I would like to cover a subject today that has changed my life. I believe everyone’s life will be enriched greatly by the discipline of daily reading. Ronald Reagan once said, “I am not a great man, but I deal in great ideas.” President Reagan was a reader and he thought deeply on the ideas he read. One of my lifetime assignments is to help create a hunger for men and women to read again. With television, radio, Ipods, movies, video games etcetera, many are failing to develop the reading habit. I was 26 before I began reading to learn and think. Before this time, reading was a task to do for school or to learn a specific function for work. I had no interest in the classic ideas and people from history, religion, or philosophy. Our society has created a nation of specialist and frowns upon the generalist. I was one of the specialists with a deep understanding of a very specific area. The fact that I was clueless of the world around me didn’t seem to faze me much, since I didn’t know what I didn’t know.
I now realize our country is in dire need for leaders who are generalist. What is a generalist you say? A generalist is someone who can tie all the disparate information from all the different fields into a unifying vision and plan for
Dear Dr. Adler, Why should we read great books that deal with the problems and concerns of bygone eras? Our social and political problems are so urgent that they demand practically all the time and energy we can devote to serious contemporary reading. Is there any value, besides mere historical interest, in reading books written in the simple obsolete cultures of former times?
People who question or even scorn the study of the past and its works usually assume that the past is entirely different from the present, and that hence we can learn nothing worthwhile from the past. But it is not true that the past is entirely different from the present. We can learn much of value from its similarity and its difference.
A tremendous change in the conditions of human life and in our knowledge and control of the natural world has taken place since ancient times. The ancients had no prevision of our present-day technical and social environment, and hence have no counsel to offer us about the particular problems we confront. But, although social and economic arrangements vary with time and place, man remains man. We and the ancients share a common human nature and hence certain common human experiences and problems.
The poets bear witness that ancient man, too, saw the sun rise and set, felt the wind on his cheek, was possessed by love and desire, experienced ecstasy and elation as well as frustration and disillusion, and knew good and evil. The ancient poets speak across the centuries to us, sometimes more directly and vividly than our contemporary writers. And the ancient prophets and philosophers, in dealing with the basic problems of men living together in society, still have some thing to say to us.
I have elsewhere pointed out that the ancients did not face our problem of providing fulfillment for a large group of elderly citizens. But the passages from Sophocles and Aristophanes show that the ancients, too, were aware of the woes and disabilities of old age. Also, the ancient view that elderly persons have highly developed capacities for practical judgment and philosophical meditation indicate possibilities that might not occur to us if we just looked at the present-day picture.
No former age has faced the possibility that life on earth might be totally exterminated through atomic warfare. But past ages, too, knew war and the extermination and enslavement of whole peoples. Thinkers of the past meditated on the problems of war and peace and make suggestions that are worth listening to. Cicero and Locke show that the human way to settle disputes is by discussion and law, while Dante and Kant propose world government as the way to world peace.
Former ages did not experience particular forms of dictatorship that we have known in this century. But they had firsthand experience of absolute tyranny and the suppression of political liberty. Aristotle's treatise on politics includes a penetrating and systematic analysis of dictatorships, as well as a recommendation of measures to be taken to avoid the extremes of tyranny and anarchy.
We also learn from the past by considering the respects in which it differs from the present. We can discover where we are today and what we have become by knowing what the people of the past did and thought. And part of the past -- our personal past and that of the race -- always lives in us.
Exclusive preference for either the past or the present is a foolish and wasteful form of snobbishness and provinciality. We must seek what is most worthy in the works of both the past and the present. When we do that, we find that ancient poets, prophets, and philosophers are as much our contemporaries in the world of the mind as the most discerning of present-day writers. In fact, many of the ancient writings speak more directly to our experience and condition than the latest best sellers.
I am by no means complete in this journey. In fact, I would say I have barely begun. But, I am on the journey. Are you? By reading from different areas: history, science, philosophy, faith, economics, politics, and biographies; you will expand your knowledge and begin to unify your understanding of the different fields.
Assignment: What are the top books in different areas you have read: Economics, History, Biographies, Leadership, Personal Development, Philosophy, Christianity, Politics, etc? Please share the best with the rest of us and explain why they impacted your life!

