In
this blog I plan to discuss my reading reflections for this upcoming year. My
overall goal is to try to record my thoughts on what I read in order to track
my reflections as I move forward in my intellectual life. Before recording my
first reading posts, though, I thought I would share my thoughts on my current
reading practices and trends.
I've been trained at the graduate level in both philosophy and history, and both of these fields inform most of my reading preferences and biases. That said, I don't really read too much philosophy for fun since it is quite hard indeed and is what I do for my 9-5 job. I love talking about the philosophy that I am reading and/or teaching, and I love how philosophy, pardon the cliché, has changed the way in which I examine various issues. Outside of what I read in philosophy for my work, though, I generally want to explore issues outside of philosophy, since what I really love in life is to connect with other people over shared ideas. As I see it, if I spent all of my time reading philosophy, then I would be pretty limited in who I could really share my ideas with. Ever since I started my college education, I have been afraid of being that guy who was totally interested in his own research and had no idea or way to connect with other thinkers or regular people. I’m not sure how well I, in fact, have avoided turning this fear into reality, but it is my aim nonetheless. I will always read philosophy and love being able to pick up professional philosophy articles and books and read, understand, and comment on them (and it has been a long and expensive road to accomplish this), but I suspect that, unlike some people I know, this isn’t how I will really change the world.
I
should say that my reading practices are such that I like to have several books
going at once, so I should be able to make some contribution to the blog as I
go through my weeks. I typically have several books going at the same time, and
I also like to be listening to lectures and watching documentaries while I exercise.
My standard fare is to be reading at least one text for fun in non-fiction of
some sort, one fiction work, one work related to Christianity, one lecture
series, and be making progress on some documentary that I watch while working
out. That is to say, this is what I consciously recognize as my reading
practice. Whether this actually holds, is something that this blog should bear
out in good time.
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