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comment by veen

You know, there are books out there for when you want to read Kant but not by Kant.

That said, my general approach for reading a non-fiction book and really understanding it is the following:

- Highlight new things I learn with yellow (physical book: underline)

- Highlight key arguments with purple (physical book: underline + exclamation mark)

- After having read and highlighted the entire book, write down / copy the core arguments from the purple notes.

If I did it right, I can tell the entire story of the book with just those notes, filling in the gaps with common sense or logical thinking. If I want to re-read the book, I only have to care about the purple highlights. If I'm looking for interesting tidbits or supportive arguments, I look at the yellow highlights.





user-inactivated  ·  2493 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm reading of a library book right now, so highlighting is kind of out, but I bet I could get a similar effect with little sticky notes in the margins!

weewooweewoo  ·  2493 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Stealing this, because otherwise too much information washes over me.