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A Syntopical
Approach to The Great Ideas from The Great
Books
The
Syntopicon as an Instrument of Liberal
Education
by Mortimer Adler. Ph.D.
The Syntopicon serves the end of liberal
education to the extent that it facilitates the
reading of the great books and, beyond that, the
study and teaching of them. To make the nature of
this educational contribution clear, it is
necessary to distinguish between the integral and
the syntopical reading of great books.
Integral reading consists simply in reading a
whole book through. But syntopical reading does not
consist simply in reading parts of a book rather
than the whole. It involves the reading of one book
in relation to others, all of them relevant to the
consideration of the same topic.
In some cases, as the References show, whole
works are cited along with passages from other
works, which may be as short as a paragraph or as
long as a chapter or a series of chapters. For the
most part, a syntopical reading consists in reading
passages of varying length rather than whole works;
but the point remains that the essence of
syntopical reading lies in the juxtaposition of
many authors under the same topic and, in
consequence, the reading together of their works,
in whole or part.
Neither of these two types of reading can ever
be a substitute for the other, nor can either be
taken as sufficient in itself. On the contrary,
each is incomplete without the other. Those who
begin by reading in the great books and reading
them syntopically must eventually read at least
some of them integrally. Those who have already
read some of the great books through must read them
syntopically to discover what an integral reading
of the great books seldom reveals, except, perhaps,
to the most mature student or conscientious
scholar. For each of these two sorts of persons --
the beginning reader and the more advanced student
or scholar -- the Syntopicon functions
differently and the syntopical reading of the great
books serves a different purpose.
For The Beginning Reader -- in the extreme case,
a person who has read none of the great books -- a
syntopical reading, done in accordance with the
references under even a few topics, works in three
ways: initiatively, suggestively, and
instructively.
It works initiatively by overcoming the initial
difficulty that anyone faces when confronted by a
collection of books as vast and, in a sense, as
overpowering as Great Books of the Western World.
The problem is where to begin and in what order to
proceed. There are many solutions to this problem,
usually in the form of courses of reading based on
different principles of selection; but these
usually require the reading of whole books or, at
least, the integral reading of large parts of
them.
It is a matter of general experience that this
kind of solution seldom achieves the intended
result. A syntopical reading of the great books
provides a radically different sort of solution,
which promises to be more effective. It initiates
the reading of the great books by enabling persons
to read in them on the subjects in which they are
interested; and on those subjects, to read
relatively short passages from a large number of
authors. It assumes only that every educable mind
has some interest in one or more of the themes,
problems, or ideas on which the great books
touch.
A syntopical reading may also work suggestively.
Starting from a reader's existing interest in a
particular topic, it may arouse or create an
interest in other topics related to those which
initiated his reading in the great books. The
syntopical reading of a collection of authors under
a particular topic may also impel the reader to
look beyond the passages cited. Except when they
cite whole works, the references cite passages
which necessarily exist in a context, ultimately
the context of the whole book. Few of these
passages are absolutely self-contained. For few of
them can it be said that it will be finally
satisfactory to read them without looking further
into the author's thought. Hence, proceeding along
the natural lines of his own interests, the reader
may be led from reading small parts of certain
books to reading larger parts and, eventually, to
reading whole books. If this process is repeated,
each syntopical reading may occasion and stimulate
a more and more extensive integral reading of the
great books.
Working initiatively and suggestively,
syntopical reading opens the great books at the
pages of maximum interest to the individual and, by
the force of the passages read and their dependence
on context, carries him from reading parts to
reading whole works. Syntopical reading works
instructively when it guides the mind in
interpreting and understanding the passages or
works being read. It does this in three ways.
First, the topic in connection with which the
passage is being read serves to give direction to
the reader in interpreting the passage. But it does
not tell him what the passage means, since the
passage cited may be relevant to the topic in any
one of a number of ways. Hence the reader is called
upon to discover precisely what relevance the
passage has to the topic. To learn to do this is to
acquire a major skill in the art of reading.
Second, the collection of a number of passages
on the same topic, but from different works and
different authors, serves to sharpen the reader's
interpretation of each passage read. Sometimes,
when passages from the same book or author are read
in sequence and in the context of one an other,
each becomes clearer. Sometimes the meaning of each
of a series of contrasting or conflicting passages
from different books or authors is accentuated when
they are read against one another. And sometimes
the passages from one author, by amplifying or
commenting on the passages cited from another,
materially help the reader's understanding of the
second author.
Third, if the individual does a syntopical
reading of the great books under a-number of
distinct topics, the fact that the same passage
will often be found cited under two or more topics
will have its instructive effect. As relevant to
distinct topics, the passage must have an amplitude
of meaning which the reader will come to perceive
when he interprets it somewhat differently in
relation to different topics. Such multiple
interpretation not only is a basic exercise in the
art of reading, but also tends to make the mind
habitually alert to the many strains of meaning
which any rich or complex passage can contain.
In this description of the ways in which a
syntopical reading instructs in the art of reading
the great books, we have emphasized only the
influence of the topic under which the reading is
done and the effect of reading one passage in
relation to another or in relation to several
distinct topics. But to assure or reinforce its
instructive effect, two other factors may operate
in the background of a syntopical reading. One is
the whole Outline of Topics, which places a
particular topic in the context of other topics
under the same idea. The other is the Introduction
to that idea, which may help the reader to
interpret the particular topic, thereby increasing
the effectiveness of that topic as a guide to the
interpretation of the works or passages referred to
under it.
If we turn now from the beginning reader to the
more mature student or scholar -- in the extreme
case, a person who has read through many, if not
all, of the great books -- we shall see that a
syntopical reading works in a different way. It no
longer need function initiatively or suggestively;
nor, for the competent reader, need it serve
instructively, to develop skill in the art of
reading. But it does provide the occasion and the
materials for a more intensive and critical reading
of passages already read; and it supplements the
reading of whole works independently of one another
by requiring an examination of these works, or
passages from them, in mutual relation, as relevant
to the same topic.
It is the general experience of highly competent
readers that a great book can be read through many
times without the attainment of such complete
mastery that the reader knows the relevance of
every passage in it to every theme it touches. On
the contrary, the integral reading of a great book,
even when done more than once, seldom reveals even
a large part of its meaning. Only the most
intensive scholarly study of a particular book or
author ever arrives at such mastery.
Short of that, reading a great book through one
or more times will inevitably leave unnoticed or
only partly recognized many passages of critical
significance to a particular theme or problem. Only
when the book is read with that particular subject
in mind will these passages, hitherto unobserved,
be found.
The truth of this can be verified by
accomplished readers of the great books if they
will examine, under particular topics, passages
from books they have already read or even studied
to some extent. Unless their previous reading of
the books was done in the light of the particular
intellectual interest represented by this topic,
they are likely to find some passages that they
never saw before, or at least never fully
recognized as having the significance they take on
when read syntopically -- in the light of this
topic and in relation to other works and passages
relevant to the same theme.
The Syntopicon can thus serve those who
have already done, to a greater or less extent, an
integral reading of the great books. The method of
syntopical reading not only provides a different
and rewarding way of reading them, but also carries
the study of them to deeper and deeper levels of
understanding. It overcomes the defects of the
ordinary integral reading in several ways. It
involves reading the great books in relation to one
another rather than in isolation. It supplements
the knowledge of whole works by concentration on
the significance of parts. Taking each of 3000
topics as the occasion for a purposeful reading in
all the great books, it makes possible the close
study of each work in relation to all the problems
or issues on which it bears.
There is still another way in which the method
of syntopical reading can advance the study of the
great books, or rather a studious use of them. Here
the aim is not to study the books themselves, but
to consider a problem or an issue to the solution
or clarification of which they contribute.
The particular problem may involve many topics
in one or more chapters. It may involve a number of
great ideas and many subordinate terms. The
organization of the Syntopicon enables the
student of such a problem to discover the range of
the terms and topics traditionally involved in its
consideration. The References enable him to examine
systematically, in their chronological order or in
any order he wishes, the record of western thought
concerning this problem, so far as it is contained
in the great books. The Additional Readings
supplement these materials by citing other books
which bear upon the problem more or less
directly.
It does not seem an exaggeration to say that a
person who has done all the syntopical reading
suggested by the References and the Additional
Readings on a particular problem, will have a
fairly adequate knowledge of that problem and its
proposed solutions in the development of Western
thought. The Syntopicon should be able to
save the person who is beginning his inquiry into a
certain problem much of the preliminary labor of
research, and advance him rapidly to the point
where he can begin to think independently about it,
because he knows what thinking has been done. For
the scholar, already advanced in his research on a
given problem, it may still be possible for the
Syntopicon to serve some good purpose as a
reminder or a check; it may even uncover a
neglected passage, or throw new light upon one by
placing it in the context of other passages.
What has just been said about the studious or
scholarly use of the Syntopicon suggests how
it may serve as an instrument in teaching the great
books, or in using them as teaching materials. For
the most part, the great books enter the curricula
of schools and colleges engaged in liberal
education only by way of courses in which some of
these books, or most of them, are read integrally.
Even when they are read in selections rather than
as wholes, they are, for the most part, used as
materials in a general course of study rather than
as applicable to the study of particular subject
matters.
Without detracting from or competing with the
unquestionable value of such procedures, the
Syntopicon offers another pedagogical use of
the great books. The method of syntopical reading
makes them available in the teaching of courses
concerned with particular subject matters, or in
the conduct of seminars devoted to the study of
particular problems. In certain cases, it may
encourage the reading of the great texts in place
of textbooks.
For a particular problem or subject matter,
whose name is either one of the great ideas or a
major term in the Inventory of Terms, the
Syntopicon suggests some, if not all, of the
topics which deserve to be studied, and some, if
not all, of the works which deserve to be read in
whole or part. It thus provides a set of materials
organized so as to be adaptable to the method and
interest of the individual teacher. For example, at
one extreme, the teacher can use the
Syntopicon merely as a guide to
supplementary reading; at the other extreme, he can
use it to construct his own set of textual
materials, selected from the References and the
Additional Readings and organized in the framework
of a sequence of topics.
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