Do you make notes in the books you read? If so, why? If not, why not?
>>9512712
Just get a seperate notebook and make notes in that. It's easier to organize and review them; and you don't have to vandalize your book to do it.
>>9512712
hell yes, only idiots fetishize dumb clumps of mushed up tree pith
It's fun to go back and read what I used to think about thinngs, or be able to flip through a book and find the passage I'm looking for cause I dabbed it with a make note
Because I take screenshots instead, and give them searchable titles that explain their content and give a terse commentary on that content.
I wrote some dates in Plutarch's lives
>>9512764
>screenshotting text
ultra turbo mega pleb
way to half ass it you neanderthal.
I put sticky flags on the pages that I want to make a note of, but I never write anything down. Usually I can remember my thoughts without having to crack the book again, and then I'll just use to flags to navigate to the quotes I want to use if need be. I don't know why anybody should need to write their own thoughts down, unless you're opperating at an academic genius-level attention to detail, which is great, but I'm not going to pretend I think enough thoughts about every given page of a book to necessitate that kind of thing.
>>9512818
Try browsing a hundred different text files in seconds with any other method.
>>9513404
footnotes you mongoloid
>>9513413
To what, a single document?
I read too many books in too many different formats for that. And too many websites.
Do you actually immerse yourself in knowledge, or just take notes for use in a specific uni project?