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I don't know. Watching x amount of quality videos and reading x amount of quality written works is surely better than just reading x amount of quality written works. And finally, of course the content of those words matters. I could read a 200 page academic work and if the work is poorly written then I haven't gained much.


> Watching x amount of quality videos and reading x amount of quality written works is surely better than just reading x amount of quality written works

Why surely?

The reason I'd push back on that simplification is it's much easier to simply absorb--without engagement--information from video. The struggle that comes with reading not only measurably increases retention. It also increases the chances that you're going to notice you're not dealing with a quality source.

There are far fewer dumbfuck textbooks on almost any topic than negatively-informative videos on YouTube, for example.

> I could read a 200 page academic work and if the work is poorly written then I haven't gained much

Could you give an example? Not of a work that's wrong. Just poorly written.

Plenty of classical sources are, by modern standards, incredibly poorly written. Yet there isn't a substitute for reading the originals.

One can learn from videos as well as from written sources. But it's harder to do right. Easier to do wrong. And you'll have put yourself in a silo from experts, who tend to communicate via and thus reference writing.


Longish reply:

Thanks for the nice reply. I think it's harder to skim a video and say you understood than it is to skim a long book and say you understood, and I know countless people who do this. So if I watch a video on a topic and someone else reads a paper on a topic, but they may have skimmed, I see merit in watching videos because of this. I would think blind people feel similarly. Can you even skim videos at all?

And yes, I do agree, Youtube can have false info. On the other hand, it can also have info that hasn't been written about yet, and I think there's a lot to say about the fact it covers stuff that otherwise might not get written about, but of course that's a separate topic.

To be honest, there are lots of bad books. I guess we'd have to measure what types a book a person reads, not just how often or how much they read. A local bookstore to me has a ton of westerns. Even if I read them all I'd be worse off. In fact I have read some, lol.

And now for an example!

https://figshare.mq.edu.au/articles/thesis/Deterritorializin...

Sorry to throw raygun under the bus, but I think her paper is a fantastic example.

And you're right, many classical works are by modern standards bad. I have read some of the norse sagas. And I do agree with you, it is important to read the originals!

Harder to do right? Again, uff. I don't know. Books certainly are more informative and more thought out, and more detailed. I think I agree there, and I too hate that people don't read for entertainment.

But reading generally, outside a certain type of books / texts, I think there is still risk. But I do agree, there's lots of bad video / podcast content.

Sorry for the disorganized answer.


To pile on, You can learn a tremendous amount from reading difficult sources, specifically due to their difficulty. Nobody reads classical fiction for the facts.

It is an exercise in cognitive flexibility and challenge. It builds the capability to understand complex ideas and challenging contexts. These are important skills in navigating a world that is in fact complex and nuanced.

If someone can only understand short sentences and bullet lists, they will struggle in the real world and be vulnerable to manipulation.


Oh, I agree. And by the way, I speak two languages and learned the second primarily through youtube. That was difficult, and difficult topics can be covered there. Certainly reading is harder! Of course I agree with that. I still couldn't read classical sources in that language. I just think we shouldn't altogether knock getting info in the form of audio.


You're comparing the time spent over 2x with time spent over 1x.


Tutoring works well as a video where after (or during) the video you put the examples the tutor gives into practice.

Everything else would be better read if you care about learning (being able to recall information and put it to use at a later stage).

Video essays and podcasts just provide a "trust me bro" level of understanding for the viewer, that is useless apart from arguing on the internet.


> better read if you care about learning

It depends on the material

> trust me bro

For what it's worth, we all know books can be this way too. I am just saying it can be productive to get information over video / audio, and I am not trying to say necessarily that Youtube for example is as reputable




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