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Sign Up for FREE!The Well-Educated Mind
A Guide to the Classical Education You Never Had



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Book Description
An engaging, accessible guide to educating yourself in the classical tradition.
Surrounded by more books than ever, readers today are frequently daunted by the classics they have left unread. The Well-Educated Mind, debunking our own inferiority complexes, is a wonderful resource for anyoContinue
Book Details
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- English Books
- Hardcover 432 Pages
- Edition: 1
- ISBN-10: 0393050947
- ISBN-13: 9780393050943
- Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
- Pub date: Aug 01, 2003
- Dimensions: 24 cm x 16 cm x 4 cm Just how big is that?

1 person find this helpful
I had already read Adler's book on the same subject, so only skimmed through Bauer's book to see where she differed. (So take this review with a grain of salt.)
Bauer spends most of her book with lists of rules on how precisely to go about reading a certain type of book, and spends the rest of ... (continue)
I had already read Adler's book on the same subject, so only skimmed through Bauer's book to see where she differed. (So take this review with a grain of salt.)
Bauer spends most of her book with lists of rules on how precisely to go about reading a certain type of book, and spends the rest of it with lists and paragraph summaries of suggested works and authors. Her book list is very useful, but I was turned off by her rigid lists of requirements of how one should read, particularly her treatment of novels: keep a character list, summarize each chapter after reading it, etc. She may be correct in saying that it is useful to keep a reading journal, but suggesting that it is the best way is a grave error. The most important thing, in my own opinion, is to be aware of the things that you would write down if you were to follow her suggestion to invest in a journal. One need not write down what one can easily keep track of in one's mind. Only the most complex books (or those being read by a reviewer or researcher) require the kind of detailed note-taking she suggests; they are impractical and unreasonable for the average reader.
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