of Analytical Reading
--From How To Read a Book by Mortimer J. Adler--
Stage 1: What Is the Book About as a
Whole?
Rule 1. You must know what kind of book you are reading, and
you should know this as early in the process as possible, preferably before you
begin to read. / Classify
the book according to kind and subject matter. (p. 60)
Rule 2. State the unity of the whole book in a single
sentence, or at most a few sentences (a short paragraph). / State what the whole book is about
with the utmost brevity. (pp. 75-76)
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. / Enumerate
its major parts in their order and relation, and outline these parts as you
have outlined the whole. (p. 76)
Rule 4. Find out what the author’s problems were. / Define the problem or problems the
author has tried to solve. (p. 92)
Stage 2: What Is Being Said in
Detail, and How?
Rule 5. Find the important words and through them come to
terms with the author. / Come
to terms with the author by interpreting his key words. (p. 98)
Rule 6: Mark the most important sentences in a book and
discover the propositions they contain. / Grasp the author’s leading propositions by dealing with his
most important sentences. (p. 120)
Rule 7: Locate or construct the basic arguments in the book
by finding them in the connections of sentences. / Know the author’s arguments, by
finding them in, or constructing them out of, sequences of sentences. (p. 120)
Rule 8: Find out what the author’s solutions are. / 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. (p.
135)
Stage 3: Is It True? What of It?
General
Maxims of Intellectual Etiquette
Rule 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.” / Do not begin criticism until you have completed your
outline and your interpretation of the book.
(pp. 142-143)
Rule 10: When you disagree, do so reasonably, and not disputatiously or
contentiously. (p. 145)
Rule 11: Respect the difference between knowledge and mere personal opinion, by
giving reasons for any critical judgment you make. (p. 150)
Special
Criteria for Points of Criticism
- Show wherein the author is uninformed.
- Show wherein the author is misinformed.
- Show wherein the author is illogical.
- Show wherein the author’s analysis or account is incomplete.
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