(Me and my weird takes again)
I found a book by Marcus Aurelius I haven't finished last year. And it reminded me of some questions I came up with in the past.
Does reading popular books differ that much from scrolling TitKok? More than that, do you gain that much if you read classics?
I have this weird theory that you do not actually need to read popular 'key' books. You may not get to know exactly what the author expressed, but the general ideas are already dissolved in the collective conscious and will be delivered to you by your peers implicitly.
I found a book by Marcus Aurelius I haven't finished last year. And it reminded me of some questions I came up with in the past.
Does reading popular books differ that much from scrolling TitKok? More than that, do you gain that much if you read classics?
I have this weird theory that you do not actually need to read popular 'key' books. You may not get to know exactly what the author expressed, but the general ideas are already dissolved in the collective conscious and will be delivered to you by your peers implicitly.