
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Philosophy passage got you spiraling? In this CARS Reading Skills Workshop, Molly and Jack unpack the “Wittgenstein and Mathematics” daily passage (Sept 17) and show you exactly how to read dense, abstract prose without panicking.
- How to anchor yourself on clear sentences (and ignore the “interesting nonsense” that isn’t testable)
- The core claim: mathematics = a kind of logic built on rules — and why that repeats (so it’s the main idea)
- Early vs. later Wittgenstein: from one monolithic language → many language games (each with its own rules)
- How to track shifts between language, logic, and math without getting lost
- When to slow down, when to move on, and how to extract the main idea fast
Pro tips covered:
-Use contrast/qualifiers (“in fact,” “later,” “still”) to spot high-yield sentences
-Treat ultra-dense lines as support, not the thesis
Before you watch:
Read the Sept 17 daily passage: https://jackwestin.com/daily/mcat-practice-passages/cars-practice-passages/wittgenstein-and-mathematics
Want to learn more? Shoot us a text at 415-855-4435 or email us at [email protected]! 📱
📌 Free Academic Advising: https://calendly.com/academic-advising-4/jack-westin-academic-advising?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
💻 Try our Chrome Extension (video solutions to every AAMC passage) https://tinyurl.com/4jw5pad8
📚 Free Resources: https://jackwestin.com?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
🎓 Live Education Sessions: https://jackwestin.com/sessions?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
👨🏻🏫 Courses: https://jackwestin.com/courses?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
🙋 Tutoring: https://jackwestin.com/services/live-online-mcat-tutoring?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
📸 Follow Us On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jackwestinmcat?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
👥 Join our Facebook Study Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/freemcatprep?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
By Jack Westin4.7
7171 ratings
Philosophy passage got you spiraling? In this CARS Reading Skills Workshop, Molly and Jack unpack the “Wittgenstein and Mathematics” daily passage (Sept 17) and show you exactly how to read dense, abstract prose without panicking.
- How to anchor yourself on clear sentences (and ignore the “interesting nonsense” that isn’t testable)
- The core claim: mathematics = a kind of logic built on rules — and why that repeats (so it’s the main idea)
- Early vs. later Wittgenstein: from one monolithic language → many language games (each with its own rules)
- How to track shifts between language, logic, and math without getting lost
- When to slow down, when to move on, and how to extract the main idea fast
Pro tips covered:
-Use contrast/qualifiers (“in fact,” “later,” “still”) to spot high-yield sentences
-Treat ultra-dense lines as support, not the thesis
Before you watch:
Read the Sept 17 daily passage: https://jackwestin.com/daily/mcat-practice-passages/cars-practice-passages/wittgenstein-and-mathematics
Want to learn more? Shoot us a text at 415-855-4435 or email us at [email protected]! 📱
📌 Free Academic Advising: https://calendly.com/academic-advising-4/jack-westin-academic-advising?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
💻 Try our Chrome Extension (video solutions to every AAMC passage) https://tinyurl.com/4jw5pad8
📚 Free Resources: https://jackwestin.com?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
🎓 Live Education Sessions: https://jackwestin.com/sessions?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
👨🏻🏫 Courses: https://jackwestin.com/courses?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
🙋 Tutoring: https://jackwestin.com/services/live-online-mcat-tutoring?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
📸 Follow Us On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jackwestinmcat?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast
👥 Join our Facebook Study Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/freemcatprep?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=podcast

13,898 Listeners

1,264 Listeners

56,563 Listeners

563 Listeners

16,911 Listeners

368,991 Listeners

99,256 Listeners

8,651 Listeners

83 Listeners

615 Listeners

421 Listeners

18,320 Listeners

43 Listeners

29,146 Listeners

4 Listeners