One of my favorites things about Logos is the journals, and I often prefer to read journals (not just use them for research) over books. There might be different ways to do this but I wanted to share the way I read journals as a daily practice if anyone is interested in getting deeper into random articles. I started using this method because I have so many journals and I wasn’t sure the best way to go through various journals to read on numerous topics.
I start by using the “Facilitate Serendipitous Discovery” feature in Logos. This is one of my favorite features in Logos and if you aren’t familiar with this, you can about read here: https://community.logos.com/forums/p/5493/60945.aspx
I have a shortcut on by taskbar that opens “Facilitate Serendipitous Discovery in Journals”. This opens a random article in my Journals Collection. Since I have so many journals, I never know what is going to come up. Occasionally I may close an article and try another one if I’m really not interested but I usually try to read the article even if I only have a faint interest. I do this because this really helps expand my knowledge and opens me to new ideas and information.
Here is my basic process:
--Every morning after devotions I open “FSD” in journals.
--I spend 15 minutes skimming the article and getting the basic thoughts and ideas.
--At lunch I go back to the article and usually spend 15 to 30 minutes on the article to get a deeper insight.
--If I am really interested in the article, I will read in thoroughly after I get home from work.
--If it is an article I really want to keep track of, I will add it to “journals” that I have in favorites.
I’ve been doing this for the last year and have read a lot of interesting topics and arguments that I would have never gotten to if I didn’t use “FSD”. You can use this for any collection but I would highly encourage this for journals if you really want to explore your massive journal collection. If you are an academic student, I would encourage this method to give you a quick and easy way to dive into academic studies outside of the classroom reading.
Hope this helps….Bill