> Not all of these are even true of physical books - people have been bookmarking them and scribbling in the margins for ages.
All of that is true for physical books, if you're limited to tiny margins and can't easily find your margin scribbles later, then it's a format fail, you just continue to use the same flawed logic "done for ages = good"
> And also, e-books and PDFs exist, for the people that prefer them.
Which mostly repeat the paper medium, so fail to solve most of those issues
> As for the "tailoring to a specific reader" and "tracking understanding", that's a problem for any learning resource, as people are incredibly varied.
Yet it's especially a problem with books
> In general, for a given topic one should check out different books
In general one should not limit oneself to books, even for just a starting point
> Books being hard to edit and/or collaborate on could maybe (if it's even true) be a problem for authors, but why does it matter for readers?
For example, to remove "sections that are obvious", add "exercises", find reference to "other sources", see explanations from other readers etc.
> there's no problem with supplementing a book with e.g. a website where you can find interactive visualisations, etc.
The problem is it's a big limitation of the format, and you can't integrate it well if you have to switch back and forth
> also: simply not every topic needs complex interactive visualisations
> Well, books also continue to fail a lot of people
Yes, because learning is hard. A book is not a guarantee that you'll learn something - but neither is any other sort of resource.
The thesis of this discussion is that "books don't work" and that's blatantly false. Maybe there's certain people for whom they really "don't work", but as a general statement, it's false.
> Which topic do you think can't benefit from one?
I don't need fancy data visualisation if I read up on the history of the Roman Empire, for example. Or if I want to read Plato. Or to understand axiomatic set theory.
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I'll just put it differently: if you prefer other kinds of resources and they work for you - great. But to say "books don't work" just means that you artificially limit the things you learn. Writing books is comparatively easy (if you're an expert in the area). Doing fancy interactive experiences etc. requires much more time, skill, knowledge etc. - there's probably 3 to 4 orders of magnitude more stuff that has been written in books than has been made available through other means, so saying "books suck" means just locking yourself out of a lot of stuff.
You're wrong re the thesis: this discussion is about the limitations of the format the op claimed were "few", and those limitations are what help fail people, you can't ignore it with a "learning is hard" mantra, that's not relevant when the argument is that it's made hardER by the limitations
And of course just dumping your expert knowledge on the page is easier than creating an effective learning experience
> Not all of these are even true of physical books - people have been bookmarking them and scribbling in the margins for ages.
All of that is true for physical books, if you're limited to tiny margins and can't easily find your margin scribbles later, then it's a format fail, you just continue to use the same flawed logic "done for ages = good"
> And also, e-books and PDFs exist, for the people that prefer them.
Which mostly repeat the paper medium, so fail to solve most of those issues
> As for the "tailoring to a specific reader" and "tracking understanding", that's a problem for any learning resource, as people are incredibly varied.
Yet it's especially a problem with books
> In general, for a given topic one should check out different books
In general one should not limit oneself to books, even for just a starting point
> Books being hard to edit and/or collaborate on could maybe (if it's even true) be a problem for authors, but why does it matter for readers?
For example, to remove "sections that are obvious", add "exercises", find reference to "other sources", see explanations from other readers etc.
> there's no problem with supplementing a book with e.g. a website where you can find interactive visualisations, etc.
The problem is it's a big limitation of the format, and you can't integrate it well if you have to switch back and forth
> also: simply not every topic needs complex interactive visualisations
Which topic do you think can't benefit from one?