Hannah Paskin You can! Go to RomanRoadsMedia.com - you can learn from him through the Old Western Culture series, or even through live online classes! :)
I’m still in high school, so this collection and Callihan’s knowledge on history, philosophy, and literature is inspiring. I’m still on my journey, the slow and slightly terrifying journey, of cultivating my knowledge; even if I was able to obtain half of his collection and intellect, I would be content.
@@coffeemachtspass ooh.... And add to that a beautiful, lovely and sincere wife. .... Oofff.... Perfection indeed.... Do sports 3x a week, man, btw. And don't forget nature walks and cold showers.
funny how a certain type of person instantly evokes a sense of pleasure and warmth. Perhaps abit to sentimental for this day and age, but man this dude talks in a way that remind one of going home for christmas after a long exam period. go wes
What a great compliment - I wish i'd seen this five years ago when it was posted! If I'm too sentimental for this day and age, maybe the problem is with the day and age, lol.
for me i collecting some books from few authors to read for my down time when im not on the computer gaming or watching video or watching tv, i just sit on the bed & read a book also relax
LeandroBRC47 I’m assuming modern morals like don’t read if you do don’t read for pleasure read so you can feel superior and brag (got that from screwtape) also history revision one school is teaching that Abraham was a Democrat and it was the republican who succeed the evidence behind it is that Republicans are racist. There’s also identity standing out which this man does. He’s humble reads to better himself and because he wants too very odd values and traits
Of all the videos I've watched on personal libraries...this one is by far the best. It may be old school, but its distinguished and its absolutely authentic. Bravo, sir, for your exquisite taste and collection!!!
Such passion united with erudition and love of learning is a rare thing. Wes is a remarkable teacher, unconstrained by temporal politics and superficial trends in education and the larger society. Very refreshing! Thank you, Wes.
@@Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius They really aren't that separate honestly. Most Islamic scholarship was based heavily on Aristotle. The Western World actually got Aristotle BACK from Islam after they were lost. We actually went quite a while without what is one of the major keystones of Western thought. It's kind of crazy.
best home library i've seen so far. Indeed, organizing your books in which era they came from is an excellent idea. Maybe i'll do the same once I have more books!
Never, ever, ever! Start collecting 2nd hand books now and by the time you're 40 you will have a sizable collection. Only get what you're interested in, don't get books to "seem clever", I have about 50 of those, out of 1,000 that's not bad but they take up space. Real books cannot be replaced by technology, period!
Thanks for the video and walk thtough history. As a theologian and eternal learner, I appreciate you taking us through it; especially, its impact on what we are today. I am in the process of re-doing my home library; I had not considered your approach, but will do now. Thanks.
A fine library and a thoughtful tour. I'd like to talk to him about revelation as a reliable epistemology, but, nevertheless, I will admire his books and passion for them. Well done.
Your lecture on the Middle Ages was inspiring. Also I would really enjoy learning about the early saints. I was expecting a secular library tour this was way more interesting. Thank you.
Monty Thibault Gnosticism is the idea that faith is more personal and not tied to a common scripture. Hence a digital book, which doesn’t really exist, only in someone’s head, is gnostic. Non-gnostic faith is rooted in scripture, written physical books universal to everyone. A physical book can exist independent of the person reading it, will still be there after they’re gone. I guess the comparison is that Christianity is true regardless of whether any one person believes it. It’s a truth potentially available to everyone in the same way a physical book is.
@@williams.5952 No, I just didn't explain myself very well. I was simply referring to that aspect of gnosticism that rejects the value of the material, physical world. So the emphasis in digital books on "just the content", as though the bodies of books with their colors, heft, smell, and textures, mean nothing, is sort of gnostic.
I first watched this library tour years ago and it's as enjoyable now as it was then. I hope you are well Wes and still teaching. If this is a taste, you do it so well 👍🏾
I love how if he has a question about what a word means in a book, he opens another book to find the meaning..... most people would bust out google.....He is truly a smart man
I am not a believer, but still found it wonderfully interesting to hear this man talking about his books and the many connections between them. I wish there many more such presentations on YT where people talk about what they really love and understand on a deep level. I love all those shabby cloth covers and the complete absence of Tolkien and Harry Potter.
A friend who holds a PhD in history of the catholic church recently commented that "The Dark Ages" also is a case of protestants slandering the times before the protestant churches were there; it was dark, because there was only the catholic church (or "the church") there.
Interesting approach to shelving one's books! I have a similar system for filing my recordings, especially LPs (which are less chaotically placed than CDs and audiocassettes). Within large categories, say, ballet music, I shelve the music by date of composer's birth. Miscellaneous recordings of ballet segments (e.g. "Great Moments of Ballet") I sheve in alphabetical order by conductor. And so it goes. Works for me!
That's neat that you have three shelves of Homer. "De Anima" is my favourite work of Aristotle. I recommend it, if you're interested in a metaphysical meets spirituality, theme of writing style.
I wish I could have been a learned man. To have a passion for books and being able to make a living at it is priceless. A true classically educated man. One day …. one day I’ll tackle Virgil’s Aeneid.
Your comments about the look, color and feel of your books is endearing. The Chinese have a similer sensuality. In Mandarin it's called: "SHU XIANG" the perfume of books.
That is really neat about the Mandarin word for the perfume of books! Are you familiar with our recent publication, "Redeeming the Six Arts"? It is about Chinese classical education, and specifically how Christian classical education in China ought to honor their own tradition vs embracing solely the Western texts as they are often tempted to do.
I'M IMPRESSED!!!! Wes Callihan is a truly well-read scholar if ever there were one!! I'm also jealous in that he has such a vast private library!! Thank God for literacy and for marvelous people like Wes!! :-)
Most of the books that survived the fall of Rome and the dark ages , Roman and Greek classics survived in one small church in Spain . If our world collapsed and this little personal library was saved you would to a great extent would have much of western history still. I like this gentleman without even meeting him fine fellow
His comments beginning at 9:58 on the “Top Shelf Book Set of Great Books” ( Mortimer Adler etc) are very revealing. Pointing out that the Dark Ages were equated with the Christian Age and suggesting what appears to be an attitude that is influenced deeply by Enlightenment thinking namely - Christianity results in Darkness! This is not dissimilar to the biased thinking of several strident atheists like Hitchens, Dawkins, Harris and others who, influenced by scientism and relativism, also equate Christianity (religion in general) with darkness.. Thanks for the observation Wes Callihan!
There are few videos on UA-cam that I keep returning to. This is one of them. It has been nearly 10 years since this video has been released and is easily the most popular video on your UA-cam channel. I would be lovely to get a 10 year update. I suspect 99% of the library will have remained the same but some questions that come to mind are: - How has Mr Callihan's Library changed in the past 10 years? - The most signficant finding that Mr Callihan has discovered from his books in the last 10 years. - What is Mr Callihan most looking forward to reading or re-reading in the next 10 years?
Great collection! I went to my brother's house that was recently renovated to include mostly hues of white and ivory. He and his wife had about 50 books in their personal library, but they had the spines of the books facing away from the room and not visible. My mom later told me this is a decorating tip to keep the room looking white and pure, and I was horrified.
My God, your language alignment method is brilliant! I'm going to steal--I mean, ADOPT it for my own library! And it's interesting. It would never have occurred to me to collect multiple translations of works. I always went for the most accurate translations because it offended me to read an inferior or biased translation but now I'll give it some thought once I can afford the space and storage issue.
I appreciate his perspective on great books (and the shortcomings of The Britannica Great Books). Although I am an atheist and personally inclined towards ancient authors and their Enlightenment intellectual offspring, I am curious about the Middle Ages and willing to read their thoughts with a generous mind. Anyway, as a lover of books and the culture of the mind, I salute you. May your spines remain flexible and your pages crisp.
Wes, this is amazing. What would be neat is for those of us who have NEVER read the classics for you to make a starter list of the top books to read. Maybe a beginner, intermediate, and advanced list so we can progress. Thanks
The Old Western Culture series he mentions goes through a 4 year high school curriculum of Greeks, Romans, Medieval-Elizabethan, then onward to the early modern. So read Homer, Hesiod, Sophocles, Aeschylus, Euripides, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, and Aristotle first.
Beautiful library. Who wouldn't want a teacher like Wes. A godly and literate man with a passion for learning and teaching. A dying breed. Which translations of Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy were they I wonder? And what system of reading would Wes propose? I love to read but we are so spoiled by choice it almost becomes unbearable. The sheer weight of history and ideas and thought. Where does one start? And how long do you spend reading a book. Do you study or read for pleasure? Thanks! Great content.
Start by learning languages and do try to read books in their original languages as much as possible. Sanskrit, Chinese, Persian, Arabic, Greek, Latin and German are a good start. When ye go into a field, first do read a general history of that field. Then go into it's classics. If ye diye directly into classics without first reading that intellectual area's history, ye wouldn't understand much
Thank you so much for this video. You and I share tastes in literature. I have read most of these books and continue to digest them. All you need is a copy of the Domesday Book and the Gutenberg Bible. Imagine what was lost at the Library of Alexandria.
Nice private library. You can never have too much Homer. There is a stronger weight to christian writings than I enjoy. But very nice. I do appreciate Adler's Great Books collection. I have a copy and gave a set to my son, a UChicago Classics major. I found ours at our local library's weekly used book sales. Adler a University of Chicago professor has some fun books and interviews on books, reading and education. He's on UA-cam.
I am here once again, thanks to Autumn Kern's The Common Place video on How to Organize Your Library (Like a Christian) | Mother Culture Series | Classical Charlotte Mason.
Beautiful library. I don't read much currently but I will be reading a lot of books in the future. You have encouraged me to start building my collection of good books/works.
You forget the Carolingian era (mid 9th to the end of the 10th centuries). Very powerful theologically. Gottschalk of Orbais, Ratramnus of Corbie, Florus of Lyon, Paschasius Radbertus, and etc. This leads up to Anselm's Cur Deus Homo? Albert the Great or Albertus Magnus taught Aquinas and both were influenced by Avicenna (Ibn Sinna) and Averroes (Ibn Rushd-the great Muslim commentator on Aristotle).
I agree with all those, and I actually have all of them in my library, but I didn't have time to talk about everything on my shelves - though I wish I could! :)
🤤 I will have a library like this one day. Right now my books just line my small house like insulation. I just stick them wherever I think they will be safe and take them out when we go over them in our school.
Wonderful. Its great and worthy of admiration. I liked your love for books. Please accept my hearty facilitations for the collection and maintenance in so much systematic way. With regards and affection from India. Aum shanti.
Ah, your Plutarch! I've got a copy of that same 2-volume Sir Thomas North reprint. What a find that was! I found it at a second-hand store, maybe a decade ago, and paid merely $6 or $8 for it, and it's in quite exquisite shape. (Now, to sometime actually buckle down, finally, and really try to dig into reading it one of these days!)
Beautiful collection of works, the colors of the bindings in particular work together immensely well in creating a vibrant effect. Even as a deist I can appreciate that the works of the Middle Ages and "church literature" are vastly underrated genre.
what? No CS Lewis??? ;) .. impressive library... I have a minor version of this, mostly composed of leather bound Easton Press and other similar books both for the aesthetic and the intellectual aspects.
Very interesting and inspiring. I recently retired and I am challenged to bring my office library home. Shelving is certainly a challenge to overcome. I organize my library similarly to how you organize yours. Thank you for sharing.
This guy is the type of men I would like to have as a teacher. He seems nice, but still a good teacher, nice voice and pleasant face. Idk
Hannah Paskin You can! Go to RomanRoadsMedia.com - you can learn from him through the Old Western Culture series, or even through live online classes! :)
Hannah Paskin We're even having our once-per-year big sale RIGHT NOW (until August 17th)
Roman Roads Media Really? Awesome :D
Ü
Hannah Paskin you only talk, it’s hard to become one. Try becoming one yourself you fool
I’m still in high school, so this collection and Callihan’s knowledge on history, philosophy, and literature is inspiring. I’m still on my journey, the slow and slightly terrifying journey, of cultivating my knowledge; even if I was able to obtain half of his collection and intellect, I would be content.
Your time will come start at the librabry
Christian theology is the best place to begin. The KJV Bible is part of the "Great Books" collection. In our homeschool, we memorize key passages.
I can't describe how much I would love to have a collection like this.
If heaven was just living in this room for eternity I think I'd be okay with that
A good cup of coffee, a comfortable chair, and a beautiful book waiting to be admired. What could be better?
@@coffeemachtspass ooh.... And add to that a beautiful, lovely and sincere wife. .... Oofff.... Perfection indeed.... Do sports 3x a week, man, btw. And don't forget nature walks and cold showers.
@@coffeemachtspass The same but without the coffee would be better.
funny how a certain type of person instantly evokes a sense of pleasure and warmth. Perhaps abit to sentimental for this day and age, but man this dude talks in a way that remind one of going home for christmas after a long exam period. go wes
What a great compliment - I wish i'd seen this five years ago when it was posted! If I'm too sentimental for this day and age, maybe the problem is with the day and age, lol.
@@wjcallihan Well you've seen it now ;) and spot on, maybe the problem is with the times we live in ;) Peace, Gus from England ;)
he is a type of man who really reads his books. not just collecting books for decoration.
for me i collecting some books from few authors to read for my down time when im not on the computer gaming or watching video or watching tv, i just sit on the bed & read a book also relax
Oh yes, I need to borrow a leaf
Yes I'm always quite impressed by people who have a lot of books and who have also read them
A wonderful collection of Classical literature. Truly a scholar's working library. Thanks for sharing.
Great library and good guy. He didn't swallow everything the modern world has served him.
Amen to that!
-Daniel
What do you mean?
Yes I want you to elaborate on that.
LeandroBRC47 I’m assuming modern morals like don’t read if you do don’t read for pleasure read so you can feel superior and brag (got that from screwtape) also history revision one school is teaching that Abraham was a Democrat and it was the republican who succeed the evidence behind it is that Republicans are racist.
There’s also identity standing out which this man does. He’s humble reads to better himself and because he wants too very odd values and traits
What on Earth are you talking about?
This man was oozing with passion, God bless him.
Of all the videos I've watched on personal libraries...this one is by far the best. It may be old school, but its distinguished and its absolutely authentic. Bravo, sir, for your exquisite taste and collection!!!
Such passion united with erudition and love of learning is a rare thing. Wes is a remarkable teacher, unconstrained by temporal politics and superficial trends in education and the larger society. Very refreshing! Thank you, Wes.
This has inspired me to start my own library.
What, no Hunger Games or Twilight? (Just kidding!)
Man, I'd put a sleeping bag in that room and never leave.
Yesica1993 Visually impaired, so audio books work for me now.
acajudi100 oh I’m sorry, that must suck, audiobooks just are not the same for me.
@@acajudi100 audios are never replicas of real, physical books which have pages that are leaves of the history, as Wes Callihan said in this video
Any copies of cloudy with a chance of meatballs ? Jk 🤣
"It pales in comparison to the libraries of some of my friends." The day I can say that is the day I've won at life lol
For real!
@@spinecollector9931 Btw Islamic Civilization has products as much and deep as Western Civilization
@---- hahhah, arr ye Muslim, friend? Other than Muslims, I wouldn't think someone who thinx like that would exist.
@@Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius They really aren't that separate honestly. Most Islamic scholarship was based heavily on Aristotle. The Western World actually got Aristotle BACK from Islam after they were lost. We actually went quite a while without what is one of the major keystones of Western thought. It's kind of crazy.
I'm as interested in Islamic Culture as to Western and African Culture. 😩@@Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
What a beautiful arrangement. Thanks for this.
This guy is a real man… a man that searches for knowledge that makes you a man
best home library i've seen so far. Indeed, organizing your books in which era they came from is an excellent idea. Maybe i'll do the same once I have more books!
Carlo Clores I would like to acquire his mental Syntopicon regarding his medieval collection. I also wonder if he has his library on Library Thing.
A man with a personal library like that: May you live to be a thousand years old, sir!
I wish I could have a library like that... Wow! Greeks and Romans.
You can. Even if not in physical form, digitally. Ancient works are free to read online.
Never, ever, ever! Start collecting 2nd hand books now and by the time you're 40 you will have a sizable collection. Only get what you're interested in, don't get books to "seem clever", I have about 50 of those, out of 1,000 that's not bad but they take up space. Real books cannot be replaced by technology, period!
Yes peasy
Thank you. There is a great kinship among men and women who feel about books as this man does.
Thanks for the video and walk thtough history. As a theologian and eternal learner, I appreciate you taking us through it; especially, its impact on what we are today. I am in the process of re-doing my home library; I had not considered your approach, but will do now. Thanks.
A fine library and a thoughtful tour. I'd like to talk to him about revelation as a reliable epistemology, but, nevertheless, I will admire his books and passion for them. Well done.
Your lecture on the Middle Ages was inspiring. Also I would really enjoy learning about the early saints. I was expecting a secular library tour this was way more interesting. Thank you.
"The digital experience verges on the gnostic." (about 16:00)
That was nicely put.
i agree. I loved that comment.
Monty Thibault
It doesn’t make any sense.
Monty Thibault Gnosticism is the idea that faith is more personal and not tied to a common scripture. Hence a digital book, which doesn’t really exist, only in someone’s head, is gnostic. Non-gnostic faith is rooted in scripture, written physical books universal to everyone. A physical book can exist independent of the person reading it, will still be there after they’re gone. I guess the comparison is that Christianity is true regardless of whether any one person believes it. It’s a truth potentially available to everyone in the same way a physical book is.
@@Uppernorwood976 very well explained, nice
@@williams.5952 No, I just didn't explain myself very well. I was simply referring to that aspect of gnosticism that rejects the value of the material, physical world. So the emphasis in digital books on "just the content", as though the bodies of books with their colors, heft, smell, and textures, mean nothing, is sort of gnostic.
This is why I hesitated to purchase my Kindle. I did anyway, however physical bks are more widely held by me. ☺
I'm the same. I have a Kindle but much prefer (and still buy more of) hard copies. :-)
@@BoganBrett great
I first watched this library tour years ago and it's as enjoyable now as it was then. I hope you are well Wes and still teaching. If this is a taste, you do it so well 👍🏾
He still teaches, though he has slowed his pace.
And his lectures are preserved through oldwesternculture.com !
This guy is so fucking well spoken, I could listen to him speak for hours. Love how intelligent he is too.
You can listen to all 192 lectures spanning the great books: oldwesternculture.com
Excellent video. Love the collection, especially the emphasis on the Church Fathers.
He's a fantastic personal guide with good musings on books and book collecting.
I love how if he has a question about what a word means in a book, he opens another book to find the meaning..... most people would bust out google.....He is truly a smart man
This video will live rent free in my memory...
Happy to meet you Sir. This is the best part of technology for me, to come across such fine things as highly educated polymaths.
Fantastic collection. You are so knowledgeable! Fantastic to see someone who really enjoys and understand books.
NOW THATS A BOOK COLLECTION! GOD BLESS TAKE CARE
This is the best library tour I’ve ever watched…I love this so much ❤❤❤ absolutely inspiring!
A magnificent selection
I am not a believer, but still found it wonderfully interesting to hear this man talking about his books and the many connections between them. I wish there many more such presentations on YT where people talk about what they really love and understand on a deep level. I love all those shabby cloth covers and the complete absence of Tolkien and Harry Potter.
I find this video very relaxing, it always lifts up my mood.
Mine too
They should do one for the Islamic Civilization too
His Library is much like mine. I like this guy!
A friend who holds a PhD in history of the catholic church recently commented that "The Dark Ages" also is a case of protestants slandering the times before the protestant churches were there; it was dark, because there was only the catholic church (or "the church") there.
Amazing video! I really like to watch these kinds of videos of people who not only collect, but read all the books in their collection.
What a beautiful collection
Brilliant commentary! These are the kind of videos that remind me of how little I know and how much I have yet to learn!
Interesting approach to shelving one's books! I have a similar system for filing my recordings, especially LPs (which are less chaotically placed than CDs and audiocassettes). Within large categories, say, ballet music, I shelve the music by date of composer's birth. Miscellaneous recordings of ballet segments (e.g. "Great Moments of Ballet") I sheve in alphabetical order by conductor. And so it goes. Works for me!
I find this very soothing.
That's neat that you have three shelves of Homer.
"De Anima" is my favourite work of Aristotle. I recommend it, if you're interested in a metaphysical meets spirituality, theme of writing style.
I wish I could have been a learned man. To have a passion for books and being able to make a living at it is priceless.
A true classically educated man.
One day …. one day I’ll tackle Virgil’s Aeneid.
I learned so much from this video. Thank you for showing your awesome collection and sharing some of your learnings.
An erudite, rich, and fascinating tour! Many thanks!
Your comments about the look, color and feel of your books is endearing. The Chinese have a similer sensuality. In Mandarin it's called: "SHU XIANG" the perfume of books.
That is really neat about the Mandarin word for the perfume of books!
Are you familiar with our recent publication, "Redeeming the Six Arts"? It is about Chinese classical education, and specifically how Christian classical education in China ought to honor their own tradition vs embracing solely the Western texts as they are often tempted to do.
What a lovely video! Thank you.
Werner Jaeger's Paideia trilogy. Very, very cool. What an inspiring read!
What a library.
What a fun walk through history! 📚
I'M IMPRESSED!!!! Wes Callihan is a truly well-read scholar if ever there were one!! I'm also jealous in that he has such a vast private library!! Thank God for literacy and for marvelous people like Wes!! :-)
Most of the books that survived the fall of Rome and the dark ages , Roman and Greek classics survived in one small church in Spain . If our world collapsed and this little personal library was saved you would to a great extent would have much of western history still. I like this gentleman without even meeting him fine fellow
Would love a list of what’s in his library!
Here is a good starting place!
These are the books he teachers through in Old Western Culture:
romanroadspress.com/2017/11/owc-reading-list/
Thanks for the answer to the question " wow, have you read all these books?". I can now answer..."nooooooo, because.....".
Greatest novel of all time=war and peace. Glad to see it up there😁
archerce Nah Anna Karenina > War and Peace...and Anna Karenina isn’t even the GOAT.
@@justtosuffer398 Brothers Karamazov by Dostoyevski is better than both.
His comments beginning at 9:58 on the “Top Shelf Book Set of Great Books” ( Mortimer Adler etc) are very revealing. Pointing out that the Dark Ages were equated with the Christian Age and suggesting what appears to be an attitude that is influenced deeply by Enlightenment thinking namely - Christianity results in Darkness! This is not dissimilar to the biased thinking of several strident atheists like Hitchens, Dawkins, Harris and others who, influenced by scientism and relativism, also equate Christianity (religion in general) with darkness.. Thanks for the observation Wes Callihan!
Hi Wes, thank you for the fascinating tour of your library. I’ve been thinking of Classical education for my daughter & your work really inspires me.
Jack, that's great! Check out the curriculum we have here: www.romanroadsmedia.com/old-western-culture/
There are few videos on UA-cam that I keep returning to. This is one of them. It has been nearly 10 years since this video has been released and is easily the most popular video on your UA-cam channel.
I would be lovely to get a 10 year update. I suspect 99% of the library will have remained the same but some questions that come to mind are:
- How has Mr Callihan's Library changed in the past 10 years?
- The most signficant finding that Mr Callihan has discovered from his books in the last 10 years.
- What is Mr Callihan most looking forward to reading or re-reading in the next 10 years?
Priceless books of immense value
Wonderfull, divine library. I loved it. I have one, too. Congratulations.
I love both poetry and philosophy.
Great collection!
I went to my brother's house that was recently renovated to include mostly hues of white and ivory. He and his wife had about 50 books in their personal library, but they had the spines of the books facing away from the room and not visible. My mom later told me this is a decorating tip to keep the room looking white and pure, and I was horrified.
ARGH!!! Pure white? ARGH!!!
Nice collection, thanks for the tips on how to appreciate and relate to the changing of time.
I love Paideia In the Polis!!!! This is my first time seeing a video of someone with all 3 volumes!
My God, your language alignment method is brilliant! I'm going to steal--I mean, ADOPT it for my own library!
And it's interesting. It would never have occurred to me to collect multiple translations of works. I always went for the most accurate translations because it offended me to read an inferior or biased translation but now I'll give it some thought once I can afford the space and storage issue.
Great library! Thanks for show it us!
I appreciate his perspective on great books (and the shortcomings of The Britannica Great Books). Although I am an atheist and personally inclined towards ancient authors and their Enlightenment intellectual offspring, I am curious about the Middle Ages and willing to read their thoughts with a generous mind.
Anyway, as a lover of books and the culture of the mind, I salute you. May your spines remain flexible and your pages crisp.
Thank you for your kind comments! Best wishes to you.
It’s great to see a serious and eclectic collection. Booktube is usually abysmal.
Wonderful collection. I do have such a personal library but not of such a size. I do enjoy the way he is enjoying.
Wes, this is amazing. What would be neat is for those of us who have NEVER read the classics for you to make a starter list of the top books to read. Maybe a beginner, intermediate, and advanced list so we can progress. Thanks
Start from antique China and greeks. And slowly progress to Islamic civilization. Then to Romans... etc etc
The Old Western Culture series he mentions goes through a 4 year high school curriculum of Greeks, Romans, Medieval-Elizabethan, then onward to the early modern. So read Homer, Hesiod, Sophocles, Aeschylus, Euripides, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, and Aristotle first.
This is the most insperational video i’ve ever seen and it’s my dream to have a home library like this.
It takes a lifetime.
This was absolutely fascinating!!
Inspiring. I also have my history shelves (with biographies) in chronological order.
Beautiful library. Who wouldn't want a teacher like Wes. A godly and literate man with a passion for learning and teaching. A dying breed. Which translations of Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy were they I wonder? And what system of reading would Wes propose? I love to read but we are so spoiled by choice it almost becomes unbearable. The sheer weight of history and ideas and thought. Where does one start? And how long do you spend reading a book. Do you study or read for pleasure? Thanks! Great content.
Start by learning languages and do try to read books in their original languages as much as possible. Sanskrit, Chinese, Persian, Arabic, Greek, Latin and German are a good start. When ye go into a field, first do read a general history of that field. Then go into it's classics. If ye diye directly into classics without first reading that intellectual area's history, ye wouldn't understand much
I get most of my books at the discount sales at my local Libraries. I'm sort of a book hipster.
Thank you so much for this video. You and I share tastes in literature. I have read most of these books and continue to digest them. All you need is a copy of the Domesday Book and the Gutenberg Bible. Imagine what was lost at the Library of Alexandria.
The loss of the Library of Alexandria pains me!!
Nice private library. You can never have too much Homer. There is a stronger weight to christian writings than I enjoy. But very nice. I do appreciate Adler's Great Books collection. I have a copy and gave a set to my son, a UChicago Classics major. I found ours at our local library's weekly used book sales. Adler a University of Chicago professor
has some fun books and interviews on books, reading and education. He's on UA-cam.
Thank you for your comments! All the best to you and your son.
I am here once again, thanks to Autumn Kern's The Common Place video on How to Organize Your Library (Like a Christian) | Mother Culture Series | Classical Charlotte Mason.
Beautiful library. I don't read much currently but I will be reading a lot of books in the future. You have encouraged me to start building my collection of good books/works.
Did you?
You forget the Carolingian era (mid 9th to the end of the 10th centuries). Very powerful theologically. Gottschalk of Orbais, Ratramnus of Corbie, Florus of Lyon, Paschasius Radbertus, and etc. This leads up to Anselm's Cur Deus Homo?
Albert the Great or Albertus Magnus taught Aquinas and both were influenced by Avicenna (Ibn Sinna) and Averroes (Ibn Rushd-the great Muslim commentator on Aristotle).
I agree with all those, and I actually have all of them in my library, but I didn't have time to talk about everything on my shelves - though I wish I could! :)
Watching the video for a second time. Very entertaining and informative.
🤤 I will have a library like this one day. Right now my books just line my small house like insulation. I just stick them wherever I think they will be safe and take them out when we go over them in our school.
I thoroughly enjoyed this 🙏 Undoubtedly informative and inspiring ❤ Thank you for sharing!
Wonderful. Its great and worthy of admiration. I liked your love for books. Please accept my hearty facilitations for the collection and maintenance in so much systematic way. With regards and affection from India. Aum shanti.
I enjoyed listening. Didn’t even double speed it.
Ah, your Plutarch! I've got a copy of that same 2-volume Sir Thomas North reprint. What a find that was! I found it at a second-hand store, maybe a decade ago, and paid merely $6 or $8 for it, and it's in quite exquisite shape. (Now, to sometime actually buckle down, finally, and really try to dig into reading it one of these days!)
This man in a good man
Beautiful collection of works, the colors of the bindings in particular work together immensely well in creating a vibrant effect.
Even as a deist I can appreciate that the works of the Middle Ages and "church literature" are vastly underrated genre.
what? No CS Lewis??? ;) .. impressive library... I have a minor version of this, mostly composed of leather bound Easton Press and other similar books both for the aesthetic and the intellectual aspects.
He has LOTS of Lewis. I think it was probably in the upstairs bookcases.
Thanks for the tour! Beautiful library!
Great tour!
Very interesting and inspiring. I recently retired and I am challenged to bring my office library home. Shelving is certainly a challenge to overcome. I organize my library similarly to how you organize yours. Thank you for sharing.
Wonderful to see this. Thank You.
Great! Greetings from Slovakia.
Greetings back from Moscow, Idaho!
Excellent! ❤
Yes when I was a kid I often wondered why you could not easily find information about the middle ages. It was blanked out of public school education.
I collect translations of Hesiod. I have a library like yours, but it differs a bit. I also arrange my books chronologically.
Hesiod is on those shelves for sure! It's even part of the Old Western Culture program