Recently gave me the tiniest of glimpses into the world of competitive policy debate and oh wow I am still a naive idiot about this subculture but I am SO! FASCINATED!
First! Some of them make arguments at ~six trillion WPM?? Please listen:
Conversation
These arguments draw on huge libraries of cards which they prepare in advance, individually summarizing various speeches, policy documents, positions, etc! Teams use these plastic tubs to transport these papers b/c they maximize checked baggage volume! nytimes.com/2010/04/18/edu
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They "cut" 1000s of these cards by using a multi-level scale of underlining, bolding, highlighting, font size, etc to make the key points of a primary source rapidly visible on the page! There are plugins for word processors to help do this more quickly! chrome.google.com/webstore/detai
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The highlighting technique makes me wonder whether some of How to Read a Book's approach could be executed this way, surfacing the text's structural skeleton through levels of inline markup, rather than by making a parallel summarizing outline. I'll need to try these plugins!
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Indeed, I actually thought of Tiago‘s work when I saw this! Very interesting to see a whole subculture adopt something like this.
